Top 7 Strategies to Build Trust in
Your Online Service Business
How do you know whom you can trust online? Which businesses
are legit, and which ones are primed to rip you off? It can
be tough these days determining which is which. With the
advent of phishing and other online threats, some days you
just want to shut down your email program and Internet
browser and wish for a face-to-face interaction with someone
that you know, like it was in the "good ole' days" before
the Internet took over our lives.
The ability to do business online is both a blessing and a
curse, to paraphrase Tony Shalhoub's TV character, Adrian
Monk, from the series "Monk". As a business owner, the
Internet lets you expand your business to more potential
customers than ever before. However, as a small service
business owner, you can't be everywhere at once, nor can you
possibly have time for personal interactions with all of
your potential clients. So, what's an online business owner
to do?
You can clone yourself online. I'm not referring to some
science fiction technology involving the creation of a
"mini-me". Rather, you want to create an experience of you
that is available to prospective clients, without you having
to actually be there. Your "clone" creates a feeling of
confidence in your prospective customer base -- a feeling
that you're a real, live human being whom your prospective
client can reach out and touch whenever needed.
Here are 7 strategies you can use to create your online
business clone and increase customer confidence:
1. Make contact easy. Ensure your contact
info clearly displayed on your website. Make it easy for
your visitors to find your mailing address, phone number, or
email address. Nothing is more frustrating to me when I'm
searching for info on a website than to find only an 800
number. I want to know with whom I'm about to do business
(a name) and where this business is located.
2. Be responsive. Respond to all email
inquiries and phone calls in a timely fashion. Or, install
a live chat feature on your site. I've dropped an email to
several well-known consultant-types after reading their new
book or hearing about a project in which they're involved,
and have been happily surprised to receive an email response
from them, and even a phone call, in some cases. Nothing
satisfies that human need for connection than some personal
attention, and promptly returning your phone calls and
emails will provide that for your visitors.
3. Become a real person. Use audio and video
on your website and your photo. No one likes to do business
with a faceless corporate entity. Come out of hiding and
display your photo on your website, or photos of you in
action in your business. Create a visual image in the mind
of your visitor. Better yet, with the increasing popularity
of online video and audio, let them hear and witness you in
action. A great tool to help you put audio and video on
your website is
AudioAcrobat.
4. Provide client testimonials. "Can she do
what she says she can do?" is a common question asked of
service business owners, and they want to read about others
who've been happy consumers of your service. Ask current
and former clients for powerful testimonials and sprinkle
them across your website. Keep in mind that the best
testimonials give a synopsis of the client's problem prior
to hiring you, and the happy outcome as a result of hiring
you. Those that just say, "Oh, Donna is wonderful!" is a
great ego boost, but provide little credibility to your
visitors.
A second powerful way to demonstrate your results is by
providing case studies, or a synopsis of a problem that a
client faced and your strategy that helped that client solve
that problem. People want to do business with people who
have a proven track record, and testimonials and case
studies provide that track record for you.
5. Demonstrate your expertise. One of the
easiest ways to tell the world what you know is by writing
articles. Article writing is an extremely personal
experience for me, as I'm typically writing about a problem
that a client has had, an issue that came up in conversation
recently with a potential client, or something with which
I'm struggling in my business or something I want to
research and know more about. The greatest compliment that
I ever got about my articles (other than the fact that they
contain useful info <g>) is that each article really sounds
like me. Don't worry about giving away your info -- those
who may be able to implement your information without hiring
you can also become your biggest champion and referral
source because they know that you know what you're talking
about.
And, you never know where your articles might lead. I got a
call today from a friend who was in an online chat for
resellers of a product, and the topic of writing articles
came up with another person in the chat room. My friend
went to my blog to provide a link to an article I had
written on the topic of article submission, and when he
published it on the chat, the person with whom he was
chatting said, "Oh, I know Donna." My friend was blown away
by the coincidence. There are no coincidences--just good
marketing..:)
6. Provide freebies. Add value to your
website visitors by giving something away -- an ebook, a
report, an ecourse, an audio recording, or a a free
teleclass. The more you can demonstrate your expertise and
the more ways that a visitor can begin to know, like, and
respect you, the greater chance you have of building trust
with that person and converting that person into a paying
client.
7. Stay in touch. Once you've obtained
someone's contact info, stay in touch with him on a regular
basis, as the more someone sees and talks to you, the
quicker the trust develops. Regular communication is key,
and you can stay in touch on a regular basis through the
publication of an email newsletter, a free teleclass series
that is open to all of your contacts, or by updating your
website regularly with new content, like articles for your
target market.
Giving your visitors confidence that they can trust what you
do and say is one key to success in the online world.
Eliminate the barriers in doing business with you and set
visitors on the path of getting to know, like, and respect
you. When you do, you'll discover that their trust
isn't too far behind.
(c) 2009 Donna Gunter
WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE OR WEB SITE? You
can, as long as you reprint the article in its entirety
and include this blurb with it:
Internet Marketing Automation
Coach Donna Gunter helps independent service professionals create prosperous
online businesses that make more profit in less time by teaching them how to
automate their businesses, leverage their expertise, and get found online.
Would you like to learn the specific Internet marketing strategies that get
results? Discover how to increase your visibility and get found online by
claiming your FREE gift, TurboCharge Your Online Marketing Toolkit, at ==>
http://www.TurbochargeYourOnlineMarketing.com.
Return
to Index of All Articles
Want to receive more articles like
these? Subscribe to my free weekly email newsletter, Get Clients Online,
where you'll learn the proven strategies I use every single day in my business
to get 95% of my clients from Internet marketing.
Subscribe below:
|