Search “average conversion rate” and you’ll find confident-sounding numbers that fall apart on contact. A 2% checkout rate and a 40% free-signup rate are both “conversion,” measured on wildly different actions and audiences. So before chasing a benchmark, it’s worth understanding why they vary — and what to measure instead.
What conversion rate actually measures
Conversion rate is the share of people who completed a desired action out of everyone who had the chance:
conversion rate = completed ÷ had the opportunity × 100 The denominator is where comparisons quietly break. “Had the opportunity” has to mean the same population every time — unique people or sessions, consistently — or your rate isn’t comparable week to week, let alone to someone else’s.
Why benchmarks vary so much
Four things move a conversion rate far more than any industry average:
- Intent. Warm traffic that searched for you converts many times better than cold traffic you interrupted.
- The ask. A free email signup is easy; entering a credit card is hard. The harder the action, the lower the rate — by design.
- Price and consideration. Impulse purchases convert fast; expensive or considered buys convert slowly across many visits.
- Channel and audience. Different sources bring different people; a blended rate averages over all of them and hides the truth.
Rough context, heavily caveated: e-commerce site-wide conversion often lands in the low single digits, lead and email signups can reach double digits, and high-intent flows can go far higher. Use these as orientation, not goals.
Overall vs step conversion
A single end-to-end rate tells you that you’re losing people, not where. Break the journey into a funnel and measure step conversion — cart to checkout, checkout to payment — and the leak reveals itself. Optimizing the worst single step almost always beats trying to lift the blended number directly. The smaller actions along the way are micro conversions; tracking them as events turns a pass/fail metric into a map.
Measure and improve yours
Use the free conversion rate calculator for a single rate and visitors-needed planning, and the funnel calculator to find the bottleneck step. In Pug, funnels compute step and overall conversion over your real events and let you break them down by source, plan, or cohort — so you can see which users convert and where the rest fall away.
The bottom line
A “good” conversion rate is one that’s improving against your own baseline, on a clearly defined action, broken down by step. Set the benchmark with your own funnel, fix the leakiest step, and ignore the headline averages. For the downstream metric, see what a good retention rate is.