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Should
I use you or how should
I use you?
Creating credibility
with your web site.
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| By: Chad Barr, President, CB Software Systems, Inc. |
| Of
the sites you get
to visit when using
the web, how many
of them do you decide
to contact or eventually
do business with?
Also ask yourself,
of the total visitors
that potentially visit
your own web site,
how many of them end
up contacting you
and conduct business
with you? What made
you and your visitors
contact the sites
you visited or end
up being their customer?
I believe the answer
may be summarized
in three words: intrigued
interest, value and
credibility.
How do visitors
end up showing
on your web site?
There are several
reasons. They
may already know
about you, been
there before,
get your business
card, receive
your company’s
paperwork, view
your email signature,
told about it
verbally, read
it in the news
or heard it on
the radio or TV,
be directed to
it from other
web sites or found
it using search
engines. Although
the page displayed,
especially if
directed from
a search engine,
may not be your
home page, the
page that is displayed
when typing your
domain name (URL)
is your home page.
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The responsibility of your
web development team, when
developing your site, is to
create ecstatically pleasing
pages that are easy to navigate,
grab attention, communicate
the professional image of
your company and most importantly,
create immediate credibility.
The following are the 14 important
basic ways to generate credibility
on your web site:
- Testimonials
– These are your
clients’ words describing
the impact you had on
their organizations and
how better off they are
after working with you.
You must continually request
your clients to send you
testimonials and when
they agree to do so, make
sure you suggest they
comment on the biggest
impact and outcome you
had on their organization.
When incorporating testimonials
on your web site, I suggest
you have a testimonial
tab that includes as many
as possible. Pull out
the most powerful sentence
and display on that page,
with the client name and
company name for additional
credibility. On the various
site pages, include appropriate
testimonials that substantiate
why you are the expert
or why this product is
outstanding. I also recommend
you scan and link the
original letter to the
testimonial which allows
the visitor to click and
view online. Recently,
the technology became
available to easily and
economically incorporate
video testimonials from
your clients. You may
want to view our own web
site for testimonial
examples of the ideas
illustrated above
- Quoted in
– If you are able
to be quoted in any publication,
make sure you incorporate
these quotes and where
you were quoted on your
site, preferably in a
section dedicated to collecting
all these quotes.
- Appeared in
– As you get to
appear on TV, other public
appearances and various
speaking engagements,
incorporate the when,
where and what the topic
was on your web site with
the appropriate testimonial.
- Articles
– Your wisdom and
knowledge are best depicted
in the article
collection you incorporate
on your web site. These
articles are a quick taste
of your brain power and
are the reason why visitors
would want to talk with
you. Do not concern yourself
with delivering your intellectual
property for all to view.
The visitor will understand
that if this is the value
you deliver on the web,
they can only imagine
what they would learn
when they would meet you
in person.
- Value proposition
– This sentence
or two should tell me
exactly what you do, how
am I going to be better
off when working with
you and be intrigued to
find out more.
- Newsletters and
their archive
– Consider archiving
all your newsletters on
your web site which will
build the content that
not only would benefit
your visitors but also
would be loved by the
various search engines.
Remember,
great content rules
the web.
- Check lists
– These are always
of tremendous value to
visitors to be able to
refer to a quick check
list for certain tasks.
Your check lists could
cover; preparing for travel,
action plan for strategy
goals, writing an article
and so on.
- Surveys
– Why not conduct
an online survey with
your customers and publish
the results online? Visitors
are often interested to
get the scores of what
other successful organization
or CEOs think of.
- Books and e-Books
– I am not suggesting
your public display of
the books you like to
read. I suggest you write
your own books and enable
visitors to inquire further,
get a sample chapter,
download
the entire e-Book
or purchase the book.
- Teleconferences
and podcasting
– Why not record
your wisdom and knowledge
and enable visitors to
listen to some of it or
download for free or for
a fee?
- Videos and audios
– Same concept as
the previous point. Professionally
record your next presentation
and make it available
on your web site.
- Typical client
results –
As I stated earlier, create
a tab on your web site
that describes in bullet
points the great outcome
you were able to generate
for your clients. Outline
about seven points and
support them with client
testimonials and scanned
letters. Click here for
additional examples of
this client
results concept.
- Case studies
– Document some
of the more interesting
work you’ve done
with your clients and
place it in the case studies
tab section. If possible
and not revealing confidential
information, name the
client you’ve done
the work for.
- Client list
– Name your clients
and be proud to publish
their list online.
First remember that when it
comes to your home page content,
less is actually more. No
one goes to your home page
to read text upon text and
no one cares. Your site should
create the “Wow”
factor when visitors get there.
I often use the comparison
of your home page to a highway
billboard. Just like driving
down the highway and either
noticing the message on a
billboard and thinking further
about it or not, your web
site generates the same reaction.
Your visitor is either intrigued
by the design, powerful message,
and value they received and
perceived credibility, or
they press the back button
and are out of there. The
idea is to transform your
visitors from thinking should
I use you or how should I
use you.
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