Fine Tuning the WIIFM Dial
APPEAL TO PERSONALITY TYPES FOR ONLINE SUCCESS
You’re never gonna increase your conversion rate by pushing
what you want to do in the way you want to do it, because there are
lots of folks out there who don’t think or act or even feel the same as
you.
Let me put it more succinctly: online efforts that don’t
make allowances for the different ways in which people approach making a
decision leave lots of money on the table.
It’s a personality thing.
So, to make it online, you gotta construct the type of
environment that leads your customers through buying the way they want
to buy. You write copy, set up decision paths and create designs that
are going to snag your various visitors, pull them in and get them to
take action.
Please join me for a special issue of Grokdotcom as we revisit this super-critical subject.
Your task-oriented visitors are landing on your site with a
single question in mind: What's in it for me? Around here, we call it
everyone’s favorite radio station, WIIFM.
They ask the question and look to you to provide the
answer. And it’s a big question. Your answer depends on things like
your Unique Value Proposition, the products or services you offer, your
ability to instill trust and confidence. But most of all, your answer
must be reflected in the way your site “speaks” to the four dominant
personalty types.
The sales process and the buying decision process - these
are the paths of activity your Web site must accommodate. But folks are
gonna walk those paths differently. Let’s take a look at the
differences:
AMIABLE
Attitude: Personal, activity oriented
Using Time: Undisciplined, fast paced
Question: Why is your solution best to solve the problem?
Approach: Address values and provide assurances, credible opinions rather than options
ANALYTICAL
Attitude: Businesslike, detail oriented
Using Time: Disciplined, methodically paced
Question: How can your solution solve the problem?
Approach: Provide hard evidence and superior service
EXPRESSIVE
Attitude: Personal, relationship oriented
Using Time: Undisciplined, slow paced
Question: Who has used your solution to solve my problem?
Approach: Offer testimonials and incentives
ASSERTIVE
Attitude: Businesslike, power oriented
Using Time: Disciplined, strategically paced
Question: What can your solution do for me?
Approach: Provide options, probabilities and challenges
You’re getting the idea that different personality types
ask different questions, require different sorts of information to feel
comfortable making their decisions and even take different amounts of
time in which to make their decisions, right?
Think about how all this works in the “real” world.
Imagine you - an impressionistic, Expressive type - go to a
bricks-and-mortar store to purchase a digital camera. All you want is a
camera that takes pictures and isn’t a big hassle - you just want to
enjoy yourself. The salesperson comes on like a know-it-all and rattles
on about pixels and resolutions and cabling and any number of other
technical considerations you really could care less about. You want to
know, and truly only care, whether the camera is going to fit into your
lifestyle. Will it be a good match for your expectations and how you
generally use techie gadgets like this? If the salesperson can’t
communicate the information you need to know, in the way you want to
learn it, you’re not going to be happy. You are going to start tuning
out the salesperson. And you’ll probably walk away none-the-wiser, as
well as cameraless.
Now, imagine you are a very Analytic sort of person. You’ve
done the research and inherently understand the advantages or
disadvantages of each feature. To feel comfortable about a purchase,
you need to know you are getting a camera designed to meet your
criteria. You want to speak with someone who knows all the facts and
can answer all your questions. But you get a different salesperson in
our theoretical store, and this one wants to tell you all about how
easy the camera is to use and shows you print-out images and explains
her Mom has one and loves it. This is going to strike you as vague and
ditsy. You are going to start tuning out the salesperson and may well
conclude she doesn’t know the first thing about what she’s trying to
sell.
Good salespeople know whether or not they are saying what
the customer needs to hear, the way the customer needs to hear it, in
order to make a decision to purchase. And a good salesperson knows how
to redirect the presentation quickly if it isn’t working. It’s one of
the most essential components of “the sale.”
Acknowledging personality types online is critical
- you are conducting business in a self-service medium. You aren’t
there to modify your persuasion tactics when you notice they’re falling
on deaf ears. You only notice you’ve missed the mark when you check out
your Web logs.
