Tuesday 22 March 2016

Top 10 Mistakes in Online Business

1. Waiting too long to launch a product/service

When you start blogging or podcasting to build an audience, it’s easy to get stuck on the content “hamster wheel” for months or years without ever offering something for sale.
There are a few reasons this happens.
Some people are waiting for some magic audience size “1,000 subscribers” or maybe “10,000 visitors” or whatever your number might be.
Some people just can’t find the time to blog or podcast or make videos AND to build a product at the same time. It’s tough.
Some people simply talk themselves out of creating a product because they’re afraid no one will buy it. They don’t want to fail after putting in so much time creating content.
Whatever the reason, this is a fatal trap. If you’re building a business, you need to address the biggest risk head-on. The biggest risk you’ll face as a business is in creating something no one will pay for.
Plus, you need practice at building and launching products. Your first one might not be all that good. The sooner you put something out there, the closer you get to sustainable revenue.
Mistake #1: waiting too long to launch a product or service.
Mistake #1: waiting too long to launch a product or service. 


2. Solving an unimportant problem

If the problem your business solves is important enough, you won’t even have to look for customers. Imagine if you had a cure for cancer, for example.
Businesses fail all the time because they try to solve a problem nobody really cares about. If you put your product or idea out there and nobody buys it, there’s a good chance you should look for a more important problem, not a bigger audience.
Mistake #2: Solving an unimportant problem
Mistake #2: Solving an unimportant problem. 

3. Not really listening to customers

How do you know if the problem you solve is important enough?
Listen to your customers. Really listen to them.
Don’t just listen to the customers who provide validation. Listen to the ones who ask for refunds or buy your product but don’t use it. Listen to the people who tell you they won’t buy, and find out why.
Don’t just pay lip service to your customers. You don’t have all the answers, they do. There’s a reason why “the customer is always right,” because without customers you don’t have a business.
Online Business Mistake #3: Not really listening to customers
Mistake #3: Not really listening to customers. 

4. Not being different enough

In most markets, customers have different options to choose from. If your business has competition, you have to give your potential customers a reason to choose your offering over another.
I see this all the time with new bloggers. They jump into a popular topic and essentially mimic or copy what other popular bloggers are already doing. I suppose they think “if it works for them, maybe it will work for me.”
But think about it from the reader or customer perspective. If they find your blog, they’ll be asking themselves “why is this blog worth spending any time on?” You have to answer that question quickly and clearly, before they click the back button.
You can’t expect to grow an audience by being an inferior version of some other better known site. Even if your site or product is arguably better than the competition, “better” is subjective.
Instead of simply trying to be better, you need to be different. Then, when someone asks why your site or product is worth her attention, your answer will be objective and easy to understand.
Online Business Mistake #4: Not being different enough
Mistake #4: Not being different enough. 

5. Choosing a topic you don’t care about

Whatever you choose to focus your business on, you’re going to need deep subject knowledge, fresh creativity, and unwavering stamina.
There will be competition who cares more about the topic than you do. How can you compete if the gap between your love of a topic and your competitors’ is wide?
This doesn’t mean your business has to be your #1 “passion” or life’s work (most of us don’t have one single passion in life), but don’t make things impossible by choosing something you don’t care about.
If you love your topic, stamina won’t be an issue. If you love your topic, creativity will flow, and influence will be easier to build.
Don’t ask yourself what the world needs. Ask yourself what makes you come alive and then go do that. Because what the world needs is people who have come alive. -Howard Thurman
Online Business Mistake #5: Choosing a topic you don't care about
Mistake #5: Choosing a topic you don’t care about. 

6. Starting with vastly wrong expectations

This won’t be easy, and it won’t be quick.
Building a successful business is a massive undertaking. You probably can’t do it while traveling the world. If you have a full-time job, it will be much, much harder.
If your plan involves four-hour workweeks, or if your timeline is measured in weeks or months, you will probably fail.
These are the hard truths that people rarely talk about. Overnight successes don’t exist. Your original plan will probably have to be completely re-written, maybe multiple times.
Ask yourself: will building this business still be worth it if it takes years to get there? What if building the business is harder and more stressful than your current job?
Talk to some entrepreneurs who have achieved something close to what you want to achieve. Ask them what it really took. Ask them about stress and timelines and giving up. Ask them not to sugarcoat it. Really listen. Then ask yourself if you’re prepared for your own version of that.
Online Business Mistake #5: starting with vastly wrong expectations
Mistake #5: starting with vastly wrong expectations. 

7. Spending too much time thinking and not enough doing

Not much to say here that isn’t perfectly summed up in this quote:
Genius is one percent inspiration, ninety-nine percent perspiration.
-Thomas Edison
If your ratio of thinking-to-doing is anything less than 80% doing, think again do more.
As Chase likes to say, entrepreneurs have two modes, CEO mode and worker-bee mode. In a one-person business, you have to be both.
Online Business Mistake #7: Too much thinking not enough doing
Mistake #7: Too much thinking, not enough doing. 

