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Do Your Customers Trust You?

It’s all about the info

19 comments Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Making a purchase online, especially a substantial one, can be a nerve-wracking process for a consumer. The primary problem, aside from price, is trust. Shoppers negotiate their relationship with the vendor in much the same way they negotiate relationships with any stranger: by seeking information.

What an online vendor lacks (and what becomes a disadvantage) is one-on-one interaction with the customer. As such, the customer must put forth additional effort to find out about a product for sale. Making this task easier can make all the difference in closing a sale.
 

According to GetElastic, an online retailer should strive to answer these customer questions ahead of time to reduce purchase anxiety:

·    Quality of the product
·    Quality and reliability of your customer service
·    Will the item arrive on time?
·    Will the product be as described or as appears on screen? Is it the right color or size?
·    Will it fit? Is this item true to size?
·    What if the product needs to be returned?
·    Is this site secure (privacy, credit card information)?
·    Is this really the best price?

According to one survey, 76 percent of respondents cited insufficient product information as a reason not to purchase, 79 percent rarely or never purchase with incomplete information, and 72 percent will abandon a site for a competitor or further research, usually finding the product elsewhere.
Building Customer Trust
GetElastic.com says the top ten aspects of the online purchase process rated as “very important” to consumers reflected just two prime consumer motivations: gathering information and customer support. The top five, in this order were Product Overview, Merchant’s Guarantee, Stock Availability, Quality of Image, Customer Service Links.

Consumers want complete specs, and they want to know the online vendor will be there for them if something goes wrong.

This isn’t unusual human behavior, of course. Communication scholars love to toss about Uncertainty Reduction Theory, which has been around for over 30 years. According to this theory, humans follow a predictable pattern of information gathering when they encounter a stranger.

Uncertainty about the stranger causes anxiety and distrust, and so seeking out information is a natural way of decreasing uncertainty and anxiety, and of building trust.

E-tailers, then, need to build trust by making sure information is available and easily accessed. Without face-to-face interaction and without the ability to compensate for that lack with complete information, the customer isn’t going to risk doing business.

 

Online Preference

One of the advantages of online purchasing that I have come to rely on are customer reviews. The advice of random strangers who have detailed their experience with a particular product seems more trustworthy to me that third party advocates whose motives may be influenced by bias or paid reviews. Most valuable to me are reviews or sites where the person commenting identifies how long they have used a product, their expectations of a product and their own personal level of expertise where relevant. This is something that is not available in an in-store purchase environment.

Also, where trust is concerned, I find myself willing to take more chances with online companies as my trust is errodes in compaines with traditional store locations. The process of returning something to an online vendor has been far easier for me than attempting to resolve any issues through the customer service desk in-person. Viva online purchasing!

Trust

Thanks for the great article, on my sites I actually force my visitors to contact the merchant to have one- to- one conversation to finalize the sale and not to buy online and it seems to work in other words I let him use the internet for research only. I realize ZA is different from the USA but we trust people less

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