Online, it’s the responsibility of your hyperlinks to
establish, maintain and offer alternatives to your “dialog.” So how do
you do that?
Let’s distill the information above to the basics:
Amiables prefer to focus on
WHY questions.
Analyticals prefer to focus on
HOW questions.
Expressives prefer to focus on
WHO questions.
Assertives prefer to focus on
WHAT questions.
Now, look at this snippet of copy:
Our approach is personalized to meet your objectives. The
bottom line is that your results are guaranteed. Explore our
methodology to discover how thousands of clients just like you have
been delighted.
Different elements in this copy are going to appeal to different personality types.
Amiables will latch onto the “personalized to meet your objectives”
part. Analytics will make a bee-line for the “methodology” section.
Expressives are going to be very interested in those “thousands of
clients.” And the Assertives are happiest when you cut to the chase and
talk “bottom lines” and “guaranteed results.”
With this knowledge, you can
develop a linking strategy - always in the active window - so your visitors can follow the buying decision path as it suits them best.
Here at Future Now, that’s just what we do with our Web
site (undergoing graphic redesign as we speak!). We’ve painstakingly
crafted copy that incorporates specific words and phrases that allow us
to create multiple personality scenarios (or navigation paths) to
appeal to the different personality types.
Each scenario follows a logical progression based on the steps of the sales and buying decision process,
but along the way, there is always the opportunity to shift
personality gears. And our left-bar navigation? You’ll notice the
topics change - anticipating the questions you’re most likely to ask at
that point - depending on the scenario you are following and where you
are in the sales process. The global nav stays the same and lets you
hop, skip and jump your way through the site, if that’s your
preference.
As we developed these scenarios, we were very careful to
test, measure and optimize. In examining the navigation paths on our
site over time, we learned some interesting things. Those who followed
an Assertive scenario were happily staying in the process. So were the
Amiables and the Expressives. Our difficulties were with the
Analyticals - those folks who need lots of information and take their
time making decisions. (We get more Analyticals than any other
personality type.) We’d snag them just fine with the methodology
hyperlink, but lose many of them at the methodology page. We realized
this was in part because we weren’t giving them enough information to
help them decide. One of our solutions was to offer a free,
downloadable report full of conversion information.
It worked! And here’s an important feature of our solution:
you only get to the downloadable report if you follow a methodology
link (there are a number, phrased differently, at various stages
along the conversion paths
for each scenario). Are the dudes here withholding cretins? Hardly.
But if you aren’t concerned about our methodology, you’re probably not
going to bother reading the Report. Why shove it in your face? It’s
simply that much extra noise - the know-it-all salesperson blathering
on about stuff that doesn’t really matter to you. Remember, not all
content is created equal, and not all people want the same content at
the same time!
Humans are amazingly complex creatures, and any
classification attempt is a simplification of this complexity. On top of
that,
no one person is all one personality type. You are each
delightful mixtures
- one type may predominate, but others come into play, often influenced
by environmental factors, social factors, even ephemeral moods. So,
even though you may know for a fact that 72 percent of your visitors
are Analyticals, that
doesn't mean you can write solely to the analytical profile!
After all, your Analytical might follow a path that is
primarily how-oriented, then decide that to feel completely comfortable
taking action, he requires some who-oriented information.
Also,
consider the nature of the products or services you offer. Pure impulse-buying - the kind that Newport-News.com excels at - is going to appeal most to the friendly, impulsive Amiables.
A site selling engineering equipment is going to attract
more Analyticals than Expressives … and even if an Expressive engineer
requires the product, his job requires that he be concerned with a
logical, orderly, precise and features-attentive approach. And if you
run an online dating service, no matter how Analytical or Assertive
your visitor, she is likely to approach this service in an Expressive
state of mind.
Your
ultimate goal is to delight each of your visitors,
for the delighted customer is the one most likely to complete a
purchase, refer your business to others and return to buy again.
This
personality stuff is the key. And there’s no time like the present for getting personable!!
Originally published on
www.grokdotcom.com