Increase Conversion with Situational Selling

  • by Diane Metz
  • Published on 2/13/07
  • Article views: 294

When you walk into a sporting goods store, does the salesperson immediately assume that you play hockey? Of course not. In fact, he'd probably never make a sale if he greeted every customer with 'Hi! We've got some great ice skates in just your size. Would you like to see a pair?'

On the other hand, the one-size-fits-all sales pitch -- 'Hello, may I help you?' -- doesn't exactly entice shoppers to break out the old wallet either.

Instead, the really good salespeople are trained to discover details about the customer before trying to pitch a particular item. A question like, 'Hi, how are you? What sport do you play?' is a great opening line. It gets the customer to focus on a general topic, and then persuades him or her to narrow down the choices. And a focused customer is a buyer, not a browser.

What does this have to do with your online sales? Plenty. Especially if you'd like to increase your conversion by 50 percent or more.

You see, if you focus just on increasing traffic without increasing your profit per visitor, well, you're missing out on more money. Or more e-mail opt-ins. Or whatever it is that you do to monetize your site. Fewer clicks and more sales should always be the goal. You'll improve those two metrics when your site successfully gets visitors to focus right away on the homepage and then proceed directly to checkout.

That's where the 'situational sell' can be your super-cyber salesperson. On a website, you can give visitors a few choices that best describe their situation, and entice them to click on the description that puts them into a specific segment of the market.

The situational sell is a way to pitch products and information strictly from the customer's point of view. If you're selling sports merchandise online, you would want to get customers to click on their favorite team right away, and then choose the item they want to buy. After all, a New York Yankees fan isn't interested in looking at merchandise from the Arizona Cardinals. If you're selling real estate, you could ask visitors if they're buying a starter home, a vacation home, or just looking to remortgage an existing home. Think of the situational sell as pre-qualifying your visitors, before they get a chance to wander aimlessly through your site. If you pre-qualify them, you can funnel them through the sales process a lot faster.

One traffic school website who tried this tactic ended up increasing its email opt-ins by a whopping 60 percent! How did they do it? Instead of simply listing the names of the courses it offers, the website asks visitors what type of driver they are, literally. On the site you'll see 3 boxes in a row in the main body area. Each box contains a unique headline, a photo to illustrate the idea, and a description of services within the category.

Box #1 contains the headline 'New Driver?' and includes a picture of teenagers laughing and hanging out in a school parking lot. Box #2 carries the headline 'Too Many Tickets?' and includes a picture of a driver getting a ticket. Finally, Box #3 has the headline 'Trying to pass the state exam?' along with a picture of a recent immigrant holding paperwork.

Under the headlines, a series of links appear. This is also a great place to include your top-tier keywords. Once a visitor clicks on one of those links, he or she is guided to a page specifically geared to sell products or services to their demographic.

The beauty in setting up a 'situational sell' website is that it's a very flexible way to market one type of product to a wide selection of site visitors.

If you're selling e-books or informational products, there will be different features or advantages that you'll want to highlight, depending on the visitor. By segmenting your visitors first on your homepage, you can funnel them to specialized pitches.

The situational sell sounds logical because it is logical. But in the day-to-day minutia of maintaining a website, the big details sometimes get lost in the shuffle. Take a fresh look at your homepage and give your visitors a fresh perspective. Try the situational sell. It will make your visitors comfortable, they'll feel as if you already understand their point of view, and you'll most likely be rewarded with higher conversions.

Diane Metz writes about website marketing and development. She offers free, unique content to select websites. Her companies include Crown CD Manufacturing, which specializes in CD duplication and CD replication, for marketing, music, promotions and software.

Bookmark it: Digg this! Add to Del.icio.us Furl this! Add to Stumbleupon Add to Facebook

Rate this article:


