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Turn yoru Web forms into business generators
Get more leads
Turn your Web forms into business generators
By Michael Russer
Your Web site forms are
the most direct way for your site visitors to contact and interact with
you — they
are literally the doorway to new online business. Unfortunately, this door
is slammed shut on most agent sites.
But getting prospects to complete your Web forms with accurate information
is not difficult.
Here are three proven strategies that will have your visitors actually excited
about filling out your forms. Keep in mind that these assume you are giving
your visitors something of value in exchange for completing a form.
Strategy 1:
Tell them
they don’t have to complete it!
One
of the biggest mistakes that Web site owners make with their forms is insisting
that a visitor provide full contact information. This is the old gate keeper
mentality that essentially says: “I’ll give you the information
you want as long as you tell me who you are.”
This simply does not work well with the online consumer who initially enjoys
the anonymity the Internet affords them. In fact, putting in this type of
requirement can drive them away, or many consumers will blatantly enter false
information.
So take an entirely different approach. Put the following copy above each
and every form on your site and watch what happens:
“We understand that you
may be in the information-gathering stage and may not be ready to open
up about who you are or what your real estate needs are at this time. If
you are not comfortable providing all your contact information that is
perfectly OK. Just enter your e-mail address so we can send you the material
you requested.”
(NOTE: On your Web form, the e-mail address should be the only mandatory
field.)
Human nature is a funny
thing. Tell people they have to do something and they’ll dig in their heels. Explicitly tell them they don’t have to and chances
are they will complete all of it — with accurate information.
Strategy 2:
Reassure them of their privacy.
Privacy is extremely important to online consumers. The more you can explicitly
reassure them that their information will be kept safe and not be abused,
the better. In addition to the copy in Strategy 1, add the following on every
form:
“Please be assured that
your privacy will be kept sacred and your information will never be shared
with any third party.”
By the way, you should also have a link to your formal privacy policy at
the bottom of every page of your Web site, providing them with even more
comfort.
Strategy
3:
Give them visual cues to complete your form fields.
It’s
been shown anecdotally that if your form fields have a pale yellow text area
color, online consumers will often take that as a cue to complete the field,
even if it is not mandatory to do so. Another aspect of this is to have your
Web designer make your forms visually appealing and fun to use.
Form design is one of
the most overlooked areas in Web design with potentially the highest payoff.
Don’t
settle for plain vanilla forms. A little thought invested into the design
of your Web forms can give you a big return.
Put yourself in their shoes
Now just imagine you are a homeowner thinking of selling. Review your form
and the questions it asks, and just as importantly, how it asks them. As
a potential seller what are some of the conclusions you are coming to about
the practitioner that supplied this form? And, was it a burden or opportunity
to take the few minutes to do it?
The forms on your Web
site shouldn’t
be an intimidating barrier to having online consumers engage with you.
Instead, make them your welcome mat, a friendly inviting threshold that
will help turn casual visitors into serious clients.
(Reprinted from REALTOR®
Magazine Online [www.realtor.org/realtormag] March 2008 with permission
of the National Association of REALTORS®. Copyright 2008. All rights reserved.) 
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