Call to Action (CTA)
The instruction that turns attention into action — Buy Now, Sign Up, Get Started. Small words doing the heaviest lifting on any page or ad.
- Term
- Call to Action (CTA)
- Is
- A prompt telling the audience what to do next
- Examples
- Buy Now, Sign Up, Learn More, Get Started
- Read with
- Conversion, landing page, button copy
Parts of speech & senses
- A prompt — usually a button or line of copy — that tells the audience exactly what to do next, such as 'Buy Now', 'Sign Up', or 'Learn More'. "Changing the CTA from 'Submit' to 'Get my free guide' lifted clicks."
What a call to action is
A call to action (CTA) is the explicit instruction that tells someone what to do next — the button, link, or line of copy that says 'Buy Now', 'Start free trial', 'Add to cart', or 'Learn more'. It is the hinge between attention and action: a page or ad can be compelling, but without a clear CTA the audience is left with interest and no obvious next step.
CTAs work by reducing friction and ambiguity. A good one is specific (it names the action), visible (it stands out), and framed around the value the person gets ('Get my free guide' beats 'Submit'). The CTA is small in word count but large in effect — it's often the single most-tested element on a landing page.
How CTAs drive conversion
CTAs are central to conversion because they are where intent becomes action. Their effectiveness depends on the words (action- and benefit-oriented copy), the design (contrast, size, placement — often above the fold and repeated for long pages), the timing (asking at the right moment in the journey), and the singularity (one primary CTA per view; competing CTAs split attention and lower action on all of them). The discipline is one clear primary action per page, framed around the user's benefit, easy to find and easy to take.
CTA copy and common practice
The copy is the most-tested part. Generic CTAs ('Submit', 'Click here') underperform specific, value-framed ones ('Get my free guide', 'Start my 14-day trial'). First-person framing ('Start my trial') and urgency or specificity often lift clicks, though the only reliable way to know is to test, since the best CTA depends on audience and context.
Beyond buttons, CTAs appear in emails (one clear ask per email), ads (the action the ad wants), and content (what to do after reading). Wherever a marketer wants action, the CTA is the instruction that asks for it — and leaving it vague or absent is one of the most common, costly mistakes in conversion.
Synonyms & antonyms
Synonyms
Antonyms
Origin & history
"Call to action" comes from rhetoric and direct-response advertising, where a persuasive message traditionally ends by explicitly asking the audience to act. Digital marketing kept the term for the buttons and prompts that ask for the click, sign-up, or purchase.
Etymology: source.
Usage trends
Search interest for this term over the last five years:
Common questions
- What is a call to action (CTA)?
- A prompt — usually a button or line of copy — that tells the audience exactly what to do next, such as 'Buy Now' or 'Sign Up'. It's the instruction that turns attention into a specific action.
- What makes a good CTA?
- Specific, benefit-framed copy ('Get my free guide' beats 'Submit'), clear visibility and placement, the right timing in the journey, and a single primary action per view so attention isn't split.
- Why have only one primary CTA?
- Because competing CTAs split attention and lower action on all of them. One clear primary action per page or email focuses the audience on the single next step you most want them to take.
Resources & people to follow
- referenceRGM analysis — definitions, senses, and usage verified per term
Curated, non-competitor resources verified per term.
Related training
Disciplines
Areas of marketing where call to action (cta) is a core concern: