Let’s pretend that someone is looking for exactly what you have to offer and finds your website. They can afford you. They are in a buying mood. Just for giggles, let’s say they have to purchase by the end of the day.
But they don’t buy from you. Why?
The truth is, your website must establish your credibility and engender trust in your reader if they are going to take the next step and hand over some money. And while trust and credibility are subjective and obscure, you can foster both quite easily with these six techniques.
Be precise
Think about the last few times you’ve received a quote from a company. If the figure was a round number, chances are you suspected they were rounding up. If the figure was quite precise, such as $2455, you’re far more likely to believe the quote was an accurate accumulation of costs.
More precise numbers appear more accurate, and credible because they give the impression that someone has gone to the trouble of sorting through data to accurately record the results.
We all make snap judgments based on how accurate things appear. While most won’t bother to double-check accuracy never assume that people won’t check up on the validity of your claims. If a Google search and a bit of commonsense exposes you as a liar, that’s a lot of wasted effort gone into building trust that is quickly destroyed.
Sometimes precision can also trump other signals. You might have a spammy looking design with a very specific and credible promise. This level of detail makes the viewer far more likely to trust that the ad is, indeed, accurate and legit.
Avoid hyperbole
The quickest and easiest way to destroy your credibility is to embrace hyperbole. Unfortunately, hyperboles are in fashion. But reason never goes out of style, and reason stands that hyperboles are, by definition, false.
You simply cannot speak for everyone. Your business will not be a perfect match for all people and suggesting otherwise will destroy trust quicker than a door slams in a steak knife salesman’s face.
Not only are hyperboles unlikely true, but they also smell like the swagger of false confidence.
Anecdotes are not evidence
Personal stories are very useful to use in business writing for a number of reasons. They give colour and interest to readers, they make you more relatable and, over time, they help develop relationships and build your online tribe.
But they don’t build credibility or trust in isolated incidents when your web visitor is new to your site, or if you’re not adept at weaving them into data, statistics and other supporting evidence.
The best kind of business blogging weaves amusing anecdotes and intimate details with relevant statistics towards insightful conclusions. This killer combination draws the reader in, builds rapport, establishes credibility, and builds trust. A strategically placed link to a sales page and – presto! – you’ve got yourself a sale.
Statistics and technical details are easy to find – start with the Australian Bureau of Statistics or an industry publication or association relevant to your field.
One juicy statistic on which to hang an insight is enough to craft a wowing blog or sales page.
Keep your eyes out on mainstream media for articles that are indirectly related to your field – journalists are adept at turning dry data into a newsworthy article and, with enough time and practice, you will be too.
Use social proof
Wonder why businesses display those Facebook boxes on their websites that show their fan numbers and the smiling faces of strangers? Because they provide ‘social proof’ to web visitors that this business is ‘liked’ by others.
Testimonial quotes used around a website and scattered strategically through a sales page, even screenshots of Facebook and Google reviews indicate that your business has the tacit approval of others. And others, even strangers, count.
Collect them and use them in your marketing. They are gold!
Argue against your interests
We know that businesses don’t really care about us. They’re only interested in their bottom line and given the chance, an over-eager salesperson would harangue us for our commitment and credit card details.
So it surprises us when a business argues against its apparent self-interests.
Which is why it works as a copywriting technique.
When we argue why people shouldn’t buy from us – particularly phrases such as “This is not for you if …” – it makes us appear honest and credible. It’s clearly in our interests to encourage sales, so why would we suggest that people not buy unless we were totally honest, open and trustworthy?
There are a couple more benefits of arguing against your interest too.
First, suggesting situations or people where purchasing isn’t recommended means you are discouraging those who won’t get a great result from you. The more you can discourage people who are a bad fit away from your business, skewing higher customer satisfaction as a result.
Second, suggesting that people shouldn’t buy makes what you have that much more appealing. Things that are difficult to purchase (but not too difficult that people abandon their purchase from exasperation) and things that are limited or rare are far more attractive.
So go ahead and discourage people.
Know fear
Too often in business, we’re so well-versed in why people could, or would, or should buy, that we give little to no thought on why they don’t. Knowing the multi-layers of value your business offers is pretty useless without also knowing what people fear.
It’s fear that stops people purchasing. It’s fear that wastes your web traffic dollars. It’s fear that unravels the most brilliant marketing plans.
If someone is ready to buy what you sell but doesn’t, it’s the fear that you won’t deliver on your promise that stops them. It’s lack of trust and credibility in your ability to deliver the benefits that your business promises.
The final step towards of entering their credit card details is another key moment of anxiety – anxiety which often leads to an abandoned shopping cart. So allay fears with small additions around the shopping cart, such as guarantees (with credible detail), contact details (with a landline number), and a graphic badge of your site security if you use it, such as ‘Secured by Sucuri’.
Too often businesses make the mistake of trying to bypass the flirtation of social media, the dating of email marketing and caress of phone contact. Their website reads like the door-to-door salesman, haranguing the hapless homemaker into purchasing, now! At all costs!
Become familiar with the flipside of trust – fear. Get to know the many and varied fear points that influence people not to buy. Then subtly address these throughout your site, while building trust and credibility in your business.
Remember that your job is not only to make sales – it’s also to build trust that will fuel your business’s longevity.
9 Responses
Great article. The idea of arguing against interests is something I have employed recently and it works well. It speaks an honesty that cant be conveyed truthfully in many other ways.
Yeah that’s a good one isn’t it Gavin. In fact, I think that’s the best tip of them all. I mean they’re all good but I think that’s a must-have section of all sales landing pages.
Thanks for commenting!
Thanks Gavin. There is so much over-blown confidence in sales pages. A sales page that employs reason and states what people are best suited, and which aren’t, also works effectively because it’s a fresh thing that others don’t (generally) do. Glad to hear it’s working for you.
Love Brook’s insights. It really is a matter of treating your website visitors as you would like to be treated when searching online for a good or service. You want respect, social proof, reasonable pricing, understanding. The website that offers all these will always get the sale over the one that doesn’t. I say this knowing my website needs some serious work!!!
Thanks Bec. Might be time to start chipping away at your website, then. Start with what you perceive to be the biggest issue and work down your list from there. And let me know how you go!
Thanks Brook and Belinda, there are some really practical tips here that have inspired me to have a fresh look at my website to make sure I’m covering all the suggestions.
Glad to hear it’s inspired you into a site review Mel!
Thank you for this article. It definitely applies to my fledgling website, and also serves as a reminder to me to get on my ‘about us’ page…it’s the hardest to write, but I think also the most important if I’m to get customers to trust us enough to get us out in person where we can actually demonstrate our trustworthiness! Thanks for taking the time to write and share.
You need to show that you care for their problem and show them how the product is going to benefit them and their efforts.
Build trust and your connection with your audience or customers. Be unique and offer a product that will create a positive track-record into the future.
Thanks for the post!
– Samuel, Internet Dreams