Article

13min read

Cognitive Dissonance: How You Can Resolve It And Drive More Conversions

Cognitive dissonance is the psychological discomfort we experience when our belief clashes with contradictory information. This unsettling state of anguish, in turn, motivates us to reconcile the difference, either by changing our behavior or altering the importance of conflicting/dissonant beliefs.

Let’s take an example.

A smoker enjoys smoking, but also knows it’s detrimental to health. To minimize dissonance, they can give up smoking (change behavior) or rationalize their habit saying everyone has to die one day, or it isn’t as harmful as drinking. The latter sounds bizarre, but shows the extent to which people are willing to go to reclaim their peace of mind!

So what’s it got to do in an ecommerce setup? A lot.

As more and more people are shopping online, they’re also becoming increasingly skeptical. They notice every tiny detail before they hand over their hard-earned money to you! This means there’s even more of a chance that if they come across any conflicting information on your website, they will experience cognitive dissonance.

You, therefore, must identify loopholes and create a plan that solidifies their trust in you.

Wondering what can trigger cognitive dissonance and how to deal with it? Keep reading to find out.

Display Trust Signals On Your Website

As a safety measure, one of the first things online shoppers do to lower the perceived risk of transaction is look for trust signals, some of which are discussed below.

#1: Multiple, Reputable Payment Options

According to a survey published on HubSpot, 59% of buyers abandon a transaction if their preferred payment option isn’t available. Why? Because people have a varying degree of loyalty towards different payment methods. So bear that in mind and tailor your payment process accordingly. You’ll be leaving a lot of money on the table if you don’t!

Think about your target audience demographics and payment behavior in specific countries and regions. After all, the mode of payment popular in the US may not necessarily be as popular in Asia.

online payment methods

#2: Trust Logos

With fraud cases on the rise, people are wary about sharing their private information, fearing it will be misused. The good news though is that with trust logos (privacy seals, SSLs, or brand association badges) in place you can tell your customers they are in safe hands.

So, which ones are recommended to use on your website? Well, there’s no one straightforward answer. A famous Baymard’s trust study from 2013 states that people don’t have a preference between trust seals and SSL seals, but they definitely show a preference for antivirus companies, possibly because they are familiar with them. This perceived sense of security based on familiarity implies that people simply want to see a trust seal because it makes them feel safe.

To dig a little deeper, CXL Institute conducted a study to expand on the above-stated Baymard Institute’s findings. They found out that familiar brands like Norton, Visa, Mastercard, PayPal, and Google are the most trusted seals when paying online. What they also discovered was gender and generational differences in ‘perceived’ security. Clearly, this means you must optimize for your audience and not randomly choose a trust logo.

Payment logos
Verified by Visa Program and MasterCard Secure Code on the Victoria’s Secret checkout page.

#3: Reviews and Testimonials

By showcasing social proof on the homepage, product or the pricing page, and near the shopping cart, you will:

  • Reassure your customers of their choice.
  • Counter any objection/contradictory thought that surfaces in their mind.
  • Stop them from unnecessarily overthinking the consequences.
Social proof example
LeadQuizzes uses ‘wisdom of the crowd’ on the pricing page to positively influence their website visitors.

If you run a platform like Etsy, it’s a good idea to add seller ratings to put your customers at ease, as shown below.

Etsy social proof

#4: Money Back Guarantee

Giving a money back guarantee is a surefire way to keep post-purchase dissonance at bay. There’ll be no room for regret because the stakes are low. Customers can return the product if they are even slightly dissatisfied with it!

But simply ensuring a money back guarantee isn’t sufficient. You’ve got to have a simple and transparent return and refunds process explained on your website. There’s every chance these customers will buy from you again. Here’s proof: 95% of shoppers prefer buying again from the same platform if they had a positive and convenient exchange or return experience.

