By Jeremy Gislason
The more times your customers visit your site, the more time they will have invested in your relationship and the more they will come to trust and rely on you. By building up their loyalty in this way, there is more chance that they will buy from you, follow your advice and buy your affiliate products, or click on ads that you recommend.
Put simply, a sticky site equals customer loyalty. Customer loyalty equals revenue.
1. Content. We can’t stress the importance of content enough. Keep the content up-to-date and time sensitive. Remove out-of-date content so that it doesn’t affect the credibility of your site.
2. Give your site a personality.There is a huge amount of information on the Internet, and you can be sure your members could find what you are providing elsewhere. What your members are really paying for is the way you present that information.
3. Remain focused on your niche. Don’t forget that your members joined your site because they had an interest in your niche. While it is fine to include content on a slightly different subject if you are sure it will be relevant and interesting, never lose sight of your original subject. Wander too far off the subject and your may find your customers wandering off your member list.
4. Make information easy to find. Ensure the content on your membership site is organized in such a way that your members will find what they want easily. If your members view your site as a valuable information resource rather than just another Web site, they will want to use it again and again.
5. Provide what your customers want. Encourage your customers to ask for an article or information on a certain subject if they can’t find it. Writing an article specifically for one customer may seem like a lot of work, but if you think long term, that customer may then stay with you for the lifetime of your membership site.
6. Keep in touch with your members. Contacting your members via e-mail is essential to keep them engaged with your site. Send your members updates, informative newsletters and reminders, and ask them for their feedback.
7. Ask them to take part in surveys.Ask your members to complete a survey about your membership site and then make sure you act on their feedback and let them know you have done so. Send out a special edition of your newsletter showing some of the results of your survey and detailing how you have responded and any changes you have made. Feeling that they have had a hand in shaping your site will really make your members feel engaged in your online community.
8. Allow customization of your home page. Having some functions that your members personalize on your site will really make them feel involved. Even a simple message at the top of the home page saying “Welcome back [member name]” will have a huge impact on making your members feel valued.
9. Build a sense of community. Being part of an online community is one of the main reasons your members will renew their membership. Here are a few additional tips on creating that sense of community.
10. Promote an active forum.This provides a place for your members to get to know each other and begin to care about each other. Stopping their membership once they have become involved in your forum would be like losing a whole group of friends. Provide a function that allows your members to send private messages between each other. If you run competitions, or encourage your members to submit content, make sure you acknowledge the winners or contributors. Nothing makes a member feel a part of your site like seeing their name in the latest newsletter.
Jeremy Gislason is a leading expert on membership sites, marketing and online business. Do you want to market and sell all of your products faster? Free how to business and marketing courses at: http://www.MembershipMillionaire.com.