8. Going it alone

The only reason my business exists today is because other entrepreneur friends wouldn’t let me quit. Seriously, I tried to throw in the towel and start over with something else, but they wouldn’t let me. They talked me out of it.
No one can succeed in business alone. You need people to make it work. Your customers are people, your suppliers are people, your service providers are people.
Most importantly, you need support from other entrepreneurs who are at similar stages as you are, and from others with more experience.
The more connected you become with other entrepreneurs, the more normal your quest becomes. You’ll no longer feel crazy or alone, and you’ll realize that we all face obstacles just like you’re facing.
The entrepreneurs who talked me out of quitting were part of a little group that met weekly to hold each other accountable. It didn’t cost any of us a thing, other than an hour of our time each week, but it turned out to be the most valuable resource I ever used in my business.
Reach out to another entrepreneur or two, and ask them to meet weekly. Share your struggles and goals, and review your progress each week. This simple process is so powerful.
Online Business Mistake #8: going it alone
Mistake #8: Going it alone. 

9. Confusing “blog” with “business”

Repeat after me: a blog isn’t a business. A blog isn’t a business.
A blog is an incredible platform for sharing your ideas, connecting with people and growing an audience. The same is true of podcasting, YouTubing, or any other place you might publish content for free.
Giving away free content isn’t a business. It’s a tool for building influence.Don’t count on turning that influence into sponsorships or advertising dollars. You’ll need a more direct plan for earning an income if you want your blog or podcast to pay off.
See point #1 above about launching a product/service.
Online Business Mistake #9: confusing a blog with a business
Mistake #9: Confusing a blog with a business. 

Not starting at all

This is perhaps the biggest mistake of all. Don’t be that friend who talks and talks about starting a business for years and never does anything thing about it.
It’s easy to get so worried about all the possible mistakes that you never get started at all. But that’s the only way to guarantee failure.
Starting a business isn’t a sure thing — it takes guts and intelligence and heart and hustle — but you will get better over time ONLY if you start.
The best way to ensure you’ll succeed is simply this: don’t be afraid to make mistakes. Mistakes are part of the process. So dive in, get started and find a community to support you… because you are not alone.

Thursday 18 February 2016

How to grow your eBay store into something more

© Robbert Noordzij - licence
 
 
Taking the next big step and expanding your business beyond selling on eBay can seem like a daunting prospect, but it doesn’t have to be. If your store is having a lot of success on the popular auction site, there is no reason that it can’t stand on its own two feet and become a profitable private enterprise. In this article I will share some of the lessons I’ve learned from growing my own eBay store with the aim of helping you to do the same. With a little work, you will be able to transfer your sales from eBay to your own independent business.
 

eBay is a great place to do business

Even though I am encouraging you to look beyond the website, you should not underestimate the value of eBay to an independent vendor. The website provides the ideal platform for anyone looking to establish their start-up business, with very little outlay required for marketing and a user-friendly interface that makes listing your products very easy.
eBay is world famous and possesses incredible pulling power, with over 17 million visitors to the UK version of the site every month. The ability to tap into such a market is something that no vendor should pass up, especially during those early days. However, even when you spread your wings beyond the website, you should still look to maintain your store on there. Most successful vendors run both their own website and an eBay store in parallel. Many big high street names, like Argos and Currys-PC World, have opened their own eBay stores a long time after becoming established names, which just goes to show how valuable a market the auction site is.
 

Expand to a larger storage space

When I first started to trade on eBay, I was sourcing my products from a local wholesaler and then listing them online. During those early days, business picked up quite quickly and I was able to learn which items were bestsellers and which weren’t. By looking at what was selling well and what customers were asking about, I was able to anticipate where I needed to expand my range.
The problem was that many of these products weren’t available at the wholesalers, and I found it difficult to persuade the brands that manufactured them to work with an eBay trader who did his business from home. Once the store reached the right level of income, the first thing I did was to rent storage space for my stock. This turned out to be a great move, as not only did it give me more room for an expanded range, it gave me an address for the business. This really helped me to gain the trust of the brands I was negotiating with, and as a result, allowed me to offer a larger range of products.
 

Look for ways to improve your business processes

With the new storage space and expanded range, sales began to grow quickly. With the increased level of trade came more pressure to maintain smooth and punctual processes within the business. For example, as we were selling higher quantities of stock, there was more importance placed on stock replenishment than before, and it was obvious that something had to be done to make the current system more efficient. At first, I had members of my family helping out to make sure everything ran smoothly, but after evaluating the situation, I identified a number of ways that I could change the way I did things to really improve my business processes.
One of the first things I did was to take on a member of staff to help with the packing of orders. It can be strange at first after being a solo trader for a while, but increasing the number of hands on deck allowed me to concentrate on improving other things. I invested in some multi-channel management software so that I could automate many daily tasks, like accounting and label printing. We also had Royal Mail begin to pick-up from our warehouse, rather than taking the parcels to the post office ourselves. These were both great timesavers as it freed up a lot of time spent carrying out these tasks each day, helping us to speed up processing and delivery. This in turn contributed to our growing reputation as a brand that was both quick and reliable.
 

Invest in a website

While eBay is a fantastic resource for generating sales, an important part of growing your brand is to create your own website that can act as a home for your business. When the time comes to spread your wings and carve a space in the internet to call your own, make sure you do it the right way. A website done on the cheap is a sure-fire way to make customers think twice about ordering from you, as they try and decide whether your amateurish looking online store is a trustworthy place to spend their money.
Make sure your website is well optimised to maximise the traffic that comes from search engines – if you don’t have the expertise to do this, there are many online marketing experts who can help you out. Don’t go closing down your eBay store, as it can help to drive traffic towards your new website and vice versa. Having both outlets for sales can also help to build your brand.
 

