Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Does Your Business Exude Trust?

There are many different sources of trust. Not every business can effectively draw on every source, but there's no business that can't be strengthened by drawing on some of them:

Authority: 
doctor, lawyer, accountant, police officer, fireman

Affinity:
shared background, experience, philosophy, fraternity

Credibility:
factual basis for trust

Longevity:
years in business, in the community

Celebrity:
being known or being known for something

Familiarity:
reassuring omnipresence

Frequency:
the more often heard and seen, the more easily trusted

Second-party transferal:
earned, engineered, borrowed, rented, purchased endorsement

Place:
geographic or target market; being for a certain customer

Demonstration:
seeing is believing

People trust for the wrong reasons. By understanding how people actually come to trust, based on the above sources and others, you will be able to deliberately manufacture maximum trust.

People have an underlying, ongoing anxiety and angst about nearly everything -- from the news they watch, to the car they drive, from the food they eat to virtually everybody from whom they get advice, services, and products. In this environment, trust is a huge advantage. But few advertisers, marketers, or sales professionals focus on this advantage. Instead, they drift to cute advertising, low prices and discounting, or rely on product-centric presentations. This is why trust-based marketing can be such a powerful tool. You'll leave your cluttered and competitive marketing environment and, via a road less traveled, appear uniquely attractive.

Certainly the more significant a purchase is to a buyer, the more consciously he seeks a trustworthy seller or provider, but you can't ignore the role of trust in just about every act of commerce.

A big breakthrough in your approach to trust-based marketing will be forcing yourself away from rational, logical thought about why your customers would or should trust you. Instead, if you can "decode" how they really process you and the ideas, information and propositions you present, you'll find yourself holding a new key to the vault.

One of the main sources of trust is "pass along." You trust somebody because somebody you trust trusts him. It's passed-along trust.

Targeted investors handed their money over to Bernie Madoff and his epic Ponzi scheme voluntarily. And most who did so were sophisticated and wealthy individuals, managers of family fortunes, and paid administrators of universities' investment portfolios and pensions. All had access to competent financial, tax and legal advisors. Yet they handed wealth to Madoff. None could explain exactly what Bernie did with their money or how he consistently generated above-par returns. Trusting Madoff was irrational, so why did so many who should have known better? Because someone who they knew and trusted, trusted him. Yes, he served on the board of the Nasdaq stock exchange and had offices and trappings of wealth manufactured with the stolen money. But at the core, Bernie perpetuated his scam thanks to passed-along trust.

This reveals something very powerful about selling inside the fortress walls of a closed community like the very wealthy. Their fortress walls are their reliance on peer-provided information. They trust each other and distrust all others. But once the fortress is penetrated, with just one insider inhabitant, it is no longer as a safeguard for the other inhabitants. In a small, clannish industry or segment of an industry, the business-to-business marketer, the consultant, the software developer, the "expert" of any sort needs only the trust of one or a few well-known members, and all others' defenses against him disappear.

And the harder it is to gain the trust of anyone in such a community, the more viral it becomes, and the more valuable its viral nature. This is why it is so worthwhile to gain the trust of key centers of influence within any target group in which you seek to develop a clientele, and why it is worthwhile to invest in securing that trust.

Courtesy of Entrepreneur Magazine

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