Nine Ways to Build Trust and Win the Sale

What are you doing to build trust in the mind of your customers? Building trust is one of the best ways to increase sales of product and services. This is particularly true if you are selling professional services such as insurance, financial management, accounting or legal services, or selling business to business. Basically, success in these fields requires that you sell yourself to sell your products. And selling yourself involves development of customer trust in you as an individual and in your recommendations.

All sales people can talk about how good their company is, their client list and provide references. Despite such information including any hard data on performance, what is likely to separate one out from the others in the customer’s mind is an emotional feeling that the customer has-a feeling of trust and “like” for the person trying to make the sale.

Trust can also win over the customer when you can’t offer the lowest price. In such cases, sales people are routinely taught to sell value. But value cannot always be quantified. It often boils down to such statements as:”We provide better service.” “We’ll be there when you need us.” “We’ll work harder for you.” How can the customer know that this will really happen? They can’t. In effect, we are asking them to put their trust in us. Without trust, the statements become meaningless.

Take Action to Boost Your Trust Quotient

Building trust quickly takes more than simple statements (trust me on this). It requires actions and statements specifically designed to grow a feeling of trust-trust that we deserve, but trust that we must work to earn. Here are nine specific ways that you can increase your customer’s perception of trust in you:

In the end, it is your overall performance once you get the sale that will build strong trust in you. However, the above actions can help you get past the threshold of trust needed to get your foot in the door and demonstrate your and your product’s capabilities.

© 2016, Dr. Dennis Rosen. All rights reserved. Reprints welcomed so long as article and by-line are kept intact and all links made live.