You don’t need a longer form. You don’t need a shorter form. You need the same fields in a different order. We’ve watched B2B lead forms double their submission rate — same fields, same design, same traffic — purely from re-ordering. The mechanics are simple, the psychology is real, and most Bergen County B2B sites are getting it backwards.
The Test That Started This
A manufacturing client in Saddle Brook had a 5-field contact form: Name, Company, Email, Phone, Message. Submission rate was running about 3.2% of form views. We didn’t add fields, remove fields, or change the copy. We re-ordered them. Six weeks later, submission rate hit 6.8% — a 2.1x lift on roughly 1,400 monthly form views. That’s about 50 extra leads a month from a 20-minute change.
Same form. Same traffic. Different order.
Why Field Order Matters More Than Field Count
People start filling out a form when the perceived cost is low. The first field sets the entire psychological tone. Once someone has invested 10-15 seconds in answering the easy stuff, they’re far more likely to push through the harder asks. This is the foot-in-the-door effect, and it’s been studied to death in behavioral economics. Form designers just don’t apply it.
If your first field is “Phone Number,” you’ve front-loaded the highest-friction ask. The visitor sees it, mentally calculates whether they want a sales call, and a chunk of them bounce before typing a single character. If your first field is “First Name,” you’ve asked the easiest possible question. They type 6 letters. Now they’re committed.
Phone First vs Email First — the Real Data
Across the B2B lead forms we’ve tested, here’s the pattern that holds:
- Phone first: Highest abandonment. Visitors see “Phone” as a commitment to a sales call. Drop-off at this field alone runs 35-55% in our tests.
- Email first: Lower friction than phone, but still asking for direct contact info before any rapport. Drop-off around 18-28%.
- Name first: Lowest friction. Drop-off under 5% on this field. Once they type their name, momentum carries them.
Phone-required-and-phone-first is the worst combination we see. It signals “we’re going to call you immediately,” which is exactly what a hesitant B2B prospect is trying to avoid in the research phase.
The Easy-to-Hard Ramp
The order that consistently outperforms looks like this — easy questions first, ramping up:
- First Name — 1 second to answer. Zero perceived risk. Builds commitment.
- Company Name — easy, neutral. They’re proud of it.
- Email — they’ve now invested 10+ seconds. Email feels like the natural next step.
- What can we help with? (short message or dropdown) — this is where they sell themselves on the value of submitting. The act of articulating the problem increases their commitment further.
- Phone (optional) — by the time they reach this field, they’ve already mentally committed. Marking it optional removes the last objection. The optional ones still get filled in roughly 60% of the time.
Why “Optional Phone” Outperforms “Required Phone”
Counter-intuitively, marking phone as optional often gets you more phone numbers than requiring it. Required-phone forms see the kind of abandonment that means many visitors never finish, never submit, and never give you ANY contact info. Optional-phone forms get the email submission from the hesitant visitors AND a real phone number from the 60% who are comfortable giving one. You end up with more total leads AND more total phone numbers. Counter-intuitive, but the math holds.
The Mobile Wrinkle
On mobile, field order matters even more because the user can only see 2-3 fields at a time. If “Phone (required)” is in the visible viewport when the form first loads, abandonment spikes. If the first thing they see is a friendly “First Name” field, they start typing. Always test your form on a real phone, not a desktop emulator — the visible-viewport problem is something desktop reviews miss completely.
How AJD Handles This
Whether you work with us or not — pull up your current lead form right now and look at the first field. If it’s Phone or Email, you have a 30-minute fix that could materially change your monthly lead volume. We typically run a 2-week A/B test on the re-ordered version so the lift is provable, not theoretical. Setup is about 1 hour of work; the test runs itself. For most clients, this single change pays for our entire engagement in the first month.
If your form’s been quietly under-converting, the fix might be a 20-minute re-order — not a redesign. We’ll audit your current form, recommend the order, and tell you what to expect. No pitch.





