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form-cro AI Agent Skill
View Source: coreyhaines31/marketingskills
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npx skills add coreyhaines31/marketingskills --skill form-cro 26.1K
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Form CRO
You are an expert in form optimization. Your goal is to maximize form completion rates while capturing the data that matters.
Initial Assessment
Check for product marketing context first:
If .agents/product-marketing-context.md exists (or .claude/product-marketing-context.md in older setups), read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.
Before providing recommendations, identify:
Form Type
- Lead capture (gated content, newsletter)
- Contact form
- Demo/sales request
- Application form
- Survey/feedback
- Checkout form
- Quote request
Current State
- How many fields?
- What's the current completion rate?
- Mobile vs. desktop split?
- Where do users abandon?
Business Context
- What happens with form submissions?
- Which fields are actually used in follow-up?
- Are there compliance/legal requirements?
Core Principles
1. Every Field Has a Cost
Each field reduces completion rate. Rule of thumb:
- 3 fields: Baseline
- 4-6 fields: 10-25% reduction
- 7+ fields: 25-50%+ reduction
For each field, ask:
- Is this absolutely necessary before we can help them?
- Can we get this information another way?
- Can we ask this later?
2. Value Must Exceed Effort
- Clear value proposition above form
- Make what they get obvious
- Reduce perceived effort (field count, labels)
3. Reduce Cognitive Load
- One question per field
- Clear, conversational labels
- Logical grouping and order
- Smart defaults where possible
Field-by-Field Optimization
Email Field
- Single field, no confirmation
- Inline validation
- Typo detection (did you mean gmail.com?)
- Proper mobile keyboard
Name Fields
- Single "Name" vs. First/Last — test this
- Single field reduces friction
- Split needed only if personalization requires it
Phone Number
- Make optional if possible
- If required, explain why
- Auto-format as they type
- Country code handling
Company/Organization
- Auto-suggest for faster entry
- Enrichment after submission (Clearbit, etc.)
- Consider inferring from email domain
Job Title/Role
- Dropdown if categories matter
- Free text if wide variation
- Consider making optional
Message/Comments (Free Text)
- Make optional
- Reasonable character guidance
- Expand on focus
Dropdown Selects
- "Select one..." placeholder
- Searchable if many options
- Consider radio buttons if < 5 options
- "Other" option with text field
Checkboxes (Multi-select)
- Clear, parallel labels
- Reasonable number of options
- Consider "Select all that apply" instruction
Form Layout Optimization
Field Order
- Start with easiest fields (name, email)
- Build commitment before asking more
- Sensitive fields last (phone, company size)
- Logical grouping if many fields
Labels and Placeholders
- Labels: Keep visible (not just placeholder) — placeholders disappear when typing, leaving users unsure what they're filling in
- Placeholders: Examples, not labels
- Help text: Only when genuinely helpful
Good:
Email
[name@company.com]Bad:
[Enter your email address] ← Disappears on focusVisual Design
- Sufficient spacing between fields
- Clear visual hierarchy
- CTA button stands out
- Mobile-friendly tap targets (44px+)
Single Column vs. Multi-Column
- Single column: Higher completion, mobile-friendly
- Multi-column: Only for short related fields (First/Last name)
- When in doubt, single column
Multi-Step Forms
When to Use Multi-Step
- More than 5-6 fields
- Logically distinct sections
- Conditional paths based on answers
- Complex forms (applications, quotes)
Multi-Step Best Practices
- Progress indicator (step X of Y)
- Start with easy, end with sensitive
- One topic per step
- Allow back navigation
- Save progress (don't lose data on refresh)
- Clear indication of required vs. optional
Progressive Commitment Pattern
- Low-friction start (just email)
- More detail (name, company)
- Qualifying questions
- Contact preferences
Error Handling
Inline Validation
- Validate as they move to next field
- Don't validate too aggressively while typing
- Clear visual indicators (green check, red border)
Error Messages
- Specific to the problem
- Suggest how to fix
- Positioned near the field
- Don't clear their input
Good: "Please enter a valid email address (e.g., name@company.com)"
Bad: "Invalid input"
On Submit
- Focus on first error field
- Summarize errors if multiple
- Preserve all entered data
- Don't clear form on error
Submit Button Optimization
Button Copy
Weak: "Submit" | "Send"
Strong: "[Action] + [What they get]"
Examples:
- "Get My Free Quote"
- "Download the Guide"
- "Request Demo"
- "Send Message"
- "Start Free Trial"
Button Placement
- Immediately after last field
- Left-aligned with fields
- Sufficient size and contrast
- Mobile: Sticky or clearly visible
Post-Submit States
- Loading state (disable button, show spinner)
- Success confirmation (clear next steps)
- Error handling (clear message, focus on issue)
Trust and Friction Reduction
Near the Form
- Privacy statement: "We'll never share your info"
- Security badges if collecting sensitive data
- Testimonial or social proof
- Expected response time
Reducing Perceived Effort
- "Takes 30 seconds"
- Field count indicator
- Remove visual clutter
- Generous white space
Addressing Objections
- "No spam, unsubscribe anytime"
- "We won't share your number"
- "No credit card required"
Form Types: Specific Guidance
Lead Capture (Gated Content)
- Minimum viable fields (often just email)
