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Testimonials:
Let Your Clients Do the Selling for You
by
Martha Carnahan
When I
talk with my clients about adding testimonials to their marketing toolbox, I
get a lot of nodding heads and agreement. And yet, many businesses put
testimonial gathering on the back burner. It becomes one of those “important
but not urgent” activities. I’d love to see you turn up the fire on this
no-brainer marketing tool that yields strong benefits at miniscule expense.
Here
are a few tips and compelling reasons to begin creating your inventory of
client testimonials:
Credibility – We
simply believe another person’s touting of a business more than whatever the
business may say on it’s own behalf. Testimonials provide external evidence
of your success and abilities.
TIP: Get your clients’ permission to use their full name, title and company
name along with their quote.
Human Interest –
People, and what they say and do, are always more interesting than
straight-up information (well, to most of us, that is!). Your audience will
read quotes from other people before they read your carefully worded
marketing bullets.
TIP: Put your best testimonials in prominent places on your website,
brochure, proposals and other marketing materials.
Trust –
Testimonials show your prospective customers that you are trustworthy with
other clients who are willing to brag about you.
TIP: Strive to create testimonials that convey specific benefits and results
– these are more powerful and come across as more authentic.
Community – Most
people have a natural inclination to belong to and be “part of” successful
ventures. By displaying your roster of happy clients, you invite new joiners
into the fold.
TIP: Be strategic about gathering testimonials from your ideal clients so
that you attract more just like them.
Here’s
an example from my own stash of testimonials (yes, I do follow my own
advice!):
“Martha has a wonderful ability to bring fresh ideas to a situation, which
continually helps you look at things in a new way. She is fun to work
with, she makes me feel comfortable and challenges me all at the same
time."
~ K.M., Senior Engineer,
Colorado Springs, CO
Take
these steps to get started immediately…
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Make a list of your
happy clients (okay, they are all happy, so this will be a list of ALL of
your clients).
-
Begin with those who
you know are chatty and have been forthcoming with praise and positive
comments in the past (some folks are just more expressive than others).
-
Contact each client –
by email or phone or in person, depending on how they like being
communicated with – and ask if they would be willing to provide a
testimonial for you.
-
Make it easy for them
to provide the kind of testimonial you’d like to have by providing them
with “prompter” questions. Examples: What have been the most notable
benefits of using my services? What makes our company unique? How has your
business improved as a result of the work we did for you?
-
Make it easy for them,
period. Some of your clients will zip off a quick email to you with a
great testimonial. Others will take this on as a “project” and may be slow
to get it done. They truly want to do a good job for you and may put more
work into it than necessary. Take the pressure off – offer to have a quick
phone conversation with the client, where you can ask pointed questions
and jot down notes from what they say. Then, you can write up a quote and
have the client review it. This minimizes their workload and increases
your ability to get a great quote from them. A win-win!
-
No matter what, always
give your client a chance to review the testimonial before you put it on
any of your marketing materials. You want them to feel proud of how
their comments are portrayed so they continue to be in your fan club.
-
Going forward, be sure
to collect a testimonial from each and every client after you complete an
engagement – the success will be fresh in their minds, which creates an
even better quote. (Plus, you won’t have to backtrack later.)
If you
provide a service that calls for discretion, or are in a highly competitive
industry that requires client confidentiality, you can still make use of
testimonials, but may have to use the individual’s initials or skip their
identity altogether. A real name is better, but not at the cost of exposing
clients who want or need to remain anonymous – always give them the choice.
© 2006 by Martha Carnahan. All
rights reserved. You are free to use this article in your ezine
or on your website,
as long as you leave the content unaltered and include the following
attribution: "By Martha Carnahan of MC3 Strategies. Please visit
Martha's website at
http://www.YourBrilliantLife.com for additional resources on how
to build a thriving business without squeezing the life out of your
life!" Please also notify me at
martha@mc3strategies.com
to let me know where the material will appear.
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