More Articles

  • International Brand Naming And How Words Can Hurt You
    It was the famous publicist PJ Barnum who said in 1855 'I do not care what people say about me but get my name right'. In today's international marketplace, getting names right is vital. Marketers and brand managers are becoming more and more concerned that their newly created name will be inappropriate in their target markets.
  • Increase Conversion with Situational Selling
    When you walk into a sporting goods store, does the salesperson immediately assume that you play hockey? Of course not. In fact, he'd probably never make a sale if he greeted every customer with 'Hi! We've got some great ice skates in just your size. Would you like to see a pair?' On the other hand, the one-size-fits-all sales pitch -- 'Hello, may I help you?' -- doesn't exactly entice shoppers to break out the old wallet either.
  • Effective Marketing on a Shoestring Budget
    Many business owners would give their left arm to have the same brand recognition as Oprah, Microsoft, McDonald's, Starbucks or Amazon.com. But you don't need the marketing budgets of these behemoths to promote your company and get your piece of the pie. A creative approach to self-promotion will put you face to face with your prospects and, properly executed, can help you become a well-known name.
  • Why the Best Marketing Tactics May Fail You
    Ever wonder why some marketing tactics work for some businesses but not others? Maybe you heard about a business that paints their company website's URL on the top of their delivery trucks and increased online sales by 25% in a single quarter. However, when you try the same tactic, your sales remain flat.
  • Three Ways to Start a Conversation and Finish with a Sale
    Ditch your elevator pitch. Zap your infomercial. And whatever you do, keep your carefully worded, painstakingly developed, positioning statement to yourself. They may make you sound clever, but your elevator pitch, infomercial or positioning statement don’t exactly make for good conversations. Which is a shame, because last I checked, even a sales conversation is just that – a conversation.
  • Three Ways to Start a Conversation and Finish with a Sale
    Ditch your elevator pitch. Zap your infomercial. And whatever you do, keep your carefully worded, painstakingly developed, positioning statement to yourself. They may make you sound clever, but your elevator pitch, infomercial or positioning statement don’t exactly make for good conversations. Which is a shame, because last I checked, even a sales conversation is just that – a conversation.
  • Why the Best Marketing Tactics May Fail You
    Ever wonder why some marketing tactics work for some businesses but not others? Maybe you heard about a business that paints their company website's URL on the top of their delivery trucks and increased online sales by 25% in a single quarter. However, when you try the same tactic, your sales remain flat.
  • Increase Conversion with Situational Selling
    When you walk into a sporting goods store, does the salesperson immediately assume that you play hockey? Of course not. In fact, he'd probably never make a sale if he greeted every customer with 'Hi! We've got some great ice skates in just your size. Would you like to see a pair?' On the other hand, the one-size-fits-all sales pitch -- 'Hello, may I help you?' -- doesn't exactly entice shoppers to break out the old wallet either.
  • Effective Marketing on a Shoestring Budget
    Many business owners would give their left arm to have the same brand recognition as Oprah, Microsoft, McDonald's, Starbucks or Amazon.com. But you don't need the marketing budgets of these behemoths to promote your company and get your piece of the pie. A creative approach to self-promotion will put you face to face with your prospects and, properly executed, can help you become a well-known name.
  • International Brand Naming And How Words Can Hurt You
    It was the famous publicist PJ Barnum who said in 1855 'I do not care what people say about me but get my name right'. In today's international marketplace, getting names right is vital. Marketers and brand managers are becoming more and more concerned that their newly created name will be inappropriate in their target markets.
  • Resell Rights - What You Need To Know
    Resell Rights allow you to purchase a product and redistribute it keeping 100% of the cost and these particular rights may come with specific restrictions such as a specified cost of resale.
  • How To Run Your Commercial Cleaning Business
    Starting any kind of business can be scary, no matter what it is. It can be a great experience or a terrifying one. It might even be both. If you're new in the business world and have just started your own commercial cleaning business or are thinking about it, the part that you might have not considered is how to run one. Yes, the daily grind of being a business owner. It will be a daily grind that is challenging, exciting but best of all, yours.
  • SEO Certification - A worthless exercise or a sound investment?
    Until and unless Search engine marketing industry decides on a set of standards which is endorsed by search engines, these certifications will only have cosmetic value.
  • Buying a Carpet Extractor
    If you're researching carpet extractors, you probably have a good idea about what they can do, Carpet extractors range in price from under $100 to well over $1000, so it's a good idea to get some advice before buying.
  • The Real Face Of Alcohol Addiction
    Just when you thought you already know everything there is to know about alcoholism and then you came over this article, you will definitely think again. Alcohol has more harm than you can ever imagine. On the other hand, there is more treatment than you may have expected.
  • Common mistakes before starting a website
    If you want your website to be a big hit then you need to avoid some common mistakes before starting one. Here you have a list of pitfalls that are designed for beginner and for many established ones too. Check out the common mistakes that have to be avoided for sure!
  • A History of Vintage Automobiles - From 1916 to 1924
    Before cars were around, people usually traveled distances using horse-drawn carriages. But as early as 1335 several bright minds have been trying to come up with a 'horseless carriage'.
  • How to Create a MySpace Layout
    Creating a MySpace layout might seem tricky when you think about it but it is actually pretty easy. Here's a few steps that will help you in designing myspace templates.
  • Reiki and how it can help you Heal
    Reiki is a valuable healing tool which involves the practitioner placing his or her hands on the client without actually manipulating the body in any way. This makes Reiki an ideal healing tool for people who suffer from all kinds of conditions, both physical and emotional. This article discusses what is involved in a Reiki session and what training a Reiki practitioner undergoes.
  • Creating myspace layouts without any coding experience
    When we want to create or edit layout of our MySpace profiles, we must add or manipulate a piece of HTML and CSS code. The problem is just that not everyone know how to code and is not interested in that part either.
The opinions expressed in the above articles are solely of the authors and the owners of Point Articles may or may not agree with them. Copyright (c) 2008 Point Articles. All rights reserved.
School Uniforms | Flights to Perth | Air Malta | Aortic Valve Stenosis | Street Paintings