Online Marketing: How To Win Your Customer Trust

How do you win your online customer trust, in a way that makes you feel good while satisfying your customer needs and expectations? Is it a matter of how loud you scream, of how easy it is to find it on major search engines or of how many people testify to your greatness? Probably none of these will do, but the answer is right in front of your nose, if you just look at how your physical world suppliers have done and continue to do it even when they have no online presence whatsoever. How_to_win_customer_trust_size400_b.jpg Photo credit: bonsaigian To get customer trust you have to give out something valuable without asking anything in return. A few weeks back, I involved a group of my passionate POP subscribers to collaboratively lay out with me a concept map illustrating all of the possible ways to gain unconditional customer trust in an online environment. What came out of it is a rich idea map, full of many useful marketing tips and customer service suggestions that can help most any online publisher or entrepreneur. Here below are both the original version of that map, as it presented itself after a few days of spontaneous collaborative crowd-sourced inputs, as well as a new refined and edited version of the same which I have prepared later to synthesize and distill the key recommendations received. Find here 18 different strategic suggestions on how to win your online customer trust, they key factor needed to successfully sell, promote or market anything on the Internet.
How_to_win_customer_trust_mindmap_screenshot.jpg
Click the image to access the new edited mindmap or go to the old unedited mindmap




How To Win Your Customer Trust



1. GIVE


Always Deliver More Than Expected

How_to_win_customer_trust_deliver_more_id290490.jpg Provide extra value. For some this may mean to "give in abundance". For others it just means giving REAL value to your customers, beyond what is the "standard" expectation. This can be done in many ways:
  • by providing more than the customer expects,
  • by throwing in additional bonuses,
  • by offering free support,
  • by extending service and in many other possible ways.
It's the "go the extra mile" philosophy.




Give Out As a Gift Something of Great Value

How_to_win_customer_trust_give_out_valuable_id20808231.jpg Give away something so valuable that speaks miles for your products and your desire to satisfy your customer needs beyond expectations.




Offer a Tryout

How_to_win_customer_trust_offer_tryout_id755716.jpg Always give opportunities to try your product / service. Not allowing your potential customers to see, or try out directly your product is an indication to them that you have something to hide.




Make Your Customer Feel Special

How_to_win_customer_trust_special_customer_id7210481jpg.jpg Do something special for your customer. Give her a present, a gift, something good is always effective. Take the time out to do an informal text chat to help out with something problematic or just share something nice you have just discovered yourself.




Cheer Your Customer Up As You Do With Your Dog

How_to_win_customer_trust_cheer_customer_like_dog_id15477831.jpg Cheer your (potential) customer up and make a party each time you meet, just like people do with their dogs when they get back home - it works!








2. LISTEN


Listen Closely

How_to_win_customer_trust_listen_id35784831.jpg Listen to real, hidden goals. Don't force your solutions on your customer. Listen in between his phrases to what he is really looking for to obtain and find a way to get him there. Restate what the person is telling you to be certain you understand his perspective. Listen for emotional messages, not just logic. No stereotypes.




Allow Sharing of Customer Stories and Experiences

How_to_win_customer_trust_sharing_id33400911.jpg Potential customers have great stories and ideas to share. Create venues for them to do so and utilize their best stories to let your know customers learn what to expect from you.




Let Criticism Flow In

How_to_win_customer_trust_criticism_id26236691.jpg Welcome criticism and leverage it to make improvements. Reach out to customers to have them suggest new ideas and solutions to improve your product. Utilize an integrated, contextual feedback service like uservoice.com or getsatisfaction.com.





Don't Try To Sell, Focus On Listening and Helping Out

How_to_win_customer_trust_listen_help_out.jpg People don't like when someone tries to openly sell them something, unless they are the ones asking for it. That's why your goal, when trying to win your customer trust, should be one of first listening and trying to understand what the real problem is. They try to help out sincerely, without the pressing desire to sell something at all costs. Do it because you care about helping people in your niche marketplace. If they get help, they start to trust you, and when they trust you, they are going to ask you where they can buy what you actually sell.









