Reducing Perceived Barriers to Buying
Your prospective customers perceive barriers in doing business with you. (That's why more of them aren't flocking to your door.) But to the degree that you reduce the risk of making the wrong decision -- choosing you -- the easier it is for them to give you a try!
Today's example:
Upon purchasing a computer accessory recently, I found an insert for Stuffbak. Their value proposition is simple: put our sticker on your camera/phone/etc. and register with us [for free]. Some day, when you lose the device and we recover it, you pay us a nominal fee [$20] to rejoin you with your lost toy.They've tapped into a point of pain (more than the loss of equipment, now we are very likely to lose personal data, documents, photos, what have you) and provided a pay-you-later insurance policy!
In retail and foodservice, this is called the "free trial". I recall lots of miniature pink taster spoons from Baskin Robbins' (Ice Cream) as a child. Businesses using this technique successfully today range from CostCo to Starbucks.
One consultant offers free weekly teleconferences, as a way of lowering customer barriers to using his services. This lets them "try on the hat" of being his client and hearing how he works, before they ever have to commit to being one. Myself, I do something similar through this column!
How might you help your customers (and your business) by deferring cost, eliminating or reducing risk, and making it easier to climb a board?

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