website testimonials examples
TRANSCRIPT
Good Rules
Most websites show testimonials of customers because they help create confidence.
The best ones:
• Feature exemplary people that anyone can identify with (because of their activity, age or gender) or can be impressed by (famous companies).
• Show a picture of the person to humanize the experience and/or the logo of the company to make it more recognizable.
• Display the first and last names of the customer, once again, to create more empathy and make it sound real.
• Most importantly, focus the quote on a personal experience: telling only "the product is great" sounds fake; telling "I personally had this great experience considering my personal needs" is much more effective.
Most of the times, the customers quotes are on the homepage.
Exceptions
On a few popular websites, the testimonials are not on the homepage:
• Plated, a food delivery company, hides its 3 customers quotes in a weird section: Why Plated->Quality and Flexibility. Shyp, a shipping service, hides them in the eBay section.
• Crew, a platform of creative freelancers, and Slack have created a specific section called Customers, where they tell long-form stories.
A few popular websites don't use customers' quotes:
• Squarespace has a Customers section that displays only clients' logos and the websites they've built with Squarespace, but no quotes.
• Neue House, a coworking space in NY, has a Community section. You might think you'll find a series of users' portraits. But, not only will you find pictures of things instead of people, but the people behind the pictures and their awkward quotes, are actually celebrities who share Neue House's spirit, like Glenn Close.
• I've also found a number of cool and/or popular websites that show absolutely no customers references. Like Mailchimp, Dropbox, Evernote, Reserve (food), Skillshare (e-learning) or Warby Parker (eyeglasses).
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