Have a good look at your statistics and examine the pages which contain a web form, most notably, your contact form.
It is important to know the number of people who visit these pages, because this is the number of your luke-warm customers. A percentage of these made it through the form and contacted you, and the rest didn’t.
One of the primary reasons people do not fill out contact forms is because websites request too much detail from a potential customer.
Long forms scare people. They look like they’ll take a lot of time, and Lord knows we all don’t have much.
Simplify your forms down to the absolute bare minimum of information that you require to conduct your initial enquiry with this potential customer.
For most businesses, you should ask for just the following:
If you are a phone kind of person, consider also asking for a phone number. These three or four fields should be enough information for you to get the ball rolling.
This principle also applies to other web forms that are of an initial enquiry nature such as an availability request or quick quote.
For bookings and orders it is a given that you require much more information to complete the sale, and this doesn’t worry customers so much as they expect you will need more details.
When you walk into a retail shop and sales staff immediate come over to you and ask if they can help you before you have a good look around. Do you get that awkward, uncomfortable feeling that they’re desperate to sell you something, and you just want to leave the store?
Well asking too many details in a basic enquiry gives your potential customers a similar feeling. Keep forms short and sweet.
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