Don’t get sucked into a price war

One thing that I have learned from my time on eBay is that there is no point in trying to compete on pricing. The website is the world’s most popular online marketplace for a reason, and there will always be another vendor looking to undercut your prices, no matter how low you go. Instead, strive to offer a great service, useful advice, and better quality products to distinguish yourself from the crowd. These are the things your customers will remember, and will go a long way to building a great reputation for your brand.
If you follow some of these pointers and apply them to your own eBay store, you are more than likely to see an increase in sales and a growth in the number of good reviews you receive. When the time is right, set out to establish your own independent store and be patient as you build an excellent reputation for your brand. Success will soon follow.
 

About Neil Parker

Neil started out selling car accessories on eBay outside of his day job. As sales increased and his store became more successful, he moved operations from his home to a dedicated business address to cope with the demand. The business has gone from strength to strength, and now retails to a large customer base and has a popular website where customers can buy from the company directly. The store recently underwent a successful re-brand to become DriveDen, and has ambitions of becoming a recognisable brand within the automotive aftermarket and accessory retail sector.
 

Top 5 Marketing Automation Tools for Small Businesses

Image Credits janeb13, CC0
 
 
For reasonable monthly or annual rates, marketing automation tools are available to small businesses to save time and money on their online marketing strategies. These tools make it efficient and practical to schedule your emails, blog and social media posts ahead of time, and can even manage your contact lists and hiring automatically.
Most businesses use a combination of marketing automation tools to organize and synchronize their online marketing efforts. Here we list the Top 5 Marketing Automation Tools to help your small business succeed online.
 

1. GetResponse

Automation Type: Email Marketing
The importance of email marketing can’t be overstated; it’s integral to create a rapport with your customers, gather information, keep track of transactional emails and, of course, grow your contact list. GetResponse has a ton of great features to help you create and publish your emails, but it’s automation really shines among others in its class. Schedule time or action-based automated emails, to a list of contacts segmented to your specifications.
Simply import contacts from your hard drive or other services like Gmail and Salesforce. From there you can set up automation for:
  • Birthday, Anniversary or Welcome Mails
  • Transactional Mails
  • Follow-ups
  • Newsletters
GetResponse has an easy-to-use interface to help you build professional-looking emails, and sends you analytic reports to help you points of strength and weakness in your campaign.
 
 

2. Zen Desk

Automation Type: Customer Service
Eventually every business hits the point where their online customer service can no longer be contained manually. Zen Desk wants to help by automating your tickets, managing customer communications from email, web, social media, phone or even live chat.
Zen Desk goes a bit further, collecting data from your tickets to let you better serve your customers in the future. It’s also compatible with other popular online marketing tools, so you can share data across apps. Conflict resolution is made quick and easy with the team of Zen Desk behind your ticket system.
 
 

3. HootSuite

Automation Type: Social Media
To make sure you’re reaching a broad range of potential and existing customers, all businesses should have a presence on multiple social media networks. Unfortunately, it can get unwieldy to organize so many different accounts without a social media automation tool like HootSuite. This all-in-one tool lets you control all your social media accounts in one place, and even collect data on how well your posts were received and what people are saying about your brand.
HootSuite lets you keep a pulse on your business’ profile over various platforms, helping you up your social network game and take your company to the next level.
 
 

4. Recruiterbox

Automation Type: Hiring
Hiring online is a great way to reach talented individuals your company needs to grow, but it can be time consuming and expensive. Recruiterbox aims to take away some of the stress involved with hiring online; post openings, manage candidates and use their thorough analysis to make the right choice.
Recruiterbox offers:
  • customizable application forms
  • helpful questionnaires
  • online and offline communication
  • detailed search options
 

5. Evernote

Automation Type: Transactional and Accounting
Organize your accounts from your mobile device, tablet or desktop computer with the ever-helpful Evernote. Lifesaving features include:
  • Save bills
  • Scan and store receipts
  • Scan business cards to organize your contacts
  • Easily search your library of information
  • Take a picture of your notes and save it as a PDF
Evernote makes it easy to manage your eCommerce accounts and professional contacts in one place.
 
 

Which tools do I need?

Depending on your business, you may need one or all of these incredible apps to help your business reach its next level of success. Streamline the efficiency of your communications and bookkeeping with the help of these online tools.
 

7 Fantastic Tools For Video Marketing

video marketing

Video marketing is the new big thing. Every marketing blog tells you how essential video is to your business—no matter what type of business you’re actually running. New statistics are coming out all the time about how much videos can increase your engagement and audience retention. If you’re an entrepreneur you simply can’t afford to ignore this trend towards video marketing.
Luckily you don’t need a huge budget to get started adding video content of vlogging to generate more exposure to your business. With advances in technology, there are plenty of high quality video cameras that cost only a few hundred dollars and are perfect for getting started.
In addition, you do not need to be a massive tech geek or Adobe Premier expert to make cool videos for your business. You can make all kinds of nifty videos with the incredible tools below.


  1. Flipagram
With this easy-to-use tool you can combine a series of images to create a short video story, ideal for Facebook or Instagram. You can install this tool on any operating system and start making your own videos within an hour.


  1. Stop Motion
Stop motion is one of the most interesting film techniques out there and this app makes creating your own stop motion videos easier than ever before. Allowing you to watch and edit your video frame by frame, this intuitive app gives you complete control over your own videos and even allows you to buy small upgrades like sound effects. Unfortunately at this time it is only available for iOS.


