Install
openclaw skills install bookforge-sales-conversion-trust-systemUse when ready to convert nurtured leads into paying customers. Triggers on: "sales conversion", "close sales", "convert leads", "outrageous guarantee", "risk reversal", "3-tier pricing", "tiered pricing", "try before you buy", "free trial design", "trust signals", "testimonials", "customer objections", "fill square 6", "weak satisfaction guarantee", "pricing structure", "reduce sales friction", "everyone is in sales". Produces a sales-conversion.md document with a trust checklist, guarantee statement, 3-tier pricing menu, try-before-you-buy mechanic, and friction audit.
openclaw skills install bookforge-sales-conversion-trust-systemConvert nurtured leads into customers using a trust-first system: manufacture credibility signals, craft an outrageous guarantee that addresses real fears, design 3-tier pricing with an ultra-high-ticket anchor, add a try-before-you-buy mechanic, and remove friction so saying yes is effortless.
Use this skill after leads have been nurtured through an education-based sequence and are showing buying intent — requesting quotes, asking questions, engaging with your content. The goal at this stage is never to hard-sell; it is to remove the remaining barriers of distrust, commitment anxiety, and inertia.
If leads are arriving cold (no nurture) and you are having to convince or push them hard, the conversion process has been entered too early. In that case:
lead-nurture-sequence-designirresistible-offer-builder
OR ask the user to describe their current offer and nurture state before
proceeding.Before running the process, collect:
Check whether the nurture sequence has done its job. Well-nurtured leads should arrive pre-framed, pre-motivated, and pre-interested — essentially asking to buy. Signs the nurture has failed: prospects need heavy convincing, price objections dominate, ghosting is common after a first positive interaction ("hopeium").
Why: If you are hard-selling at this stage, the problem is upstream, not at conversion. Fixing the conversion process without fixing nurture is patching the wrong pipe.
Work through the checklist below and mark each item as present, absent, or needs improvement. Small businesses start behind large ones in perceived trustworthiness — technology and professional presentation can close this gap immediately.
Website:
Social proof:
Credentials and team:
Operations:
Why: Prospects are guilty-until-proven-innocent in their relationship with any unfamiliar business. Every absent trust signal is a reason to delay or defect. These signals are visible in seconds; the prospect never asks for them explicitly but will disqualify you if they are missing.
Brainstorm or research the specific fears and uncertainties your prospects hold about buying from you. Do NOT use generic fears. Source them from:
Write them down explicitly:
Why: A guarantee that addresses fears no one actually has is worthless. The guarantee must speak to the specific anxieties in the prospect's mind at the moment of commitment — not your assumptions about what they might worry about.
Anti-pattern to avoid: "Satisfaction guaranteed" and "money-back guarantee" are weak, vague, and ignored. They are so overused they register as noise. They do not address any named fear and therefore reduce no real anxiety.
The outrageous guarantee formula:
IT company example (verbatim from source):
"We guarantee that our certified and experienced IT consultants will fix your IT problems so they don't recur. They'll also return your calls within fifteen minutes and will always speak to you in plain English. If we don't live up to any of these promises, we insist that you tell us and we'll credit back to your account double the billable amount of the consultation."
Pest control example (verbatim from source):
"We guarantee to rid your home of ants forever, without the use of toxic chemicals, while leaving your home in the same clean and tidy condition we found it. If you aren't absolutely delighted with the service provided, we insist that you tell us and we'll refund double your money back."
Note the structure of both: named fears → specific promise per fear → named consequence if broken. Neither says "satisfaction guaranteed."
On abuse risk: Even after accounting for the small number of people who abuse a strong guarantee, you are far ahead — a strong guarantee attracts more customers than a weak one loses to abuse. If your guarantee terrifies you to write, that is a signal to improve your delivery quality, not to weaken the guarantee.
Why: Risk reversal shifts perceived risk from the buyer to the seller. When the seller bears the cost of failure, the prospect's decision becomes much easier. It also forces internal delivery quality improvement.
Offer exactly three tiers. Never a single price. Never more than three or four options (the Columbia jam study: 30% of buyers purchased from 6 options vs 3% from 24 options — choice overload prevents any decision).
Tier structure:
Ultra-high-ticket anchor: Add a fourth item (or make Premium the anchor) priced at 10x or 100x the Standard. Rule of thumb: 10% of your customer base would pay 10x more; 1% would pay 100x more. Even selling one ultra-high-ticket item per month can make up a large percentage of net profit.
The anchor also serves a psychological function: it makes Standard look reasonably priced by comparison. Ultra-high-ticket buyers also attract prestige-oriented customers who shop on service and convenience, not price.
"Unlimited" variation (risk reversal for high-volume buyers): For services with variable usage anxiety (data, consulting hours, support calls), offer an unlimited tier at a fixed monthly fee. People overestimate how much they will use a service at point of purchase; the unlimited option removes the fear of surprise charges while costing you very little on average.
Never discount. Unless you have an explicit loss-leader strategy, resist the urge. Discounting damages positioning and margin. Instead, increase value: bundle bonuses, add services, increase quantity.
