Write High Converting Product Descriptions for Your eCommerce Store
eCommece
is growing at an exponential rate across the globe. In the US alone, eCommerce
sales are expected to top $20 trillion by 2020. To benefit from this growth
trend, you need to ensure that your eCommerce store is fully optimized to
attract visitors and convert them into buyers.
Among
several other things, a key factor that impacts your e-commerce sales is the
quality of your product descriptions.
It
does the job that a well-qualified salesperson would do in a physical retail
outlet, and is often the difference between potential buyers bouncing back from
your website, and casual visitors turning into buyers.
So,
what exactly constitutes a high quality and conversion focused product
description?
If
you follow these steps, creating a seductive product description won’t be that
hard.
Identify
Your Ideal Buyer Persona
Before
you even start describing your product, you need to clearly identify your ideal
buyer persona.
A
buyer persona is a sample profile of your ideal buyer. This is the person for
whom your product is important, and who is willing to spend money on it.
You
need to list down the key characteristics of your ideal buyer so that you can
clearly identify and target him while writing your product description.
A
typical buyer persona includes details like the gender of your buyer, income
bracket, career level, interests, hobbies, likes and dislikes, their problems
that your product solves and the phrases and words they use to describe their
problems etc.
The
more detailed your buyer persona, the better.
Keep
this imaginary buyer in mind while writing your product description.
As
you move forward, make more sales and learn more about your buyers, you can
keep improving this buyer persona and make the necessary adjustments to your
product descriptions.
Focus
on the Benefits of Your Product and the Problems It Solves
Perhaps
the most frequent mistake I see in product descriptions is the unnecessary
focus on product features.
Features
are important, no question about it. But you need to show your potential
buyers a direct relationship between your product features and the solution to
their problems.
In
other words, focus on the benefits of your product instead of its features.
Always state the benefits of your product before its features.
For
example, instead of directly listing the technical details on the resolution, pixels
and display quality of a smartphone, tell your buyers how your smartphone brand
allows users to read messages without screen glare, under sunlight, saving them
from eye strain and headache.
This
is just one example.
When
you start writing a product description, first list down all its features
separately. Now translate each feature into a benefit.
You’ll
be surprised how powerful and convincing your product descriptions can become
with this simple change of mindset.
Use
Benefit Driven Images of Your Product
A
winning product description is incomplete without relevant and high quality
product images. Images become even more important when you have specialized
products and not just some decorative items like furniture and LCDs.
For
example Nielson conducted a study in which they compared the behaviors of two
different sets of buyers looking for bookshelves and LCD TVs.
They
noted that on average users spent almost 82% of their time reading the text
description of the product, while 18% of the time was spent examining product
images. However, images for bookshelves were examined in much more detail as
compared to generic items like LCD TVs.
So
if you have a specialized product, images become much more important.
But
for maximum impact, make sure you add multiple product images with your product
description.
Add
images that demonstrate different practical uses of your product. Also add a
few close up images of the product that give a good look of your product to the
buyer.
Cut
Down on Meaningless Statements and Jargon
What
exactly are you telling your prospective buyer when you say your product has
excellent quality?
Is
a seller supposed to say anything else?
These
are obvious statements that buyers usually ignore because no one describes
their product as poor quality.
You
need to cut down on these obvious statements and instead focus on highlighting
the key benefits of your product that reflect high quality.
For
example, nowhere in this product description will you find claims about product
quality. Yet, the overall product description gives you a strong impression of
high quality.
Instead
of stating the obvious by claiming high quality standards, try highlighting why
your product is high quality. Focus on its unique selling points (USPs) and
tell the buyer why you’re a better choice.
Create
Content That Can Be Scanned Easily
Modern
day internet users are short on time, and usually skim through content instead
of reading each and every word.
Writing
your product descriptions as one large block of text discourages your buyers
from reading it completely.
Instead,
intelligently highlight the key areas of your product descriptions and segment
your content properly. Make it easy to scan for your readers and help them find
what they’re looking for.
To
achieve this, use short paragraphs (2-3 lines) in your product descriptions,
highlight important features and benefits by making them bold or italic, use
bullet points, headings and sub headings etc.
The
objective here is to make it as convenient as possible for your buyers to
identify the key benefits they’re getting from your product.
A
properly formatted product description can prove to be the difference between
an unconvinced prospect and a potentially long term customer.
Optimize
Your Product Descriptions for Search Engines
No
matter what products you sell and which region you target, if you have an
e-commerce store, search engine traffic is crucial for your sales.
So
naturally, optimizing your product descriptions for search engines, is
important.
But
most of your potential customers are unaware of your brand name. They also
don’t know the branded names of your products.
All
they know is that they have a problem, and they need a solution for it.
That
is why it is absolutely critical that you optimize your product descriptions
around the needs of your customers, not the brand name of your product.
Use
selected keywords in your product descriptions that your client use to describe
their need.
Think
from your buyer’s perspective and write in their language.
But
make sure you don’t overuse keywords because that can kill your voice in the
product description and make it less persuasive.
Wrapping
Up
A
product description is your sales pitch to potential buyers. You need to make
it as persuasive, understandable and engaging as possible. By applying the
techniques I’ve discussed in this post, I am sure you can make your product
descriptions much more effective in the long run.
What
are some of the other ways you have seen brands and e-commerce stores make
product descriptions more persuasive?
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