Zappos money back
Step-by-step explanation of return procedure on Zappos

Order Confirmation Transaction Emails

If you didn’t know, an order confirmation email has the highest average open rates at 70%! Two reasons why:

First, it casts away a customer’s apprehension and informs them that their order has been received. Second, it gives them a sense of security; these emails function as receipts required at the time of reimbursement and returns.

order confirmation email graph

If you haven’t been sending order confirmation emails, you’re breaching their trust. The only way to right this wrong is to start sending them and make sure they include:

  • A personalized thank you note to extend the excitement of their purchase.
  • Purchase details, like the order number, purchased item (with images), payment details, delivery address etc.
  • Shipment tracking and an estimated delivery time frame.
  • Customer services’ contact information and a link back to the website.
Amazon example for shipping
Amazon’s email containing relevant shipping and order details

Leverage the Choice-Supportive Bias

Have you ever bought something and immediately regretted it, but also defended your decision because you believe you don’t make bad decisions? That’s choice-supportive bias in action.

During this decision-rationalizing process, we tend to ‘ascribe positive attributes’ to our choice and amplify the negative features of the rejected option. Think of it as a way to reduce cognitive dissonance.

When it comes to your customers, you can reinforce the bias by sending positive and reassuring messages during key stages of their journey. They will end up feeling terrific about themselves!

‘Great choice, there’ or ‘Your cart has some of our bestsellers’  is a perfect way to flatter someone adding a product to their cart. It validates their choice and motivates them to keep shopping. You can also recover abandoned carts by featuring testimonials in your emails. It triggers the choice-supportive bias and before you know it, your customer’s back on the purchase path!

In fact, once they checkout, pep them up with a congratulatory, ‘What fine taste’ message!

choice support bias example

Another way to activate choice-supportive bias is by pitting free and premium features against each other.  The free trial user will immediately be more confident about their choice and might even become a paying customer!

LinkedIn example

Create a Sense of Closure

Customers love having choices but also find it overwhelming. Even when they do zero down on one and buy it, they agonize over all the other still available options and begin to regret their decision! This is why it’s important you offer some kind of choice closure to your customers and shut their minds off from alternate choices!

An effective choice closure strategy is asking for product reviews. Make sure you time your request and ensure they’ve used your product long enough to write a review that’s closer to their actual experience.

Sephora reviews
This Sephora email includes a sample review and rating to motivate customers to write their own!

Provide Exceptional Customer Service and Support

There’s nothing more dreadful than dealing with a customer who’s having second thoughts about their purchase! It may seem like all your efforts of building a customer-client relationship have gone to waste. One way you can rectify this situation is by providing an excellent customer service. And it starts with being there for them at every stage of their buyer’s journey.

7 out of 10 U.S. consumers say they’ve spent more money to do business with a company that delivers great service. Plus, when it comes to making a purchase, 64% of people find customer experience more important than price.

What’s interesting is that even businesses have realized it:

Econsultancy’s 2018 DIgital Trends Report
Econsultancy’s 2018 DIgital Trends Report

Speaking of which, here’s how you can follow suit and prioritize customer satisfaction:

  • Ensure your customer services and support team knows the business inside-out.
  • Have a contact page easily accessible from anywhere on the website.
  • Mention how long it takes you to respond to queries. It’s called expectations management.
  • Do away with canned responses; become more human.
  • Use a live chat tool for faster customer support and better customer experience. A study revealed that as many as 77% of customers won’t make a purchase on a website if there’s no live chat option available!
live chat graph
Source 

Once a customer has a stellar experience with your brand, they will stick with you for longer and become repeat customers. Furthermore, their word-of-mouth marketing will grow your existing customer base!

word of mouth marketing
Source

Send Feedback Surveys to Feel Your Customer’s Pulse

Listening to your customers is the quickest way to learn what causes buyer’s remorse. But getting actionable insights means asking the right questions. Have a look on what to ask:

  • What made you buy the product?
  • How is it helping you?
  • What doubts did you have before buying it?
  • What was the biggest challenge in finding the right product?
  • What made you nearly abandon our website?
  • Was there any particular information you couldn’t find an answer to on the website?
  • Any other comments or remarks?