Why: Price is a positioning signal, not just a number. A single price gives buyers no choice architecture. Three tiers create anchoring, upsell paths, and the illusion of control. Ultra-high-ticket items are pure profit and attract a different, higher-quality customer segment.
Design one of:
Why this works: Try-before-you-buy breaks down commitment anxiety (it feels reversible), but inertia then works in your favour. Once the prospect has the product or has experienced the service, returning it requires active effort. A genuine customer who is getting value will almost never make that effort. The burden of reversing the sale passes to the buyer.
Why: Reducing perceived commitment risk at the point of entry dramatically increases conversion without requiring any pressure tactics.
Make it explicit to every staff member that sales are the lifeblood of the business and that everyone — not just the sales department — is in sales.
Why: The BMW service clerk who failed to offer a test drive when the customer asked to borrow a newer model illustrates what happens when staff think sales is "not my job." Every touchpoint is a potential conversion moment; untrained staff close those doors silently.
Audit every step between "I want to buy" and "purchase complete." Any step that makes yes harder or no easier is a friction point. Common offenders:
Why: Prospects have already decided to buy. Every unnecessary step introduces doubt, delay, and dropout. Factor payment processing fees into your prices and absorb them — "Cash Only" signs are stepping over dollars to pick up pennies.
Compile all outputs from steps above into a single reference document.
| Input | Source |
|---|---|
| Top 3 customer fears/objections | Sales calls, support tickets, reviews |
| Existing pricing structure | Internal records |
| Current guarantee copy | Website, sales materials |
| Payment methods and checkout flow | Website / ops team |
| Nurture sequence status | lead-nurture-sequence-design output |
| Offer definition | irresistible-offer-builder output |
sales-conversion.md containing:
Trust is manufactured, not claimed. Generic claims ("best quality", "excellent service") register as noise. Trust comes from specific, verifiable signals: named staff, real photos, support systems, credentials, and testimonials with real attribution.
Specific beats vague in every guarantee. "Satisfaction guaranteed" is forgettable. A guarantee that names the prospect's actual fears and assigns a specific consequence to the seller is memorable, differentiating, and conversion-generating.
3-tier pricing is the default. A single price leaves money on the table and removes choice architecture. Always offer Basic, Standard, and Premium. Always include an ultra-high-ticket option — someone in every market will pay 10x or 100x more.
Ultra-high-ticket anchors make Standard look reasonable. This is not a gimmick; it is how choice architecture reduces price resistance across the entire product line.
Inertia favours the seller in try-before-you-buy. The mechanic is not charity — it is psychology. Getting the product into the prospect's hands shifts the burden of reversing the sale from you to them.
Friction kills conversions. At the moment of purchase, the prospect has already decided. Every unnecessary step is a chance for second thoughts. Make yes the path of least resistance.
If you have to hard-sell, the nurture failed. Conversion is the downstream outcome of a working nurture process. Conversion tactics cannot compensate for cold, unprepared leads.
| Tier | Price | Includes |
|---|---|---|
| Basic | $499/mo | Remote support, 8-hour response SLA |
| Standard | $899/mo | Remote + on-site, 2-hour response, quarterly review |
| Premium | $1,399/mo | Standard + dedicated consultant, 15-min response, monthly strategy session |
| Concierge (anchor) | $8,500/mo | Premium + CTO-on-call, custom security audit, unlimited on-site |
Guarantee (verbatim): "We guarantee that our certified and experienced IT consultants will fix your IT problems so they don't recur. They'll also return your calls within fifteen minutes and will always speak to you in plain English. If we don't live up to any of these promises, we insist that you tell us and we'll credit back to your account double the billable amount of the consultation."
Try-before-you-buy: First 30-day trial at Standard rate, full cancellation rights.
Customer fears identified:
Guarantee (verbatim): "We guarantee to rid your home of ants forever, without the use of toxic chemicals, while leaving your home in the same clean and tidy condition we found it. If you aren't absolutely delighted with the service provided, we insist that you tell us and we'll refund double your money back."
Note: each named fear maps directly to a named promise. This is the formula.
Trust checklist gaps identified: No physical address, no team photos, no testimonials with named clients. Priority: add testimonials first (highest trust impact, lowest cost).
Guarantee: "We guarantee you will have a complete 90-day action plan with measurable targets within 3 sessions. If you don't, we'll coach you at no charge until you do — or refund your investment in full."
3-tier pricing:
Try-before-you-buy: Free 45-minute strategy session (first value delivery, creates inertia toward the paid programme).
Friction removed: Stripe payment plan (3 monthly instalments) available on all tiers. Single-page booking form. Calendar booking self-serve.
lead-nurture-sequence-design (warm leads pre-condition),
irresistible-offer-builder (defined offer pre-condition)customer-lifetime-value-growth (post-conversion value extraction),
customer-experience-systems-design (delivery quality that backs the guarantee)This skill is licensed under CC-BY-SA-4.0. Source: BookForge — The 1-Page Marketing Plan by Allan Dib.
Install related skills from ClawhHub:
clawhub install bookforge-lead-nurture-sequence-designclawhub install bookforge-irresistible-offer-builderOr install the full book set from GitHub: bookforge-skills