As I mentioned in my last post, trust is a hot commodity. It’s essential to instill trust with your readers if you want to get good business results from your blogging, social networking and internet marketing. So how do you instill trust?
The methods we use to market products and services these days are changing rapidly, and if you’re reading this blog you’re obviously aware of these changes and are taking steps to learn. Kudos. But it’s important…absolutely essential…to understand one simple fact.
The way people buy things is changing, but the REASONS people buy things haven’t changed at all.
In other words, people may be searching for information differently, they may be hyper-connected and using new resources to find out what they want to know, but deep down they still need the same things. People want to avoid pain and increase pleasure. They have the same hot buttons: greed, envy, love, etc. And they also need to trust you if they want to buy from you.
Here are things you can do to instill trust:
- Create quality content, specifically written for your target audience.
- Respond to your comments. Be thoughtful.
- Respond to your email. Take time to be helpful.
- Be everywhere. The more your audience sees you “out there”, the more your credibility increases.
- Offer a guarantee for everything you sell. Take all risk upon yourself, leave only value for your customers.
- Honor your guarantee. It should be just as easy to get a refund as it is to place an order.
- Don’t spam people.
- Leave thoughtful comments on other blogs. Use comments on other blogs as a conversational tool, not a promotional tool. People know comment spam when they see it. If you think real customers are going to click through your comment spam on other blogs and buying things from you, you’re deluding yourself!
- Be honest.
- Be consistent.
- Make your products and services targeted. In other words, don’t just produce what you want. Confirm there is a need first. Targeted product creation instills trust, because it speaks directly to your customer. They will really feel like you really know them.
- Don’t post blind, stupid links on Twitter or in your social networking status. Would YOU click on a link that says “hey check this out! crappyaffiliatelink.tinyurl.com”? I’m not against affiliate marketing of course. Not at all. I’m just saying, blindly blasting out affiliate links, hoping some of them will stick is NOT the way to build trust.
- Before you post anything, anywhere, ask yourself “Is my goal to create value for my customers, or am I just trying to sell something?”
- Be around for a while. There’s really no getting around this. The longer you are around, the more credibility you’ll build and the more your reputation will proceed you. This is a key element of trust, and it takes time.
- Make your site easy to navigate.
- Be an active member of other forums or a guest author on other properties that are valued and trusted by your target audience. This is another element of “being everywhere”, from #4.
- Avoid overzealous claims in your sales copy, even if they’re true.
- Don’t ignore complaints, and don’t be rude…seriously, someone who has taken the time to complain or leave a stupid, hateful comment on your blog is EXACTLY who you want to interact with. They care enough to let you know…99% of the time, it’s a simple issue you can resolve immediately with very little effort, and when you do this, you come off like a hero. If you choose to attack back, you will be justified in doing so, and you will also lose at least one customer forever. You can choose between using such an event as an opportunity to grow trust in your brand, or you can choose to come off looking like a jerk. Your choice!
- Testimonials. This is a classic. It works, and it will ALWAYS work. Show people proof that your product or service has produced favorable results for others. Produce a system for getting testimonials from your buyers today!
- Be good. This one might sound like a cop out, but I think it might be the most important one of all. Being good requires constant hard work, networking, staying on top of things and really putting your honest, full effort into your business…every day. These are all things the “gurus” claim they can teach you to skip. Learn all you can from the gurus, but then go out and bust your ass implementing what you’ve learned. Don’t skip the hard stuff, because doing what your competition is not willing to do…that’s exactly what will turn the tables in your favor. Can you make money online by doing very little? Yes, you can make chump change that way. Of course, if you’re in it for chump change, you’re reading the wrong blog
Of course, I don’t consider this to be a masterfully comprehensive list, but it’s a few things I consider to be absolutely crucial for instilling trust with your buyers.
Do you have any to add? Let me know what you think!







I love your “be everywhere”. I think that what you said about “the way people buy things is changing” is so true. The internet has become so important for businesses now, and if your company is not everywhere then you are in big trouble! Thanks for the great information!
Thanks! Being everywhere is not as difficult as it sounds…not after you learn the ropes!
Thanks for the post Christian. Very useful and very true indeed!
I especially like the reminder about giving: ”Is my goal to create value for my customers, or am I just trying to sell something?” which also relates to a previous post you wrote about too many people trying to make a few quick dollars rather than looking at building long term relationships with people based on trust. That’s how business will thrive. Give and look after people, everything else will follow.
Thanks!
Hi Norma…thanks for your comment! Yes it really is that simple. At least that’s what I’ve found to be true over and over again. When we try to go around the human element of our business and just “make money”, it all falls short. It’s so much easier to just build a real business from the beginning!
Hi Christian… I am a first time visitor and very impressed. I have read a couple of you posts and you are a very good writer and I enjoy your writing style which is important. I will definitely be back.
As fare as this post, I agree 100% with your 20 points and I think I follow all of them to the best of my knowledge.
Now I don’t think #20 (Being Good) is a cop out. I think you get what you put out in life and being good hopefully means getting good stuff back. One thing I always try and do is let someone know if I find something wrong with their site, like something isn’t working correctly or major typos and such. Not only is it good Karma, but it also helps build relationships.
Thanks a lot Doug! I appreciate you stopping by very much, and I appreciate the positive feedback
#4- I would have to say being as many places as possible is a good rule, diversify is a key to life.
Most importantly for #4 I would say, take the time to make a quality profile. If they got a box to link to your site and explain your site then fill out both.
Along with making quality introductions when possible. On forums and group sites especially. Taking the 10mins to type out a relevant introduction can build almost instant trust with the admins and regular users of the site who actually read them.
Thanks for sharing your list.
Christian,
I really loved this post – I think it was very well written and stopped people from being delusional that doing nothing will make you rich. Anything worth anything always took time and effort (and there is no way to get around that).
I loved this quote & it rang very true with me: “Don’t skip the hard stuff, because doing what your competition is not willing to do…”
Keep up the good work!
Thanks! I hope to hear about your progress! What’s your name, yo?
I just landed a new website design gig!
The name is Christine Barber – thanks for asking!
That’s awesome Christine