Thursday, August 11, 2016

6 Questions to Ask for Powerful Testimonials

what to ask to get powerful testimonials

Most of us ask for testimonials. And if we follow up and pester our customers enough, we receive testimonials.

There’s only one problem. These testimonials have no power.

Testimonials are stories. And stories potentially have power and grace, flow and rhythm. Look around you and you’ll see none of that in most testimonials.

Limp testimonials are a fact of life because clients don’t always know how to give testimonials and we often don’t have a clue about how to ask for testimonials.

We’re going to fix that today by examining six key questions you can use when asking for testimonials.

Ask these 6 questions to get a powerful testimonial

  1. What was the obstacle that would have prevented you from buying this product?
  2. What did you find as a result of buying this product?
  3. What specific feature did you like most about this product?
  4. What are three other benefits of this product?
  5. Would you recommend this product? If so, why?
  6. Is there anything you’d like to add?

Some folks may use slightly different terms for Question 1, like “What was your main concern about buying this product?”

You can tailor this question for your specific product or service, but don’t stray too much away from asking about objections and obstacles; it’s critical to learn about objections and the reasons why this customer (and others) may have been hesitating to buy.

Why these 6 smart questions work

Let’s discuss each of these six questions.

1. What was the obstacle that would have prevented you from buying this product?

We ask this question because no matter how ready the customer is to buy, there’s always a hitch. The hitch could be money, time, availability, or relevance — or a whole bunch of issues.

When you ask this question, it brings out those issues. And it does something more. When the client reaches into his memory to see what could have been the deal-breaker, it gives you insight into issues you may not have considered.

There’s always an obstacle, and it’s often something you may not have thought of. So when the customer brings up this obstacle, it presents an angle that’s unique, personal, and dramatic.

2. What did you find as a result of buying this product?

This question is important because it defuses that obstacle. When a client answers this question, he talks about why the purchase was worth it, despite the obvious obstacles.

3. What specific feature did you like most about this product?

Now you’re digging deeper.

If you ask the customer to focus on the entire product, his response may be vague. That’s why you want to focus on a single feature or benefit that the customer liked most. This method brings out that one feature in explicit richness and detail.

4. What are three other benefits of this product?

Since you already got information about one important feature, you can now go a little wider and see what else the customer found useful.

You can substitute the number “three” with “two” or even remove the number completely. But the number does make it easier for your customer to address the question. It lets her focus on a limited number of factors and give you the ones that were most useful to her.

5. Would you recommend this product? If so, why?

You may not think this is an important question, but psychologically it’s very important. When a customer recommends something, there’s more than your product at stake. The customer’s integrity is at stake too.

Unless the customer feels strongly about the product, she won’t be keen to recommend it. And when she does recommend it, she communicates to prospective buyers: “Hey, I recommend it, and here are the reasons why!”

6. Is there anything you’d like to add?

At this point, the customer has often said everything she has to say. But there’s never any harm in asking this question.

The questions before this one tend to “warm up” the customer, and sometimes you get the most amazing parting statements that you never could have imagined.

Use testimonials to discover and address objections

This detailed method of constructing testimonials brings us to a very interesting observation: the testimonial is the answer to the objection.

Look at the first question we asked the customer:

What was the obstacle that would have prevented you from buying this product?

That “obstacle” the customer talks about is really their biggest objection.

So, what does this tell us about how we should plan our testimonials?

We should plan our testimonials to directly defuse each objection

Let’s say you’re selling a trip to see the wildlife on the Galápagos Islands.

Obviously, the trip is appealing to travelers seeking a wildlife adventure, but even thrill-seekers have their objections.

If you did your homework and interviewed a potential customer, you’d hear objections such as:

  • It’s too expensive.
  • It’s too far to travel.
  • There are no comfortable accommodations.

Now, let’s assume these are the three main objections

What are the testimonials going to say?

  • I thought it was too expensive, but (here’s what I found).
  • I thought it was too far to travel, but (here’s what I found).
  • I thought we’d have to rough it, but (here’s what I found).

Each testimonial is a mirror image of each objection

Even if you have already addressed objections earlier in your sales copy, prospects get a third-party perspective when current customers also defuse objections in testimonials.

A third party is always far more believable to your prospective customers. And because each testimonial is specifically linked to an objection, it systematically reduces the risk.

How do you control the angle of the testimonial?

You may want the customer to talk about expense, distance, or comfort. But the customer may want to talk about her fear of seasickness or dangerous animals. So, how do you control the angle?

You don’t.

You’re in the business of helping construct the testimonial. You ask questions that give the testimonial structure; you don’t need to control the process.

But that doesn’t mean you can’t influence responses. Here’s how you attempt to get the angle you desire.

Start with the key objections you need to address

Reach out to the customer. Ask him if expense, distance, or comfort was one of his big objections.

If he says yes, follow up to find out the specifics of why expense, distance, or comfort was an issue.

But if he disagrees, and mentions a completely different issue, keep following that customer’s train of thought.

For example, he might say, “I thought bad weather would spoil the trip.”

That feedback reveals an objection you hadn’t considered, and it may be a valid objection that hasn’t come to your attention yet.

However, you may decide that the stray objection isn’t worth pursuing and you can’t use the objection and corresponding testimonial. No problem. If you decide you can’t use the testimonial, you can always reach out to other clients to get the angle you’re looking for.

With this process, you’re going to get the exact objections and exact testimonials that help defuse key objections. Which means that the testimonial is going to do some real grunt work to overcome objections.

Get detail-rich, complex, believable testimonials

Testimonials are so powerful because they’re delivered from a third-party perspective rather than the point of view of the seller.

When a customer produces a testimonial that is rich in detail and emotion, the testimonial becomes complex but also believable. And that’s the main job of the testimonial.

In the comments below, share your tips for collecting persuasive testimonials.

Editor’s note: This is the second part of The Secret Life of Testimonials. The original version of this post was published on April 8, 2010.

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