Meanwhile, it also helps to follow some of the best practices when creating a survey:

  • Use simple, jargon-free language.
  • Throw in a variety of questions, e.g.: multiple choice, likert scale, ranking, rating etc.
  • Ask neutral questions like ‘How helpful was our customer services team today?’.
  • Avoid double-barrelled questions, which means address only one topic per question.
  • Show a progress bar to keep them going.
  • Ask open-ended questions towards the end.
  • Test on multiple devices.
  • Always A/B test.

survey

With that taken care of comes the timing of the survey. Ideally, send it when you’re still fresh in their minds. Their answers will be closer to their actual experience and you’ll be on your way to fixing bad experiences in no time!

Connect With Them Over Your Blog

The more invested a customer is in you, the stronger the chances they will slip into a state of cognitive dissonance. It’s especially true for B2B buyers.

To tackle this, develop an ongoing stream of content in the form of a blog. Apparently, 71% of B2B buyers engage with blogs during the purchasing process. Your customers are no different. A Content Preferences Survey Report says, 47% of buyers consume three to five pieces of content before contacting a sales rep.

Content survey

Once you consistently create valuable and relevant content, you’ll be viewed as an expert. Combine that with your interest in interacting with your readers in comments, and you’ll create massive opportunities for your sales team. Prospects will walk straight into your marketing funnel because you seem trustworthy, interested in helping first and clinching a sale later.

You can learn a great deal about getting blogging right from Zapier. They write detailed, informative posts and are able to impress their website visitors.

zapier example

Wrap Up

By now you know the strategies you can use to reduce the chances of your customers experiencing cognitive dissonance.

Remember that all that your customer expects is a smooth experience from the beginning to end. They should be able to locate trust signals, know you’ve received their order, and that you are there when they need your help. Even returning the product shouldn’t be a hassle.

Also, shut them off from available options to reduce post-choice regret and analyze survey feedback to learn about the source of their buyer’s remorse.

Over to you now: How ready are you to take the bull by the horns?!

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Article

10min read

7 Ways To Make Your Testimonials More Persuasive  

Social proof is pivotal in establishing your company’s credibility. Recommendations from current customers cultivates trust in your brand, and prospective clients value the “tried-and-true” insight your testimonials provide.

Here are some quick stats on the positive impact of testimonials:

  • Customers are likely to spend 31% more with a business that has “excellent” reviews.
  • Nearly 70% of consumers rely on online reviews before making a purchase.
  • 90% of respondents who read online reviews said positive ones impact their buying decisions.
Trust of online reviews vs. personal recommendations

But just adding a few testimonials to your website isn’t enough. Brands that inspire higher emotional intensity receive 3x as much word-of-mouth as opposed to less emotionally-connected brands.

Unless your customer testimonials tell a convincing story that resonates with people, they will never sell. So, how do you curate testimonials that have a positive impact?

Showcase Reverse Testimonials

A reverse testimonial is a positive review that begins with skepticism. It homes in on the uncertainty your customer had before making a purchase, what swayed them to choose you, and why that was the right decision. (This is something Copyblogger has made popular.)

Reverse testimonials feel more genuine than praise-only pull quotes, which can come across as saccharine and insincere. By acknowledging that your customer initially had doubts about your product, you create an immediate connection with a prospect that’s weighing your brand against your competitors.

Check out the Bony to Beastly review below. Adam begins by talking about how overwhelmed he was searching for a workout program when most of them seemed like shams.

Example of a reverse testimonial

Adam echoes a universal doubt that people feel when evaluating a product: Will I be satisfied with my purchase?  Is this the best choice?

Testimonial explains why this brand was unique

Adam then notes what the deciding factor was for selecting Bony to Beastly, and why this workout program is unique compared to all the others (making it the top choice).

Feature Your High-Profile, Influential Customers

People with a strong reputation—whether they be celebrities or esteemed professionals—are often admired for their success, skillset, and expertise. When your company has a high-profile ambassador recommending your product, your perceived value automatically increases.

