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How to Double the Conversion
Rate on Anything You Sell

By David Frey
In my local town (Friendswood, TX) there is a
privately owned sandwich shop that prides itself in offering more sandwich
variations than any of the fast food restaurants in town.
The owner is a friend of mine and he was
mentioning to me the other day about how slow his sales were. Knowing that I
was a marketer he asked me if I had any suggestions.
I Asked My Friend to Show Me His
Menu...
I looked at the menu and immediately spotted
a major problem. I told him, "How would you like to increase your sales by
30% with the exact same amount of customers that currently come through your
shop?"
His eyebrows rose with interest.
I mentioned to him that he was making the
same mistake that many business owners make in not only the food industry
but in most industries.
He said, "I'm listening David."
Now I had his attention. (And I hope I have
yours too.)
What I Told My Friend to Do...
As I looked at my friends menu it was packed
with different types of sandwiches with all kinds of side dishes and about
12 different drink options.
There were a lot of options.
In fact, there were too many options.
I told my friend to do 4 things...
1. Remove 30% of the sandwich and drink
offerings on his menu.
2. Create 5 different bundled "value
offers" such as a drink, sandwich, chips, and a cookie. Then increase the
price by 30%.
3. Put a big red starburst on the menu next
to two of the sandwich bundles. The first one should say "Voted # 1 in
Flavor by Our Customers" (highest price) and the second one should say
"Today's Special" (lowest bundle price).
4. Stock up on the ingredients for the two
value bundles that had the red starbursts next to them and decrease the
stock of the other sandwiches.
He was courageous enough to test my
recommendations and low and behold, the average transaction value of his
sales increased by around 20% (Not the 30% that I had hoped for but close.)
How to Make a Simple Change In Your
Business that Could Double Your Sales Conversion Rate
A smart marketer once said, "Confused Minds
Always Say NO!" It's true, when you provide too many options to a customer
then they get confused and often decide not to buy anything at all.
This marketing principle plays out in many
different ways. Read the following examples of how you can implement this
important marketing principle:
Example 1 - When asking for
referrals, instead of saying, "Do you know anyone who would benefit from
my services?" you say, "Is there someone on your bowling team who might
benefit from my services?
Example 2 - When selling multiple
items, whether on a website or in a retail store always position your best
products as "Top Seller" or "Today's Special" or "Best Value."
Example 3 - When advertising retail
items only focus on one or two offers or one offer per category.
Example 4 - When in a face-to-face
selling situation, find out your prospects problem and offer only one, or
at most, two solutions.
Example 5 - When creating different
price points for different packages of goods make one price an obvious
choice.
You see, the idea is not to make anyone think
about your offer. If they have to think too much about your offer you're one
step away from losing the sale.
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