BUILDING CUSTOMER CONFIDENCE
One of the Internet's greatest attractions, anonymity as you go tripping
around the world, is also one of its chief weakness. People may browse
your Web pages, but when it comes to doing business, to plunking down
hard cash (or plastic, as the case may be), do they really know you? Do
they trust you?
As you design or redesign your Web site, you can do a lot to engender
customer trust and confidence by following several simple guidelines.
1. Your place in time and space
First, let people know who you are in time and space. Now to the Web
viewer, the business is no longer a cyber phantom, it is a real, live
trustworthy business. If your business is large enough to have a national
brand identity, your corporate logo can conjure up similar feelings of
confidence.
Many Web sites feature an "About the Company" page to share a vision, a
history, a philosophy, a particular business focus, and in so doing give
Web visitors a way to think about them, to understand them, and ultimately
to trust them.
2. A Way of Speaking
You've read corporate materials that were pompous and impersonal. If yours
are like that rewrite them. One of the characteristics of the Internet is
the casual way language is used. When you write with self-importance people
click elsewhere. I don't quite understand how the Internet's chattiness fits
with its anonymity, but somehow both are part of the medium. When you write
in a personal, chatty fashion people relax, and you bridge the distances
between you.
Perhaps your corporation can't speak in a chatty manner, but your Vice
President of Sales can, and you could even show her picture. As an
alternative, your Web site can be a little zany, a little laid back.
Iomega, for example, builds its site around a trademarked phrase, "Because
it's your stuff." Their site directory leads to zip stuff, ditto stuff,
support stuff, company stuff, e-mail stuff. Why? Because humor has a way of
breaking down barriers of stuffiness (pun intended) and building bridges of
trust.
Bottom line: if you keep people at arm's length, don't expect them to get
close enough to hand you their money.
3. Testimonials
A third way to build confidence is to quote what others say about you.
You've seen on-the-street interviews with background noise, casually-
dressed subjects, slightly shaky camera -- and paid actors. But they work.
They are believable. And on the Internet they are the cyber extension of
word-of-mouth advertising. People will trust you if they find that others
trust you.
Why don't you ask ten of your best customers to write five-sentence
testimonials in their own words which you could use on the Web.
Testimonials tie your credibility to reality, to real people who live in
real cities. If your site has been mentioned in reviews or received awards,
quote the reviews, show the award symbols. What is a Better Business Bureau
logo if not a testimonial? If an institution or person your Web visitors
know trusts you, they're likely to trust you as well.
4. Free services
A fourth way to build customer confidence is to offer free products,
services, or information. Web Week reported that since last July, people
have downloaded 118 gigabytes of free software from Sun Microsystems'
site. Sun gives away Java, but gains customer confidence and goodwill.
Nothing is free, especially confidence. It must be earned.
Do you offer a free customer service section to your Web site, with
questions and answers designed especially for people who are already
your customers? When you do this, you build confidence. Do you offer
free, high quality information, perhaps a newsletter? When people
receive helpful ideas from you over a period of time, they can't help but
trust you.
5. Security
Next, you need to help people feel safe in your Web site. Do you force
visitors to disclose their name and e-mail address in exchange for free
information? You gain something, but you'll turn many away. People are
appropriately hesitant to give out personal information. For example, if
someone asks your income on a questionnaire, do you answer? It's none of
their business! Put people at ease. Promise not to sell their address for
commercial purposes, and then keep your promise.
Do you know why companies you've never heard of send out more and more
unsolicited e-mail? Because spamming brings immediate new business. But
it doesn't build the reputation for courtesy, respect, and customer focus
that you need for the long term. People need to feel they can trust you to
respect their privacy. It's a difference in philosophy between mass
marketing and person-to-person marketing. While this may sound strange to
some, I believe the Internet marketplace is better developed via personal
marketing than mass broadcast approaches.
If you ask for credit information, offer an SSL Secure Server to protect
your customer's confidential financial information. And then go the next
step and protect or encrypt that same information as it is e-mailed from
the Web server to the store-owner's desktop computer. If people feel
confident in doing business with you, you'll find that you'll get more
and more orders.
6. Honesty
Perhaps the most important way to build trust is to be honest. Honest in
your advertising, honest in your products, honest in your dealings.
Reputations have a way of spreading rapidly on the Web through news
groups and mailing lists, and your reputation for fair dealing will go
before you. The Bible says, "As you sow, so shall you reap," and that is
as true in business as it is in spiritual matters.
You can build customer confidence and gradually build a thriving Web
business. Just like any business, of course, you need a longer perspective.
Most businesses don't start making a profit for many months. But persistent,
relentless, fast-on-your-feet marketing, a don't-quit attitude, and an
honest way of presenting yourself that respects the medium of the Internet
will result in the customer confidence you need for success on the Web.