This, in part, is the result of a cognitive bias called the Halo Effect. According to this theory, an impression someone has of one thing will influence their idea of another, unrelated, thing.

How does the Halo Effect relate to conversions? The logic is, “I admire X, and X recommends this product, so the product must be worth buying.”

Look at how BuzzSumo features the Rolling Stones, HubSpot, and Moz.com.  

BuzzSumo features testimonials from high-profile clients

This “influencer” strategy isn’t new—it’s been used by marketers and advertisers for a long time. 

Influencer marketing over the years

Check out this article, if you are interested in learning more about the evolution of this tactic.

Create a Case Study Page

A case study allows you to chronicle your success story in detail and demonstrate the true value of your product/service. Here’s how to get started:

  • Ask the right questions. Show where your customer was before you came into the picture and how things turned out for them.
  • Include data to legitimize claims.
  • List your case studies on a dedicated section of your website. 

At AB Tasty, we named our page “Client Stories.” These stories validate our claims and give readers a sense of security, both in terms of the number of clients we’ve worked with and the quality of our service.

AB Tasty Client Stories

If you’re looking for design inspiration for your page or testimonial, check out Hubspot. You can filter results by industry, location, company size, challenges, and so on. Hootsuite’s archive is also worth a look.

HubSpot case studies

Experiment with the video format

HubSpot research says that 45% of people watch an hour or more of video per day.

Another study noted that 79% of people would rather watch a video about a product than read about it, and roughly 84% of consumers have bought something after watching a video.

The bottom line? Videos are a fantastic way to engage with customers, especially with video testimonials.  

Producing these videos can be costly, but the ROI is worth it. Aberdeen Group says that video marketers get 66% more qualified leads per year and achieve a 54% increase in brand awareness.

B2B Content Marketing Tactics

Let’s look at the video testimonial on the Codeacademy website:

The focus is on three former students—not the brand—who talk about their experience before and after the coding course. This is a video testimonial done right. It’s long enough to hold a viewer’s attention and features relatable anecdotes. 

Include Quotes That Provide Insight

Quotes are relatively easy to get but tricky to get right. Potential clients usually aren’t impressed by a generic compliment like, “the product is user-friendly!”

So how do you get a quote that’s crisp, substantial, and believable?

For one, ask your clients to be specific. What feature do they love using and why? Do they have any data that highlights their successes?

Featured quote that backs up claims with data

Then, give context. Add a photograph of the person giving the quote, along with their credentials, to humanize the testimonial and give it a greater sense of  “truthiness.”

Including photos of customers help make their quotes more relatable

One A/B test and found that including the face of a happy customer increases conversion rates by 102.5%.

Photos of happy customers help increase conversions

Interview Your Customers

A great example of using an interview for a testimonial is from Squarespace. They conducted an interview with Keanu Reeves (a high-profile ambassador) and interspersed his answers throughout the page, highlighting not-to-be-missed quotes.

Squarespace features Keanu Reeves on their site

The content is informative, interesting, and feels organic—it never comes across like a  sales pitch.

Keanu Reeves’ interview serves as a testimonial

Look For Unsolicited Testimonials

…and use them wherever you can.

Deadline Funnel used unsolicited testimonials on their website and plans to use them in their email sequences as well.

Deadline Funnel uses unsolicited testimonials on their site

Unsolicited praise is genuine, unscripted, and without an ulterior motive: it’s just from customers sincerely happy with your brand. These sorts of testimonials cement your company’s credibility and increase your conversions.

So don’t let public praise for your company go to waste! It’s a great way to show the positive impact you’ve had on customers, and the appreciation you have for them in return.

Bizzabo showcased customer tweets on their website

Getting Started

Now that you’ve stockpiled some useful tips on using testimonials to increase conversions, it’s time to start curating! Run an A/B test to see what sort of testimonials work best for you, and don’t limit yourself when it comes to formatting, style, and placement.

And now we turn it to you: How do you make customer testimonials stand out?