How to get your customers to trust your website
By Glenn Murray | Advertising
Copywriter, Website
Copywriter, Article PR Specialist *
Research reveals three important facts:
- The Internet is one of the most important sources
of information.
- The trustworthiness of the Internet is declining.
- Customers will come back to your site if they trust
it.
In the face of a declining trust in the Internet, there’s
definitely value in creating a website which can be
trusted by your visitors. But how do you do it? That’s
what this article is all about.
But first, the research…
According to a recent major study, "Ten Years,
Ten Trends", conducted by the Center
for the Digital Future, a leading authority on the
impact of the Internet, the Internet is still seen as
one of the most important sources of information, but
people are placing less faith in the reliability of
that information.
These findings are supported by earlier research. American
Express found that 73% of people use the Internet to
gather information, and Lyra Research found that 48%
of people use the Internet to find work-related information
as opposed to 7% who use magazines. When it comes to
reliability of information, A.T. Kearney found that
workers take so long trying to find information that
it costs organisations $750 billion annually!
But never fear! All is not lost. It is possible to
stem the tide – at least as far as your own website
is concerned. According to Nielsen NetRatings, helpful
website content develops site loyalty. The average person
visits no more than 19 websites in the entire month
in order to avoid information overload – they tend
to rely on the sites that they can trust to help them.
So how do you make yours one of those sites? How do
you inspire trust in your visitors?
The answer is simple – make your website copy
trustworthy!
Following are 8 steps that’ll put you on the
road to a trustworthy website.
STEP 1 - Always include your contact details
Always! This includes an email address, phone numbers,
fax numbers, and address. Without these details, you’ll
look like a fly-by-night operation.
STEP 2 – Tell us who you are
Dedicate a page of copy to the people who run your
company. You don’t need to say much – just
provide a little history. Talk about their work history,
career highlights, education and qualifications, etc.
And it never hurts to include a little personal information
as well. Let your readers know who you are.
STEP 3 – Know it & Show it
It’s not enough that you know what you’re
talking about. Your readers have to know you know it!
This normally means including a little bit of technical
information or some other titbit that potential customers
will recognise as expertise. (And always check your
facts before publishing. If possible, include statistics
or some other form of research results.)
STEP 4 – Include samples & testimonials
Of course, if you’re going to talk the talk, you
have to be able to walk the walk. Validate your claims
by including samples of your previous work (if applicable),
and testimonials from some satisfied customers.
STEP 5 – Something for nothing
Nothing inspires trust more than an offer of something
for nothing. But you have to make sure that ‘something’
is helpful. And make it doubly clear that it really
is obligation-free. Nothing undermines credibility faster
than the suspicion that there’s a hidden catch.
STEP 6 – Avoid advertorial style web copy
Don’t go on and on, page after page, repeating
the same thing using different words. Make your point
and make it quickly. Don’t insult your visitors’
intelligence by implying that they’ll believe you
if you just say it often enough! If you use advertorial
style web copy, you’ll seem more interested in
yourself than the business solution you’re offering
your client.
STEP 7 – Avoid hard-sell web copy
Once again, don’t insult your visitors’ intelligence.
Hard-sell web copy can give the impression that you’re
more interested in the sale than the business solution.
Sure, create a sense of urgency with your web copy,
but don’t overdo it.
STEP 8 – Talk benefits not features
When you talk features, you’re talking about your
product or service - you’re talking about you.
When you talk benefits, you’re showing that you’re
interested in what the customer needs. Talking benefits
is one of the best ways to engage your customer. (For
more information on writing about benefits, see Engage
Your Customer – Write About Benefits and Writing
Benefit-Driven Web Copy.)
Websites can be a great way to engage your customers
and make sales. But you have to make sure your visitors
trust what you say. And that means getting your web
copy right.
Of course, it’s not ALL about the website copy.
Obviously you also need a website design that inspires
trust (see MC3 for that).
Happy writing!
* Glenn Murray is an advertising copywriter, website copywriter, SEO copywriter, and article submission and article PR specialist. He heads copywriting studio, Divine Write, and is a director of article PR company, Article PR. He can be contacted on Sydney +612 4334 6222 or at
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. Visit http://www.DivineWrite.com or http://www.ArticlePR.com for further details, a FREE SEO eBook, or more FREE reprint articles.
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