Introduction To Multivariate Testing
In split testing, we test one element of your sales page or website. For example, we can test headline A vs headline B (or vs C, D and so on), and we see which is the winner.
Split testing is pretty easy and straightforward to set up and implement.
But there are several drawbacks.
It’s very time consuming and costly. That’s because you can only test 1 element at a time.
Say we want to also test different images, location of image, sub headlines and so on…we can only do so one element at a time – one after another.
Because of this, by the time you are finished with all the elements, it could be weeks or months later!
You waste more time. And money as well as you incur more cost when the duration of the test drags.
There is another important point to consider. With split testing, it doesn’t tell us how each elements affect one another.
You might independently test the headline, and find one that performs really badly – so you don’t use it. Then you test your image, and find one that does really bad – so again, you don’t use it.


I’ve been fiddling around with email optimization in the past week.
Split testing is essentially an A/B test. We put 2 version out, A and B.
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