During a November 2025 marketing strategy review, the team identified that BluePoint ATM's "Reverse ATM Benefits — How They Make Payments Easier" blog post receives approximately 10x the traffic of the homepage. This creates both an opportunity and a risk: the post is a major organic entry point, but its current content quality may be undermining conversion.
This article captures the findings, concerns, and recommended next steps surfaced in that discussion.
Related meeting: [1]
Client: [2]
The blog post in question — focused on the benefits of Reverse ATMs — is the single highest-traffic page on the BluePoint ATM website by a wide margin. Despite this, it was not prominently linked from the main navigation and its URL structure lacked clear breadcrumbs, making it difficult to locate within the site architecture.
Key implication: A large share of BluePoint's organic audience is landing on a blog post rather than a product or conversion page. This makes the post's quality and conversion path critically important.
The post currently uses:
- Dated stock photos that do not depict Reverse ATMs accurately
- AI-generated images that lack authenticity
- Images showing competitor machines or unrelated equipment
This risks immediate credibility loss for visitors who are evaluating BluePoint as a vendor. A prospect who recognizes the imagery as generic or AI-generated may bounce without engaging further.
High traffic alone is not a success metric. The team flagged that it is unknown whether blog visitors are:
- Clicking through to product pages, the homepage, or the contact form
- Bouncing immediately after landing
Without this data, it is impossible to determine whether the post is contributing to pipeline or simply accumulating pageviews.
Before investing in a content upgrade, measure the post's actual conversion behavior:
This analysis should be completed by Melissa (Asymmetric) using available analytics tools (Google Analytics / HubSpot).
"Can we see the conversion rate? If people who land on the blog and what percentage of them click to another spot on the website and which of them just click out of it... they might just land on it and be like, oh crap, this is AI, I'm X-ing out."
— Melissa Cusumano, Nov 2025 call
If conversion data reveals a high bounce rate or low click-through, a content upgrade is warranted. Recommended improvements:
A professional photoshoot is already being planned for other marketing assets (email campaigns, one-pagers). The blog post imagery should be included in that shoot's scope.
See: [3] (if created)
This blog post issue is part of a larger pattern identified across BluePoint's marketing materials: a shortage of high-quality, branded photography of the actual Reverse ATM machine. The same gap affects:
A single photoshoot — ideally using BluePoint's fully branded machine in a controlled studio environment — would address all of these gaps simultaneously.
See: [2] for full asset status
| Task | Owner | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Analyze blog conversion rate (bounce vs. click-through) | Melissa (Asymmetric) | 🔲 Pending |
| Schedule professional photoshoot of branded Reverse ATM | Wade & Mike (BluePoint) | 🔲 Pending |
| Replace blog imagery post-photoshoot | Asymmetric team | ⏳ Blocked on photoshoot |
High-traffic content without conversion visibility is a blind spot. When a secondary page (blog post, resource, FAQ) outperforms the homepage in traffic, it should be treated as a primary landing page — with the same attention to imagery quality, internal linking, and CTA placement. Audit conversion behavior before investing in a content rewrite; the data may reveal the problem is UX or imagery, not the copy itself.