  1. Animoto
If you’re looking for something really simple Animoto is the program with you. Simply upload all the photos & videos you want to string together, add music and a range of other features offered by the editor and embed it in your website code. There is a mobile Animoto app as well so you can more easily share videos on mobile.


  1. PowToon
PowToon is a tool specifically designed to create animated videos for brands and products. They offer a variety of video templates, characters and transitions to make it easier to create your own video but you can also create your own template from scratch.


  1. WeVideo
One of the few high quality web-based video editors, WeVideo allows you to combine still photos and audio recordings to create a compelling video story. You can also download the WeVideo mobile app to create videos while you’re out and about.


  1. Wideo
Designed to help businesses create simple promotional videos, Wideo offers a variety of templates for you to choose from as well as allowing you to create your own template from scratch. With this program it’s also easy to pull your logo or other branded graphics into your videos.


  1. YouTube Editor
If you’ve already got some cool video you can use the YouTube Editor to do a whole range of things including adding a fill light, altering contrast and changing the length of your video. You can also add transcripts and annotations to make your video more SEO friendly.
Creating videos for your business sounds like a daunting prospect but it doesn’t have to be. These tools are just a portion of what’s out there. Keep searching until you find a program you truly love working with.

http://www.businessblogshub.com/2016/02/7-fantastic-tools-for-video-marketing/

Tuesday 16 February 2016

The Top 10 Ways to Find Your Audience

 

Your Audience Is Out There Somewhere!

It doesn’t matter who you are, what your opinions might be or even whether you have anything to say worth listening to.

Someone is willing to listen to YOU right now.

In fact, they are listening to someone right now and they might as well be listening to you!

But, most likely they aren’t.

Even if you have thousands of fans, clients, customer and supporters for your ideas, products and services, you haven’t even touched the surface of the audience available to you right now.
As I write this there are 310,574,391 people in the United States alone and  the world has a few more … 6,877,731,978 at last count.

I’m pretty sure you aren’t reaching them all.

But, I’m also just as sure that there are THOUSANDS of people who agree with what you want to say — No matter what you think.
 

1. “Who IS your Target Audience”

  • What type of audience do you want?
  • Are you looking for a particular age, gender, location etc – or stage of life, political interests?
  • What are the personality traits, emotions, needs, passions and frustrations of you audience?
  • What value or benefit can you bring to the table?
  • Who is your ideal customer?
  • What kinds of groups or associations would they join?
  • What do they dislike?
 

Try imagining a prototype person who is your main audience.

  • Name the person.
  • Give them an age.
  • An outlook on life.
  • A job.
  • A family.
  • A city to live in.
  • Interests.
  • An Education.
 

Do you have more than one audience?

Why not list them all out?
  • What is cool to these people?
  • What impresses them?
  • How do they interact?
  • Are they technical?
  • Are they sophisticated?
  • Are they conservative?
  • Are they radical?
 

What is the tone of their language?

  • Do they use slang?
  • Do they want “Just the facts?”
  • Are they emotional?
  • Are they angry?
  • Do they have a history together?
 

What do they want and need?

  • What are they missing?
  • What are their problems?
  • What do they value?
  • What is most important to them?
  • What are they least likely to care about?
The best way to spread your message is to start by observing what is already being shared, discussed and admired by your audience.
 
 

2. “Identify where your audience is and what they do”

  • Where do they hang out?
  • What activities are they taking part in?
  • Are they readers?
  • Social animals?
  • Do they have their own jargon or lingo?
 

Talk to your audience

  • Do surveys.
  • Ask your friends and relatives what things they would look for if they were your potential customers.
  • Find online forums that appeal to your audience.
  • Research what your competitors are doing.
  • Keep on top of what your industry buzz is about for successful target marketing.
  • Subscribe to relevant newsletters and publications.
  • Use market research to find vendors and content providers.
  • Search Google for blogs, profiles and groups.
 

Look for “Hot Spots”

Where does my target go to …
  • Network
  • Research
  • Read the news
  • Catch up with friends
  • Be entertained
 

See who’s getting results  …

Which items are …
  • Getting the most buzz
  • Gathering responses
  • Causing controversy
  • Being the most useful
 

Check your competitors …

Be sure to locate your competitor’s online presence to make sure you’re heading the right direction.
  • Focus on high-traffic sites, events and profiles …
  • Find potential partners, what websites are they on.
  • Don’t stop researching your target audience. Your marketing strategy must keep pace with change.
 

Check your own analytics.

Google Analytics is a great way to see who refers readers to your site. Check out where your audience comes from and visit those sites.  Then check and see where they are going when they LEAVE your site.
 
 

3. “Find the key influencers”

Who are the key  …
  • Bloggers
  • Marketers
  • Experts
  • Print Publications
  • Media Outlets
  • Mavens
  • Reporters
  • Social Media Addicts
Then figure out what motivates them to move your message out to the masses.
 
