10 Secrets to Asking for Effective Client Testimonials for Your Website
I tend to be a skeptical consumer. I see so much marketing
hype these days it's becoming more and more difficult to
discern what's real and what's fabricated, and I've found
that to be especially true when it comes to buying products
and services online. However, reading testimonials from
other satisfied customers helps in my buying decision many
times.
As a service business owner, requesting testimonials from
satisfied clients is one of the quickest ways you can start
to establish trust with your online visitors. Why?
Because it's not just you touting how wonderful you are --
it's other people stating how happy they were with your
product or service and how its use changed their lives for
the better. Testimonials create credibility,
believability, and a sense of security for prospective
customers when they visit your site, as they then know that
others have successfully used your product or service.
As a side benefit, requesting testimonials from happy
clients creates increased loyalty to you from your existing
clients. This happens because the act of providing a
testimonial puts their credibility on the line, as well, in
terms of backing a product or service that they are willing
to stand behind. Additionally, they feel that they are
making a vital contribution to helping your business grow
and prosper.
How do you go about getting effective testimonials for your
website? Here are 10 strategies for creating testimonials
that will make your visitors say, "Wow -- I've got to get
that!":
1. Ask when the timing is right. When should you ask for
testimonials? It depends on the nature of the work you're
providing for someone. If you tend to work with your
clients over a longer period of time, ask for the
testimonial within the first few weeks or so, or at the
point where they experience their first "ah-ha" or
significant breakthrough or change with you. If you offer
a short-term service, ask for it when you receive payment.
For example, we recently had gutters installed around our
house. The man who did the work was quick, efficient,
thorough, easy to work with, had a great product, and did a
wonderful job. Had he asked, I would have provided him
with a written testimonial on the spot!
2. Request specific results. Effective testimonials go
beyond the "Working with you was great!", which really
tells the reader very little, to a longer statement with
specific information about specific outcomes the client
received as a result of working with you or using your
product. They could use a "before and after"scenario to
paint a more dramatic picture of how effective they found
your product or service to be. Or, simply incorporating the
five Ws (Who, What, Where, When, and Why) that describe
their dealings with you is also an incredibly effective way
to write a testimonial.
3. Keep it short yet powerful. No one has time to read a
testimonial that goes on forever. Three or four sentences
is optimal for an effective testimonial. It should be one
that will quickly grab your reader and deliver a powerful
punch. Your clients will appreciate knowing that you value
a short testimonial--it takes much less of their time and
doesn't seem like such a major hassle to complete.
4. Request to use their contact info. Make your
testimonial provider a "real person" in the eye of your
visitors. When you ask for a testimonial, it's most helpful
if you request to use the name, website, and photo of the
person providing the testimonial. Technology exists where
you can request an audio testimonial from them, or if
you're at a conference, you can create a video testimonial
as well. Testimonials with initials and a city or just a
job title don't strike me as authentic -- to me, they
appear to be fabricated by the business owner.
5. Get diverse testimonials. I become quite skeptical of
testimonials of well-known Internet marketers, for example,
when all I see on their sites are testimonials by other
well-known Internet marketers. It appears like they have a
testimonial club established. I'm also skeptical if all I
see are testimonials from people in the same industry as
the person who is requesting the testimonial. Remember, the
point of providing testimonials is so that your visitor can
see a visual representation of someone like him/herself who
has used your product or service successfully and has
gained real results from doing so. Make sure that the
testimonials you use represent a cross-section of your
target market.
6. Request their permission to use the testimonial in all
of your marketing efforts. You may decide to incorporate
testimonials into your brochures, direct mail, special
reports, print ads, etc. Make sure that you can use the
testimonial in any of your marketing strategies.
7. Write the testimonial for them. This may seem counter
to every strategy listed above, but reality dictates this
step if you have busy customers or clients who simply hate
to write. In many cases, you may have heard your client
sing your praises so often that all you need to do is write
down what you've been hearing and send it to that client
for any revisions and approval. Or, you can request a a
10-minute interview with the client and create a
testimonial based on what answers are given in the
interview and send that to your client for approval, as
well.
8. Use case studies if you're new in business. If you've
just opened your business, you probably have few, if any,
clients at this point, which means you have no one to ask
for a testimonial. In that case, I tell my new business
owner clients to use either use testimonials from their
former lives as employees, which is a passable strategy but
not the best, or better yet, create and use case studies on
their site.
Some case studies anonymously document a situation and a
problem of a client and then how the business owner helped
the client resolve that problem. However, newbie business
owners will need to research the problems of their
potential clients and then create a solution for those
problems. The problem-solution case studies can then be
used in lieu of testimonials to help the new business owner
create credibility with website visitors.
9. Create a system for requesting testimonials. If you're
selling information products online, incorporate a
testimonial request and testimonial writing guideline into
your follow up autoresponder system. If you work with
clients on an ongoing basis, incorporate your testimonial
request into the sequence of your regular correspondence
and follow up with your clients. If you work with clients
only on a short-term basis, incorporate your request into
your invoicing process and provide either an email address
or online form to make the process as easy and automated as
possible for them.
10. Thank your testimonial provider. Everyone likes to
hear a "thank you" when extending a favor to others, so
take the time and drop a note or postcard in the mail to
show your thanks. Because we're so overwhelmed with emails
these days, a handwritten thank you attracts more attention
and is more memorable than ever before.
Getting testimonials from happy clients helps you become
more trustworthy in the eyes of your visitors. By
implementing a testimonial request system and incorporating
testimonials into both your online and offline marketing
efforts, you'll create a two-fold effect of establishing
credibility with new customers and inspiriting loyalty in
current ones.
About the Author:
Online Business Resource Queen (TM) and Online Business
Coach Donna Gunter helps self-employed service
professionals learn how to automate their businesses,
leverage their expertise on the Internet, and get more
clients online. To sign up for more FREE tips like these
and claim your FREE gift, TurboCharge Your Online Marketing
Toolkit, visit her site at
www.GetMoreClientsOnline.com
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