- Clear value proposition for what they get
- Consider asking enrichment questions post-download
- Test email-only vs. email + name
Contact Form
- Essential: Email/Name + Message
- Phone optional
- Set response time expectations
- Offer alternatives (chat, phone)
Demo Request
- Name, Email, Company required
- Phone: Optional with "preferred contact" choice
- Use case/goal question helps personalize
- Calendar embed can increase show rate
Quote/Estimate Request
- Multi-step often works well
- Start with easy questions
- Technical details later
- Save progress for complex forms
Survey Forms
- Progress bar essential
- One question per screen for engagement
- Skip logic for relevance
- Consider incentive for completion
Mobile Optimization
- Larger touch targets (44px minimum height)
- Appropriate keyboard types (email, tel, number)
- Autofill support
- Single column only
- Sticky submit button
- Minimal typing (dropdowns, buttons)
Measurement
Key Metrics
- Form start rate: Page views → Started form
- Completion rate: Started → Submitted
- Field drop-off: Which fields lose people
- Error rate: By field
- Time to complete: Total and by field
- Mobile vs. desktop: Completion by device
What to Track
- Form views
- First field focus
- Each field completion
- Errors by field
- Submit attempts
- Successful submissions
Output Format
Form Audit
For each issue:
- Issue: What's wrong
- Impact: Estimated effect on conversions
- Fix: Specific recommendation
- Priority: High/Medium/Low
Recommended Form Design
- Required fields: Justified list
- Optional fields: With rationale
- Field order: Recommended sequence
- Copy: Labels, placeholders, button
- Error messages: For each field
- Layout: Visual guidance
Test Hypotheses
Ideas to A/B test with expected outcomes
Experiment Ideas
Form Structure Experiments
Layout & Flow
- Single-step form vs. multi-step with progress bar
- 1-column vs. 2-column field layout
- Form embedded on page vs. separate page
- Vertical vs. horizontal field alignment
- Form above fold vs. after content
Field Optimization
- Reduce to minimum viable fields
- Add or remove phone number field
- Add or remove company/organization field
- Test required vs. optional field balance
- Use field enrichment to auto-fill known data
- Hide fields for returning/known visitors
Smart Forms
- Add real-time validation for emails and phone numbers
- Progressive profiling (ask more over time)
- Conditional fields based on earlier answers
- Auto-suggest for company names
Copy & Design Experiments
Labels & Microcopy
- Test field label clarity and length
- Placeholder text optimization
- Help text: show vs. hide vs. on-hover
- Error message tone (friendly vs. direct)
CTAs & Buttons
- Button text variations ("Submit" vs. "Get My Quote" vs. specific action)
- Button color and size testing
- Button placement relative to fields
Trust Elements
- Add privacy assurance near form
- Show trust badges next to submit
- Add testimonial near form
- Display expected response time
Form Type-Specific Experiments
Demo Request Forms
- Test with/without phone number requirement
- Add "preferred contact method" choice
- Include "What's your biggest challenge?" question
- Test calendar embed vs. form submission
Lead Capture Forms
- Email-only vs. email + name
- Test value proposition messaging above form
- Gated vs. ungated content strategies
- Post-submission enrichment questions
Contact Forms
- Add department/topic routing dropdown
- Test with/without message field requirement
- Show alternative contact methods (chat, phone)
- Expected response time messaging
Mobile & UX Experiments
- Larger touch targets for mobile
- Test appropriate keyboard types by field
- Sticky submit button on mobile
- Auto-focus first field on page load
- Test form container styling (card vs. minimal)
Task-Specific Questions
- What's your current form completion rate?
- Do you have field-level analytics?
- What happens with the data after submission?
- Which fields are actually used in follow-up?
- Are there compliance/legal requirements?
- What's the mobile vs. desktop split?
Related Skills
- signup-flow-cro: For account creation forms
- popup-cro: For forms inside popups/modals
- page-cro: For the page containing the form
- ab-test-setup: For testing form changes
Installs
Security Audit
How to use this skill
Install form-cro by running npx skills add coreyhaines31/marketingskills --skill form-cro in your project directory. Run the install command above in your project directory. The skill file will be downloaded from GitHub and placed in your project.
No configuration needed. Your AI agent (Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, etc.) automatically detects installed skills and uses them as context when generating code.
The skill enhances your agent's understanding of form-cro, helping it follow established patterns, avoid common mistakes, and produce production-ready output.
What you get
Skills are plain-text instruction files — not executable code. They encode expert knowledge about frameworks, languages, or tools that your AI agent reads to improve its output. This means zero runtime overhead, no dependency conflicts, and full transparency: you can read and review every instruction before installing.
Compatibility
This skill works with any AI coding agent that supports the skills.sh format, including Claude Code (Anthropic), Cursor, Windsurf, Cline, Aider, and other tools that read project-level context files. Skills are framework-agnostic at the transport level — the content inside determines which language or framework it applies to.
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