 

4.” Engage with Empathy”

You don’t stand out in a crowd, by standing there and yelling. Think about the boy who cried “Wolf.”  It works the first time, but after a while people tune you out.
Introduce  content or conversations your audience is interested in using a voice that commands respect or affection or they won’t listen to you.
Ask …
  • What is my audience interested in?
  • What would they want to read?
  • What do they search for?
  • How can I entertain?”
Definitely …
  • Be personal
  • Be helpful
  • Be enjoyable
  • Ask questions
  • Be human
  • Be nice
  • Be interesting
  • Use their language and jargon
  • Share media (pictures, videos, reports) they will connect with
 

5. “Expand the edges”

Reach out to your audience and become part of communities.
  • Subscribe to blogs
  • Join networks
  • Join groups
  • Write articles
  • Publish a book
  • Attend live events
  • Speak
  • Create useful content
  • Comment on blogs and forums
  • Set up Google Alerts to track mentions.
  • Use StumbleUpon – to discover and read new content
  • Introduce yourself – Sending someone a personalized email shows them that you have noticed them and you care about them enough to personally contact them.
  • Respond to posts
  • Answer questions
  • Solve problems
  • Make them notice your presence.
  • Share interesting content.
  • Check out advertisements
  • Use Google Trends and Trendrr to search for what is trending now.
  • Use Quantcast to get data (size, age, income, education etc) on your audience.
  • Use Technorati to search for hot blogs and posts.
  • Use Dan Zarrella’s ReTweetability Index and Wefollow.com to find the most influential Twitter accounts by keyword and number of re-tweets.
  • Use local geo-targeted directories such as Placeblogger
  • Search Facebook fan pages
 

Find out who and what is popular

  • What posts are drawing comments
  • What is being retweeted
  • What Fan pages have high followers
  • What topics are hot today
  • What is the news media covering right now
  • Which headlines are drawing you in
  • What videos are getting the most views
 

6. “Deliver quality solutions”

Think about who you are, what you stand for, and what valuable contributions you can make to your audience.
Be as specific as possible.
  • What do you have to say that will surprise your audience?
  • What do you want your audience to think, learn, or assume about?
  • What impression do you want to convey to your audience?
Solve real problems!
Develop content and delivery platforms (blogs, social network profiles, article sites, forums, etc.) so you have a platform to can communicate your expertise on a consistent basis.
 
 

7.  “Determine your keywords and key phrases”

Develop a list of keywords and key phrases your audience is searching for.
For detailed help on keyword research, view the free video tutorials at http://newbiequickstart.com
Keyword research is a tactic marketers use to help increase search engine optimization (SEO) for bloggers and websites to improve their visibility in search engines.
After you have your keywords, here are a few ways to use them:
Use Twitter Advanced Search to search on your keywords and phrases and follow interesting people in the results.
Subscribe to the RSS Feed of the results.
Identify hashtags used in posts related to your terms.
Write tweets using your keywords as hashtags.
Use Twellow.com to search Business Categories.
Use Blastfollow.com to follow Twitter users in mass based on subject.
 
 

8. “Outsource your marketing to find your target audience.”

It’s easier than ever to find qualified and knowledgeable experts for reasonable rates to create marketing strategies for your company’s target audience.
Click here for free resources for List Building and Outsourcing.
 
 

9. “Advertise!”

Who says you have to jump through hoops to build an audience.
It is nice to know that there are targeted, reliable, effective options in paid media to reach consumers in their media of choice.   Check out the Tobri Business Premier Advertising Package and tap into the millions of page views being generated on Tobri every day.
 
 

10. ” Do good!”

All of the above methods really come down to one basic principle.  Do good things and you will have all the audience you ever need.
Hope this helps!
 

Wednesday 27 January 2016

13 Ways to Increase Your Conversion Rate Right Now


Increasing your conversion rates is absolutely crucial. Having a good conversion rate is the foundation of high sales volume.
Let’s say your goal is to increase your sales by 50%. How would you do it? More advertising? Producing 50% more content? 50% more time, effort and money into marketing?
All of this could work, but it sure is much faster and cheaper to do it by increasing your conversion rate. Remember – if you have 2% conversion, going to 3% is actually a 50% uplift in results!
Sometimes just a small tweak can lead to significant improvement in conversion rates. Many small and a few big tweaks combined can bring dramatic increase in your results.

1. Do A/B testing

In real estate it’s about location, location, location. In conversion optimization it’s testing, testing, testing.
Wait! What’s A/B testing in the first place?
A/B testing (or split testing) is a technique for increasing your website’s conversion rate (that’s its ability to turn visitors into customers). If you had two possible headlines for your page and you couldn’t decide which to use, you could run an A/B split test which one works better.
You create two alternative versions of your page (page A and page B), each with a different headline. A/B testing software directs 50% of the incoming traffic to page A and 50% to page B. Both pages have a call to action, and in the end you count how many people took the action.
The page with more conversions (more people taking action) wins.
Your goal should be to have at least one, and preferably several A/B tests running at any given time on your site. There’s no “perfect” when it comes to marketing sites, and the only way you learn about what works and doesn’t work is to continuously test.
Deciding what to test
Marketers guess what factors to concentrate on and mess around testing things that have little or no impact on users or conversion goals. Instead, use the data available to you to spot the most important projects to focus on.
To help you decide what tests you want to do, consider the potential revenue each test may bring, and rank tests accordingly. It’s important to test one hypothesis at a time – otherwise you won’t know which change made the difference.
Main things to test:
  • The headline. You should have a strong, convincing and believable headline that promotes the main offer. The legendary ad guru David Ogilvy once said: “On the average, five times as many people read the headline as read the body copy.  It follows that, if you don’t sell the product in your headline, you have wasted 80% of your money.
  • Page layout and navigation.
  • The offer. What is it that the customer is getting for their money (how is it all described and laid out).
  • The size of your order buttons and the wording of call to action (e.g. “Join now and get access to XYZ” vs “Sign up”). For software products the primary call-to-action should often be the “demo/trial”, not the “checkout/purchase” buttons. Enlarging your action buttons usually helps.
  • Different media: test adding a video to communicate key points.
  • Radical change. Sometimes you want to compare two totally different approaches.
What to use for testing
Many entrepreneurs spend money buying expensive testing software before they actually understand how to implement a conversion rate optimization process. You don’t need to spend much.
  • Google Content Experiments – built into Google Analytics. Free. The downside is that it’s not real-time, and you always need to create 2 separate URLs for testing.
  • Optimizely says it’s an A/B testing software you’ll actually use, while Visual Website Optimizer says it’s the easiest. They’re price similarly (the latter being a bit cheaper) and not out of reach for small business owners (but not dirt cheap).
There’s no excuse for NOT testing. Testing is easy, fast and actually… fun! You get to test your gut feeling, learn new things all the time and exercise your creativity.
Testing should also never end. As soon as you have a winning page, try to build on that and test something else.
Incremental positive changes lead to substantial growth.
 

