Where is Your Phone Number? |  | Visited: 1719 |
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| | by Jeff Mulligan October 25, 2003 |
| Jeff Mulligan |
About the Author:
Jeff
Mulligan has an MBA and 20+ years of marketing experience
as an ad agency Senior VP and VP Marketing for two software companies,
one of which was publicly traded. Jeff owns CBmall, a site that
provides 10 different ways for ClickBank affiliates to earn income
on 1,997 ClickBank InfoProducts. http://www.cbmall.com/10ways.asp
Jeff
Mulligan
CBmall.com
603-315-3456
Learn
10 Powerful Ways CBmall Makes You Money and get your
own automated income stream.
http://www.cbmall.com/10ways.asp |
| Jeff Mulligan
has written 2 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Jeff Mulligan... |
There
is probably a major problem lurking on your sales page right now.
And it could be hurting your profits.
Experts
agree that one of the most important factors in a successful website
is credibility. This frequently translates into the credibility
of the site owner. People are more likely to buy from somebody they
believe in.
Is your website
as credible as it could be?
People
judge credibility by many subtle factors. Does the design of the
site look professional? Is the site well written? Are there typos
and grammar errors strewn throughout the site? Is the author believable?
Does the author have experience in this market or with this product?
These are all important factors.
We
also know that a strong guarantee is a key part of a successful
sales page. Taken one step further, the reader needs to believe
he will actually get a refund if requested. And herein often lies
a major inconsistency.
Look
at your sales page and ask yourself: Who is standing behind the
product? What do you provide for contact information?
If
there is only an e-mail address, or worse yet, no contact information
at all, then you do not have a believable guarantee.
If
you want someone to believe that you stand behind your product you
need to be reachable. Put your complete contact information on your
web site. I'm not just talking about an e-mail address. Consider
adding your snail mail address and even, dare I say, your phone
number.
At
first, I worried about using this approach. I feared getting calls
at all hours of the night. I worried about getting overwhelmed.
But, I reasoned, I could always remove the phone number if it became
a problem.
Turns
out, having my phone number on the site is a blessing. I have made
dozens of sales because I have been available to answer one or two
simple questions from a prospect. I now look at each telephone call
as an opportunity to help someone solve their problem and, frequently,
earn their business.
I have
received numerous comments from customers saying that one of the
reasons they purchased is because they can tell there is a "real
person" standing behind this business. The fact it is, I only
get about one or two phone calls a day. And my sites have thousands
of visitors every day.
In
summary, take a look at your own sales page or contact page with
a critical eye. Do you look like just another anonymous web site?
Or is there a person there; ready, willing and able to help. The
answer to these questions may have a lot to do with your conversion
rates.
At
the very least, test putting your phone number on your web site.
Even if your web business is part time, with a good voice mail system
you will sound professional and you can return phone calls when
you are able. Try this credibility improvement. And see if it doesn't
improve your sales.
Jeff
Mulligan (C) 2003
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