--dc--adobecom.hlx.page/dc-shared/assets/images/frictionless/how-to-images/pdf-to-jpg-image-how-to.svg An Adobe Acrobat document pointing to JPG or PNG image files showing the PDF into image conversion process.
--dc--adobecom.hlx.page/dc-shared/assets/images/shared-images/frictionless/seo-icons/work-wherever.svg A desktop icon with a checkmark demonstrating that you can convert PDF to JPG using any platform or browser
The Acrobat online converter tool lets you quickly convert a PDF to a PNG, TIFF, or JPG image using any web browser. Just choose your preferred file format. The Acrobat JPG conversion process happens in seconds, delivering image quality you can trust.
You can also try Adobe Acrobat Pro for free for seven days on Mac or Windows. In addition to converting PDF files to image file formats, Acrobat PDF tools let you convert JPG, BMP, GIF, Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and other file formats to PDF. You can also convert HTML webpages. Other Acrobat Pro tools let you edit PDFs, merge PDFs, delete PDF pages, and reduce PDF file sizes. You can also add watermarks and use OCR functionality to edit scanned documents.
To understand (and increase) website conversions, start by understanding your users: what drives them to your site or product in the first place, the blockers and pain points they experience, and the hooks that persuade them to take action.
A website conversion happens when a user completes a desired action on your website, like making a purchase or filling out a lead generation contact form. Every business website is built to generate conversions.
Micro-conversions happen when a step toward your end goal is achieved, like subscribing to a newsletter, downloading an ebook, or watching a product video (i.e. events that occur before a macro-conversion).
Sometimes the secret to conversion rate optimization (CRO) is as simple as changing the colors of your call to action (CTA) button, using a larger font for main messaging, or having fewer fields in your sign-up forms.
? Pro tip: ask different survey questions at each stage in the customer journey to gain valuable insights and improve the user experience. With Hotjar Surveys, you can embed a pop-up survey anywhere you like on a single webpage, or reach out to customers with an emailed questionnaire.
You can also save time toggling between different heatmaps and find out which site features draw people in the most with a Hotjar Engagement Zones map, which combines data from multiple heatmaps into one streamlined view.
Watch session recordings of under-performing pages and see how users experience and interact with your site, from homepage to product page, so you can uncover more UX design issues or blockers like website bugs. Seeing people struggle to use your site in real-time helps build empathy for your customers and puts you in the right mindset for coming up with creative UX solutions.
Place a feedback widget on your problem pages, and let users tell you about their experience. Giving visitors an opportunity to provide nuggets of opinion while interacting with your site gives you digestible (and quantifiable) voice of the customer (VoC) feedback that you can use to lobby for new features or redesigns.
Hotjar Feedback widgets let visitors rate their experience with a simple emoji, or they can go into more detail by writing a comment, highlighting specific page elements, or leaving their email address for follow-up communication.
? Pro tip: for additional insight, connect your feedback responses to your session recordings in Hotjar to understand how what your users said relates to what they experienced. Then, zoom out even further with a heatmap to discover whether negative feedback found in one recording was an isolated event or a widespread functionality issue.
Connecting Feedback with Recordings and Heatmaps lets you zoom in and out on user issues effortlessly, saving you time as you work to identify, understand, and validate areas to improve your conversion rate.
You can also invite customers to participate in an external link survey to ask them more detailed questions. Find out what their biggest concern was before they converted and how their experience could be improved, or use an NPS survey to find out how likely they are to recommend you to a family member or friend. You can even adapt the feedback you collect into case studies or testimonials on your site to build social proof and reinforce trust in your business.
Hotjar integrates with popular A/B testing tools, like AB Tasty, Optimizely, and Unbounce, and you can reference Funnels to expose where visitors drop off and get an overview of how well your pages convert.
To find out what your customers want and need from your business, you need to understand who they are and what they like (or don't like) about your site or product. Website conversions can help you understand both your customers and the user experience. For example:
A low conversion rate might indicate a poor user experience, so you'll need to investigate and uncover the pain points and blockers your users are experiencing: a low-converting product page could suggest that you need to further explain or clarify your product's benefits to your users.
A high conversion rate probably means you're doing something right (yay!), so you might want to try replicating that success elsewhere on your site: look at the placement, phrasing, and design of the CTA on a high-converting landing page to illustrate how you successfully persuaded your audience to convert.
When you know how your customers experience your site or product and can identify what works (and what doesn't), you can prioritize changes and optimizations to improve what your business has to offer. Ensuring the user experience runs smoothly while sparking customer delight will lead to happier customers and, ultimately, higher conversion rates.
But it takes more than a good product to build and maintain an effective online presence. You have to actively listen to customers to understand how they feel and make changes to improve the user experience (UX).
Conversion tracking enables you to measure your return on ad spend by tracking the actions people take after viewing or engaging with your ads on X. Your conversion events will allow you to report on the performance of your campaigns but can also be used to help better optimize and target your ads.
New! We have rolled out a series of improvements across our Conversion Tracking products, designed to help expand on our existing solutions, improve setup, and increase measurement flexibility. These include:
These updates should not disrupt existing measurement or campaign performance. However we do recommend updating or implementing relevant solutions. For example, if you previously had a X Universal Web Tag (UWT) or Single Event Tag (SET) implemented, we recommend upgrading to the new X Pixel.
Both solutions achieve the same goal and have largely the same functionality: enabling conversion tracking for your web campaigns. It is critical to implement or upgrade to at least one of these options in order to unlock the full capabilities of web campaigns.
Once conversion tracking is set up, you'll also be able to track cross-device conversions. This means even if someone viewed your Promoted Ad on their mobile device but converted on their laptop, the conversion will be accurately attributed to your campaign.
This new product combines our legacy web tags - the Universal Web Tags (UWT) and Single Event Tags (SET) - into one, easier-to-use solution. Alongside this release, we have also introduced code-based event functionality (vs. events defined by URL rules).
Base code - similar to the Universal Web Tag, this should be implemented across all pages of your site. Any previously integrated Universal Web Tags are able to operate as the base code of the new X Pixel. The base code tracks visits to a website and initializes the pixel so that you can track additional events via event code or create audiences using Audience Manager.
Event code - requires the base code to be implemented. Similar to Single Event Tags, event code should be implemented in key locations (like an add-to-cart button). Any previously integrated Single Event Tags have been transitioned to operate as event code of the new X Pixel. Event code allows you to track individual actions on your website, like Purchases.
(i) Previously implemented the Universal Web Tag and/or Single Event Tag? With the transition mentioned above, any implemented measurement should continue to operate as before. However, we still strongly recommend updating your implementation in order to access new functionality now and in the future.
To update your existing implementation by directly implementing code, follow the instructions on this page, and paste over any previously implemented code with the new base code and/or event code(s). If using a Tag Manager, replace your previous setup with their updated X templates.
Conversion API increases measurement options and provides you with control over what data is shared. This is a complementary measurement solution to the new X Website Pixel and can be used with or without the Pixel.
Note: Using the Conversion API also allows you to track offline conversion events. Conversion events can often start online, but finish offline. Using an offline Conversion API solution means you can measure these conversions in addition to your online conversions.
Implementation: Setting up the Conversion API requires access to the X Ads API and an active Developer Account. More details and a step-by-step guide can be found on our Conversion API documentation setup page.
This option is required to access the full functionality of future Conversion Optimization and Dynamic Product Ad solutions, as the data would be used for campaign optimization. Read more about Click ID here and about how we leverage cookies here.