2. Create a compelling and clear value proposition

The potential of your conversion rate is determined by the value proposition, making it the most important conversion factor.
What exactly is a value proposition?
It’s the primary reason a prospect should buy from you. Customers not only want to know “What’s in it for me?” but “Why buy from you?”
If you had just 10 words to explain why people should buy from you instead of the competition, what would you say?
Many marketers try to improve results by changing page elements like font colors and sizes, button shapes, images, incentives, and so on, when the first step should really be focusing on strengthening their value propositions.
If your home page or the product page says “Welcome!” or lists just the name of your company or the product, you’re missing out. Note that there is a difference between the value proposition for your company and your product. You must address both.
What makes a good value proposition?
  • It must be differentiated from your competitors’ offers.
  • You may match a competitor on every dimension of value except one. You need to excel in at least one element of value (key important factor for the buyer).
Crafting a value proposition requires substantial reflection on what is unique about your company and your products and services. Having a powerful value proposition is not enough; it must be communicated effectively to achieve optimal results. You need to refine your value proposition until you can articulate it in a single, instantly credible sentence.
However hard you work on expressing your value proposition, to know its true effectiveness you must test to see how it resonates with your ideal prospect. Optimizing value propositions is a continual process that involves identifying, expressing, and testing/measuring. Use A/B testing to do it.

3. Set up a sales funnel

Sometimes what kills your conversions is that you’re asking for the sale (signup, whatever) too fast. People might be “just browsing”, not be psychologically ready or not in a hurry to buy right now.
The more expensive and/or complicated the product, the more time people need before they’re ready to commit. 
As I mentioned earlier, for software products sometimes offering a demo or a free trial instead of asking for a signup or purchase can bring significant improvement in conversions. But in many cases you need to just slow down and build a sales funnel to build trust, develop relationship and prove your expertise.
Let’s say your product is an online course on DIY home repair. Here’s how you should go about it.
What the visitor wants
  • To learn about DIY home repair
What you want
  • Get the visitor to buy your course
How to do it
  • Offer valuable free home repair advice via your blog, videos, free reports, whitepapers
  • Become their trusted advisor
  • Give them compelling reasons to sign up to your email list (in exchange for some good info)
  • Free drip content video course via email
  • Send them to your sales copy and ask for the sale
Some people say it takes at least 7 contacts with a prospective buyer before they’re ready to buy from you. I haven’t seen any recent research to back this up, but I know for a fact that the longer and deeper your relationship with the prospect, the more likely they are to buy from you.
So slow down. Offer value and results in advance, way before asking for the sale. Just capture their email address, so you could continue talking to them.

4. Cut the jargon

Clarity trumps persuasion, always.
Recently I came upon a site with the following value proposition:
“Revenue-focused marketing automation & sales effectiveness solutions unleash collaboration throughout the revenue cycle”
What does it mean? Can you now explain what they do and how is it useful to you? Not really, right?
Do not try to woo people with fancy, complicated business language – it just doesn’t work. 
You write for people, it’s people who read your site. A marketing director or a purchasing manager are people too. Don’t write for companies, write for people.
Clarity is something that I see marketers constantly struggling with. The best way to re-phrase all of the marketing speak on your site is to imagine you’re explaining your product to your close friend. If there’s a sentence worded in a way that you wouldn’t use in a conversation with a friend, re-word it.

5. Address objections

Whenever people read your offer, there will be friction. They’ll have some conscious and sub-conscious objections to what you’re saying and hesitations about taking the offer.
While during in-person sales we can uncover those hesitations with questions and address the concerns, online that’s kind of difficult. The solution is to prevent those objects by addressing all the possible issues in your sales copy right away.
Step one – create a list of all the possible hesitations and objections your potential customers might have. Step two, add info to your sales copy to eliminate or alleviate those concerns. The list can contains things like
  • You don’t understand my problem (explain the problems your product solves)
  • Why should I believe you? (show off your credentials, experience, awards etc)
  • What if it doesn’t work on me? (have testimonials of all kinds of users that have benefited from your product)
  • It’s not worth the money, there are cheaper alternatives out there (explain your price, compare with the competition, prove the value your product offers)
… and so on. It’s important to come up with as long list as you can. Seek external input, do user testing and ask your customers to figure out what all they might be concerned about.

