10 Ways to Build Customer Confidence Online

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Many factors come into play when a customer makes a buying decision on the Internet, yet none may be more important than trust.

Ultimately customers choose to purchase from a given online retailer based on their ability to trust the transaction taking place. Therefore, it should be no surprise that all successful business relationships require building trust with the customer. If you can’t build trust with your potential customer, you won’t get the sale.

To illustrate let me give you a brief example.

For simplicity’s sake let’s say you have a flat tire on your car. You need that car to get from place to place and thus you need that tire fixed. It’s not a desire but rather a need/necessity.

Your doorbell unexpectedly rings and a man in a greasy jumpsuit is standing there. He says he was driving by and noticed that you had a flat tire. He points to a rusted-out old pickup truck loaded with tires heaped in the back and says he’ll sell you a tire on the spot.

He indicates that he will even install it for you at no extra charge. You glance at the truck and find no sign indicating the business he represents. Furthermore, the state of repair of his truck leaves you questioning his ability and honesty.

Would you buy it from him? I doubt it. Even though you need the tire and you need it now, the likelihood of you completing the transaction at that moment is hampered by your ability to trust the seller.

Can you trust the tire will be installed correctly? Are the tires old, new, or refurbished? Why are they just thrown in the back of his truck in a big unorganized pile? Who does he work for and is his business even legit? What are his qualifications? These questions–along with others–are all examples of what would likely go through your mind.

Each question involves basing a decision upon trust and because of the lack of it, in this case, the sale will likely be lost.

The above example illustrates how much of an impact trust plays in the final decision-making for the consumer. Now let’s turn our attention to the impact trust has online and detail numerous factors that can help you build it.

Factors That Influence Building Trust

Before we delve into how to build trust let me just state there are many ways to misconnect or disconnect with site visitors and thus break trust.

Most often it can be seen in bad design (which equates to the rusted-out old pick-up truck and an unorganized pile of tires in my offline example) or usability issues. A few of the most common design and usability mistakes I’ve seen include the use of pop-ups, poorly designed shopping carts, weak checkout processes, lack of customer assurance items such as SSL seals, shipping information, payment methods, returns policies, and unresponsive or unprofessional customer service.

Those are just a few of the factors that most often break trust. There are more, but I want to focus on building trust online not breaking it so let’s get into that now.

Below is a detailed list of items you need to consider for helping build trust online.

Usability

Building an ecommerce site with a specific target audience or market in mind is critical to the ultimate success of the store. Yet, this need is too often overlooked by many-coordination and communication are the key.

Graphic designers are rarely aware of the impact their use of animation, images, and graphical text can have on search engine visibility or compatibility with mobile devices. In a similar vein, programmers developing backend functionality are not frequently educated on the impact dynamically generated content and code can have on visibility and browser compatibility.

Most importantly, the entire development team may create a site that looks wonderful on all screen sizes and types but is, in fact, very difficult to navigate to accomplish the desired task. One answer is to involve a usability engineer and search engine optimization specialist throughout the development process.

Don’t neglect the KISS principle (Keep It Simple Stupid). Make your site simple and informative. Oftentimes the more information you provide the greater your chances are of customers becoming confused and not trusting your brand.

Security

Get a private SSL Certificate (vs. a shared one) and keep it up to date.

Clearly display the seal and words like “your transaction is 100% safe and secure” on all pages of your site, especially in areas where you are asking for personal information such as credit card numbers.

Uniqueness

Few ecommerce stores operate in markets where there is no competition. To stand out, you must differentiate your business from the rest–this is often called your UVP or unique value proposition. It’s what will make a customer choose you over your competition when all other factors are closely related or constant.

When a prospect visits your site, how are you differentiating yourself from the competition?

Too often, companies use competitors’ designs as a baseline when developing their own site. While this is not a bad idea (providing your competitors do it right and you have done your homework), make sure that when you design your site it is not so closely related to your competition that it takes away from your uniqueness.

The inclusion of key differentiators and less tangible benefits like your brand identity, culture, and values all factor into the overall customer experience and are what will help you gain a competitive advantage.

Social Media

Don’t neglect social media. Social media includes tools like Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Instagram, and can include blogging. Taking advantage of this channel can help give your company a personality, and an identity beyond the site itself. Harness the power and you can create trust through relationship building.

Contact Information

It seems obvious to include contact information on a Web site, but far too often, companies bury this information or omit it completely. All sites should include the basics: contact form, phone, fax, and mailing address where applicable. If you do business locally, consider including a map of your location as well.

Don’t hide from your customers or they will hide from you.

Visibility

The presence of your site across the internet through marketing and promotion also helps build trust. The more positive exposure you can get for your business the greater the trust.

Get mentioned in blogs, get listed in search engines (using both paid and organic methods), send out press releases, run contests, sponsor events, etc. These are all ways to gain positive exposure for your business and create trust at the same time.

Respect Your Audience

Know who your customers are and respect their needs.

Any B2B company worth its salt will have one or more of the following elements on its site: industry certifications, reviews, awards, press coverage, articles, customer testimonials, case studies, product demos, free trials, and white papers.

The key is to understand the benefits of each in building trust, and determining relevance to your company, industry, and target audience.

For business-to-consumer (B2C) Web sites such as e-retailers, there are entirely different expectations and requirements. Some of the more important site elements include strong brand/identity, security certifications, and guarantees, shipping, return and privacy policies, customer testimonials, product reviews, promotions, and product comparisons.

Rather than get distracted by the bells and whistles, it’s critical to ensure the site functions reliably and visitors can find what they are looking for without the need to dig deep for it.

Anticipate Every Question

I’ve written numerous articles on answering your customer’s questions before they ask them. This is done through first understanding your customer and then placing the proper elements in the right locations on the site to address their concerns at precisely the right moment they typically would ask.

Anticipating their questions and answering accordingly helps build trust. Impressions of secrecy or anything that makes a customer’s visit to a site difficult, can annihilate trust.

Confirm, Confirm, and Confirm

It’s often said the most important time for car manufacturers to advertise is within four weeks after purchase. Why? This is the period during which consumers need confirmation they’ve made the right choice. The principle is no different online, but the reality may be more important than in the brick-and-mortar world.

Confirm orders placed with emails to the customer immediately following a successful sale. Confirm the shipment of the item when it is sent and include tracking information for them as well. Don’t forget to follow up with an email sometime after delivery (not too soon after) thanking them again and asking them if they are satisfied with the product or have any questions about it.

This type of proactive approach builds a relationship that has trust as its foundation. Even after purchasing, customers want to feel they made the right choice. It’s your job to assure them they have.

Answer customer inquiries quickly

If a customer asks a question, answer within 24 hours. Nothing can hurt your business more than not responding to a customer inquiry on time. It sends a message that they are not important enough to warrant a quick response and often leads to lost sales and bad PR.

Trust is built on a foundation with a multitude of influential elements. The fewer influential elements included in your Web site, the greater the likelihood the visitor will go elsewhere, like a competitor’s site. By following the above recommendations, you are all but guaranteeing an increase in trust and online sales.

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