Once Your Yellow Page Ad or Website Brings Customers In, Make Purchasing Easy for Them
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Title: Once Your Yellow Page Ad or Website Brings Customers In, Make Purchasing Easy for Them
Word Count: 776
Author: Lynella Grant
Email: grant@promotewitharticles.com
Article URL: www.submityourarticle.com/articles/easypublish.php?art_id=3285
The article is preformatted to 60CPL.
Once Your Yellow Page Ad or Website Brings Customers In, Make Purchasing Easy for Them
Copyright 2005 Off the Page
Smooth Out Customer Choice Points
Developing a trusting customer relationship is a process.
And sales seldom happen without trust. A relationship
builds as a sequence of steps follow one another. Whether
contact occurs in a single encounter or over time, each
step is riddled with choices. As the sales process goes
along, customers have to be willing to take another step -
to make further commitments (however small) of their time
and attention.
When customers already trust you and are interested in what
you’re offering, they’ll take the next step without
hesitation. However, if they’re unsure about you (or had a
prior negative experience), they’ll want to think about it
- and just maybe that’s when they realize they aren’t all
that interested after all.
Each buyer choice point actually ups the ante. On some
unstated level, buyers know they’re committing to the next
step, bringing the transaction closer to happening. These
steps get riskier (for you as well as them) whenever you
specifically ask them to do something more.
Choice points are precisely the places you’re most likely
to lose them - when they bail out of the process.
Kinds of buyer choice points - Come into the store - Read
the ad beyond the headlines - Listen to this audio tape -
Visit the website - Pick up the phone and call - Try it for
30 days without obligation - Take a test drive; check out
the product - Write the check - Negotiate the monthly
payments for a purchase - Present their credit card
Sour notes that creep into the experience can break the
inevitability of them taking the next step. These
interaction points represent higher risk to sellers,
because that’s when buyers are is most likely to reconsider
or flee.
Anything that breaks the steadily building momentum puts
the sale at risk. And just because the deal’s complete,
don’t relax. There are always plenty of reasons why a
person changes her mind and wants out (or returns the
product) afterwards.
That’s why even free offers can be a hard sell. A person
has to think about whether it’s worth the effort or
inconvenience to try or assess something new. Whether it’s
worth changing their existing preferences to consider what
you’re offering.
Reduce Obstacles that Make Customers Walk Away
Imagine a typical sales process that takes eight-steps,
from the time the person steps into the store (or website)
looking for a particular product, until she walks out with
it. What percentage of your potential buyers taking the
first step make it through to the last one? If you want
them to complete the whole sequence, it’s critical their
entire experience moves as smoothly as possible.
Identify each place where your procedures impose upon
customers. (Who cares if the competition does it, too!
Solving the “glitch” gives you an advantage, while showing
respect for buyers.) Do they add extra aggravations or
increases the likelihood of them walking away? What could
be done to make interaction points less risky or annoying?
Become obsessive about getting them so smooth and
trouble-free that they’re hardly noticeable at all.
Assess each obstacle/choice point you’ve got built into the
buying and paying process. These are the exact places where
you’re losing customers - and sales. When customers can’t
get the help needed, can’t find the product in the model or
size wanted, can’t navigate through the check-out without
mishap, she’s likely to stop midstream.
Let’s assume that she gets all the way through and
completes the purchase, despite the obstacles. What are the
odds she’ll be in a hurry to come back?
Online, seventy to ninety percent of those who start to
make a purchase don’t complete the process (abandoned
shopping carts, etc.). These were people motivated enough
to attempt to buy, and gave up. It’s unlikely that figures
are anywhere near that high in retail situations, but
they’re still much higher than they need to be. Anything
that cuts customer bail-out goes straight to the bottom
line.
Keeping Customers is Much Easier than Getting New Ones
Yellow Pages ads are primarily a tool for acquiring new
customers (your “unknown” market). And a business needs to
do that routinely. But with all the effort spent finding
more business, it’s easy to forget that getting buyers to
come in is easy compared to building a long-term
relationship with the ones you have (your “known” market).
That’s at the heart of repeat business. As you eliminate
the aggravations of doing business with you, you’ll see
more of that.
About the Author:
--Dr. Lynella Grant An expert in Yellow Page ads and Local
Search. Stand out online and offline, so you capture more
Internet-savvy buyers for your brick and mortar business.
Free resources www.localsearchresources.com
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