6. Increase trust

Let’s say you walk down the street, and some random dude comes up to you. “Hey, wanna buy an iPad2? Just $50. It’s brand new.” Would you buy it?
You know the product is good. You know it’s a really good deal. But you probably wouldn’t still buy it. Why? Because you don’t trust him.
Sales guru Zig Ziglar once said that there are only 4 reasons why people won’t buy from you:
  • no need,
  • no money,
  • not in a hurry,
  • no trust.
We can’t do much about the first 3 reasons, but we can build trust. Add trust elements to your website and see your conversions increase.
So what makes people trust a website? The good thing is that Stanford Persuasive Technology Lab has studied this over the years and has the answer.
Here’s the list, make sure your website has all of the items present:
  • Make it easy to verify the accuracy of the information on your site. You can build web site credibility by providing third-party support (citations, testimonials, articles in well-known publications, source material) for information you present, especially if you link to this evidence. Even if people don’t follow these links, you’ve shown confidence in your material.
  • Show that there’s a real organization behind your site. The easiest way to do this is by listing a physical address. Other features can also help, such as posting a photo of your offices or listing a membership with the chamber of commerce.
  • Highlight the expertise in your organization and in the content and services you provide. Do you have experts on your team? Are your contributors or service providers authorities? Be sure to give their credentials. Are you affiliated with a respected organization? Make that clear. Conversely, don’t link to outside sites that are not credible. Your site becomes less credible by association.
  • Show that honest and trustworthy people stand behind your site. Find a way to convey their trustworthiness through images or text. Post employee photos and bios that tell about family or hobbies.
  • Make it easy to contact you. A simple way to boost your site’s credibility is by making your contact information clear: phone number, physical address, and email address.
  • Design your site so it looks professional (or is appropriate for your purpose). People quickly evaluate a site by visual design alone. When designing your site, pay attention to layout, typography, images, consistency issues, and more. Amateur-looking websites kill trust, invest in a quality designer.
  • Make your site easy to use — and useful.  Research shows that sites win credibility points by being both easy to use and useful. Some site operators forget about users when they cater to their own company’s ego or try to show the dazzling things they can do with web technology.
  • Update your site’s content often. People assign more credibility to sites that show they have been recently updated or reviewed. If you have a blog or a news section, make sure they’re updated regularly. Nothing says “out of business” like an abandoned blog.
  • Use restraint with any promotional content (e.g., ads, offers). Nobody likes hype, popups and blinking banners. People associate it with scam and spam. If possible, avoid having ads on your site. If you must have ads, clearly distinguish the sponsored content from your own. As for writing style, try to be clear, direct, and sincere.
  • Avoid errors of all types, no matter how small they seem. Spelling errors and broken links hurt a site’s credibility more than most people imagine. It’s also important to keep your site fast, up and running.

7. Make it easy to buy from you

Your goal has to be to make doing business with you as easy as possible. Your users should not try to figure out how to buy from you or where to click. It has to be intuitive and self-evident. As few clicks as possible.
Could your grandma be able to buy from your site within a minute or two?
  • Tell your users what they should do next. In every page, always guide the user towards the action you want them to take. Make the primary next step look more important than other links.
  • Do not give users too many options. The Paradox of Choice (a great book, btw) states that the more choice you will give your users, the easier it is to choose nothing. Choice paralyzes. If you have a lot of products, build better filters, so your prospects could identify the right one for them without spending too much time.
  • Ask to fill as few fields as possible. The more fields you have in your order or sign up form, the less people will fill it. Add the option to sign up via their Facebook or Google account. Don’t ask for anything that you don’t absolutely need to know in order to fulfill the order.
  • Do not force users to sign up in order to buy. Do you know the story of the 300 million dollar button? I suggest you read it. The main point: do NOT force people to sign up as a user in order to buy from you. Let them check out as a guest. It will make a world of difference.
  • Offer free shipping. Free shipping was the most popular motivation for 82% of UK and 80% of US consumers in a study conducted by eConsultancy, and gives etailers that offer this option a clear advantage over competitors.

8. Communicate value

A common mistake entrepreneurs make is that they do not provide enough information about the products and services they sell.
Let’s take that chair, for instance. If I’d describe it like this (all true facts):
  • Seat and back of breathable pellicle suspension material for long-term comfort.
  • Weight: 51 pounds
  • Color: Classic Carbon Pellicle
  • Full 12-Year Manufacturer’s Warranty
Price: $869.
Would you pay $869 based on what I just listed here?
No, that would be ridiculous. Yet so many sites do exactly that (luckily the maker of this chair provides more info than that).  They just list a bunch of bullet points with features along with the price.
The best way to sell products and services is to to add as much information about them as is possible. Pages and pages and pages, videos and images. It’s true that 79% of people won’t read it all, but 16% read everything! That 16% is your main target group.
If one reads all of the product info and is not convinced yet, you have a problem. But if one is convinced after reading just 1/4, they can skip the rest and just complete the purchase right away. Up to 50% of potential sales are lost due to inadequate information, says IDC, a global research company.
You need to provide enough information so that the prospect could convince themselves
Add pictures, videos, reviews to all of your products.  Intelligent, neutral and benefit-oriented sales copy works the best. Take a look at Amazon – they manage to create a lot of content for most products they sell, and they sell millions of products.
Aah, and list the price AFTER you communicate the value. Otherwise people might make a snap judgement based on the price without reading the value it offers.