3. BE A MODEL


Never Advise One Thing and Then Do The Opposite

How_to_win_customer_trust_advise_do_opposite_id858322.jpg Walk your talk. Recommend what you honestly would for yourself. Honesty is always the best policy.




Always Begin With The Intention to Serve and Give

How_to_win_customer_trust_serve_id21655011.jpg That should be your starting point. Not the one of selling. Help out is your first mission.




Lead by Example

How_to_win_customer_trust_lead_by_example_id370992.jpg Be a model. Apply your advice to your own blog, business and network. Be coherent with what you preach.




Lead With Humbleness

How_to_win_customer_trust_lead_from_beneath_id6710811.jpg Be a servant leader, asking: "How can I help you vs. me succeed?" Share, give support, inspire, encourage, guide.




Know Your Competition Like Your Pockets

How_to_win_customer_trust_know_competition_id305728.jpg Customers love to have as a supplier a passionate expert. Someone who knows every product in the market, and the differences, strengths and weaknesses of each one. Competitors are also an enormous resource for inspiration. They often have cool ideas before you that can inspire you, they make mistakes just like you do and it is good to know and learn from them yourself. The more you you ignore your competition the more your customer will ignore you.









4. BE TRANSPARENT


Show HOW You Do What You Do

How_to_win_customer_trust_show_id39358701.jpg Customers and prospective ones love to see how you actually create / edit / produce the product you offer. It allows them to see how much passion, skill and expertise you put into it.




When You Cannot Sell Your Products Suggest

How_to_win_customer_trust_suggest_id40725011.jpg If you don't have what your potential customer is looking for, don't send him away. Suggest an alternative solution if it involves sending your customer to the competition. Show that you care about finding a solution for them, not getting their money.




Publish Yourself

How_to_win_customer_trust_publish_id15332241.jpg Have a place where you publish regularly your sources, your insights (Twitter, blog, Facebook group / page, Tumblr, ClaimID, etc...) Freely share new communication tools vs hogging info to make yourself look better. This will communicate your attitude towards knowledge sharing and collaboration to everybody else, and your potential customer will see it as a proof of your engagement in the area. Even more-so, of your willingness to help them succeed! Share not only your flow of data (search results, Digg, bookmarks, links...) = information, but also your network of contacts and valuable / trusted sources = people.




Know When To Walk Away

How_to_win_customer_trust_go_away_id9832052jpg.jpg If you don't have what the customer needs but your competitor does, let your customer know. He will be thankful if he will happen to come around again, as he now knows that you are there just to sell him something. You have gained some trust.


Originally prepared by Robin Good and Daniele Bazzano for MasterNewMedia, and first published on June 1st, 2009 as "Online Marketing: How To Win Your Customer Trust".

Photo credits: Cheer Your Customer Up As You Do With Your Dog - Lisa F. Young Don't Try To Sell, Focus On Listening and Helping Out - DualCall Make Your Customer Feel Special - James Steidl Know What Should Be Free and What Should Not Be Free - adempercem Always Deliver More Than Expected - Tomasz Trojanowski Always Begin With The Intention to Serve and Give - Helder Almeida Let Criticism Flow In - Mikhail Kovalev Know When to Walk Away - Luis Francisco Cordero Give Out As a Gift Something of Great Value - Valeriya Potapova Lead From Beneath As a Servant - noahgolan Lead by Example - Tomasz Trojanowski Never Advise One Thing and Then Do The Opposite! - pmtavares Publish Yourself - Konstantinos Kokkinis Offer a Tryout - Ljupco Smokovski Show HOW You Do What You Do - nyul Know Your Competition Like Your Pockets - mipan When You Cannot Sell Your Products, Suggest - Jean-Noël Tercier Listen Closely - Stefan Andronache Allow Sharing of Customer Stories and Experiences - sgursozlu
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