- What are Trust Signals?
- How do they Increase Conversions?
- And just how important are they?
But your brand isnât a household name (yet), and most of the people that youâve got visiting your site are first time users who donât know you too well (again, yet). This moment is one of the most significant challenges that any young, growing business has to face. You know youâve got the products that your audience want, and the ad campaigns youâve got running is delivering them to your store in good numbers, but now you have to convert.
This is where the rubber hits the road. Either your new users arrive at your site and go through to purchase, and you make money, or they donât â and youâre left holding all the costs, and you lose money.
Thatâs it â the stark reality of doing business in any environment.
Conversion rates can make you or break you.
To address your conversion rate, youâll have to address the elephant in the room â and that is the subject of trust. For anyone to overcome that natural level of trepidation that we all feel when we visit a new store online, you have to have trust.
The internet is still a relatively new space for society, and also relatively unregulated. All of us have had a bad experience one time or another. No matter how hard you try, there will always be some level of fear that a new website visitor will have when buying from a smaller business.
So how can you build trust?
Itâs straightforward.
To develop trust with a user, you need to take a look at the building blocks that they use to build it themselves.
These building blocks, or âSignalsâ, are sometimes very subtle, but if you understand what they are, you can work hard to make yours better. If you get them right, it is potent because your conversion rate will skyrocket.
The main thing that your new users are all looking for is any information that differentiates a trustworthy business, from a dodgy one.
Brand familiarity and overall perception go a long way to increasing conversions. If a user has never heard of you before, you need to make a real effort to highlight your previous customer reviews (for example, you could use TrustPilot or Feefo). Featuring any security seals or badges that you have from any other official (more trusted) brands can helpâand also reducing the risk to the user by offering free returns.
One of the most potent tactics is to make a real effort to show your users that you are human and that you arenât afraid of disclosing your identity. For example, you could feature your companies physical location on your contact page. Or even adding some pictures of your team to your âAbout Usâ page all helps to provide some extra reassurance and make your business appear more human.
The first thing that any dodgy business tries to be online is faceless. So donât be afraid to humanise your brand, and show that you live in the real world too (not just online).
Using well-written copy and high-quality images and video also goes a long way to creating subconscious trust signals. Your new website visitors instinctively know that any unscrupulous company is probably not going to invest in good content, and UX design.
Humans are highly social beings, and we actively seek the opinions of othersâdeveloping some social proof around your brand is critical.
The term âSocial Proofâ was first coined by Robert Cialdini in his 1984 book âInfluenceâ, and the concept is also known as âinformational social influenceâ.
Wikipedia describes Social Proof as a âpsychological and social phenomenonâ where people copy the actions of others in an attempt to validate their behaviour.
Here at Remap, weâre not a big fan of âvanity metricsâ per se. However, focussing on them for a young brand is an excellent way to develop social proof. Likes and comments on your social feed, highlighting customer reviews (good and bad) and also publicising any recent media coverage you may have had, will all help to convince your new website visitors of your credibility.
Then there is the subject of transparency. Ultimately, the more transparent your site design is, the more likely any of us is to trust you as a legitimate and experienced trader.
But one of the most powerful (if not the most powerful) thing that you can do to build trust is to use time. I know taking your time isnât exactly a popular tactic, but it is very, very powerful.
If you want to build a great online business, you need to build trust with your users over the long term. You do that by being consistent.
Consistent in all of your communications. The look and feel of each touchpoint. The style of copy, the colour palette of your social feeds, everything.
Here is an excellent comment from user experience expert JD Graffam.
As a designer, you have to stay focused on each and every touchpoint that your users will have with you over a long period of time. That can add up, and itâs no easy task.
âItâs way easier to screw up than it is to get it right.â
Hard work and time.
Whoâd of thought they were the magic ingredients for online success?