9. Offer proof

Whatever you claim, you need to back it up with proof. People are skeptical and they want to see the evidence.
So what kind of proof can you provide?
  • Customer testimonials. People who used your products verify your claims. It’s a good idea to use testimonials from customers that were in a worse situation that the average customer. If even people in terrible circumstances could get the results, so can they!
  • Case studies. We’ve all seen before and after type of case studies. Very effective.
  • The results of scientific tests and studies. I know a log home manufacturing company that wrestled with the claims that log homes lose a lot of heat in the winter and they’re expensive to keep up. They commissioned an independent study from a well-known university. The study found that the log homes are as energy efficient as any other kind of buildings. Now the manufacturer can refer to this study to back up their claims.
  • Third-party reviews. Did a trade magazine or a blog write a glowing review? Show it off and link to it.
  • Social proof. If you have thousands of customers, make it a well-known fact. Nobody wants to be the only idiot using your service. If you have thousands of people / companies use your service, can’t be all that bad!
  • Show it! Nothing like a good demo to prove what your product does. Use videos that showcase your product in action.
Go over all the claims you make in your sales page and figure out how to add some proof.

10. Remove distraction

This is big. You want people to focus on a single action and not be distracted from it.
Are there items on the page that could divert the visitor away the from the goal?
The more visual inputs and action options your visitors has to process, the less likely they are to make a conversion decision. Minimizing distractions like unnecessary product options, links and extraneous information will increase the conversion rate.
On your landing pages and product pages, remove or minimize everything that is not relevant to users taking action.
  • Remove or shrink the menu.
  • Get rid of sidebars and big headers.
  • Take off irrelevant (stock) images.
Ask yourself is there anything else that you could take off page, something that is NOT contributing to the conversion?

11. Compare with the competition before they do

Every product and service has its competitors – direct and indirect. Research shows clearly that people do their homework before purchasing a product and compare among providers. It seldom happens that someone will buy your product without checking out your competition first.
Taking that into account, use it – compare your products to competing products before users do.
People are lazy. More often people compare things without giving it a lot of thought – they just look at the price and main features. For example when choosing a web host they look at the server space and monthly payment and that’s it. You, as an expert in your field, know that actually many other things should be considered.
When it’s you doing the comparison, you can point out the things you feel are your biggest advantages over the alternatives. If your product is more expensive than others, then this is your chance to explain why.
What if your competition is already doing it?
Imagine if your competitor is openly comparing your services and making it look like their offer is superior, and you don’t provide any information on why your product is better? A large number of people will take that competing offer.
Another benefit to adding product comparison pages to your website is that it can keep people from leaving your website. They can already do the comparison on your site, so why leave? It won’t keep all of them on your site, but you’ll definitely win over a good portion of visitors.
How to do the comparisons?
This depends on your product. If it’s a pure spec­-based product like say, a laptop, you can compare the specs (battery life, disk space, RAM etc) in a traditional table. If your product is more complex, use a more descriptive comparison.
If some of the specs are lower than the competition’s, point out that maybe your support is way better or you provide personal consulting or its more green or whatever. Also, admitting your shortcomings is a good thing – it makes the rest of your case more believable.
The traditional way is using tables like this, but probably you can come up with better, more creative ways.

12. Reduce or remove risk

Whenever there’s a transaction, there’s risk. Usually the vendor has the buyer carry most of the risk. If the risk seems to big, the purchase won’t take place.
Offer guarantees to eliminate or reduce the perceived risks your prospects might have. Here are some examples of great guarantees:
  • Hyundai and America’s Best Warranty. Hyundai struggled with years with a reputation that it makes crappy cars that break down fast. So they initiated a 10-year warranty – basically saying that ‘how can it be a bad car if we’re giving it such a long warranty?’ . Now Hyundai is considered the new Lexus.
  • The Punctual Plumber. Plumbers are renown for being late. To combat this prejudice, they branded themselves as ‘The Punctual Plumber’ and will pay you for every minute they’re late. If they’re willing to do it, they probably won’t be late, will they? Guarantee removes risk.
  • Pizza delivered in 30 minutes or it’s free. If you’re ordering pizza, the delivery time is a concern. With a guarantee like that, this fear is eliminated.
  • Not only will we give your money back, but also compensate your pain. This is the most powerful kind of guarantee – a pain compensation guarantee.
30-day money-back guarantee is like the industry standard and you should definitely not offer any less. Try to do better than that.
A/B test various guarantees to find out what works best.

13 Add incentives to take action right away

Is there an indication that the action needs to be taken now? The tone of the presentation, offers and deadlines can all influence urgency. I bet you have seen urgency notifications like this before:
It might seem obvious to some and some might think it can’t possibly work, but it does and very, very well. Nothing creates urgency like scarcity.
There’s 2 kinds of of scarcity you can create:
  • quantity-related scarcity (2 seats left at this price)
  • time-related scarcity (last day to buy)
If the supply of your product is endless, you can give out time-sensitive bonuses, a free gift to first X amount of buyers or a discount if they complete the purchase within a certain time frame.
Word of advice: the reason for scarcity has to be authentic. Do not lie to your customers, ever. If it’s fake scarcity, people will know, and your trustworthiness plummets. It’s not worth it.
Thank you for reading. Until next time.