Social Proof on
An obvious way to apply social proof on LinkedIn is to have recommendations on your LinkedIn profile, preferably from clients. There is little point in asking your colleagues to do this, as recommendations from clients are much more credible. If you do not work directly with clients, you could ask a manager to write a recommendation for you.
If you have successfully completed a project and the client indicates that they are extremely phone number database atisfied with your service, then that is the moment to ask your client to write a recommendation for you on LinkedIn. The more recommendations, the greater the social proof. Social proof works best here when visitors to your profile recognize themselves in the people from whom the recommendations come. In other words, a marketing manager, for example, is most easily convinced
A by the recommendations of other marketing managers
Did you post a LinkedIn post that received a lot of likes and comments? Other LinkedIn users will be more likely to stop and read your post when scrolling through their timeline. A post that receives so many comments must be worth reading or watching. There is a snowball effect: the more comments, the more readers, and the more readers, the more comments.
Example in your content creation
95% of our customers are fans of this red wine
80% of our tickets are already booked by startups
(Psstt.. the difference between influencing and misleading is small. Of course you have to tell the truth. Then it clean email is influencing. If you lie with numbers then we speak of misleading).
4. Sympathy
People are more likely to say yes to someone they find sympathetic and nice. As soon as you are liked seller tricks that buyers need to know you increase the likeability factor enormously. But why do you actually find someone sympathetic?