Nine Critical Elements of a Confirmation Page

In Let Your Customer’s Voice Be Heard, we highlighted the importance of surveying interactions between customers and support agents. By offering customers a platform for voicing their concerns, businesses increase loyalty, drive internal improvements, and establish a reputation for stellar service.

However, by providing customers with certain key resources and crucial pieces of information, businesses can prevent the problems that cause customers to contact support teams in the first place, thereby reducing contact rates and increasing customer satisfaction.

Sofa vs. Software

If I buy a sofa at Overstock.com, I’ll need information that allows me to track the delivery of the product, but I won’t need any instruction on how to access or use the product: It goes in the living room and I sit on it.

Digital products are different. They are delivered immediately to the buyer, but download and installation processes are often complex, even overwhelming, to some users. The order confirmation page is the perfect place to address these concerns and others.

9 Critical Elements of a Confirmation Page

1. Order completed– As a former customer service representative, I can personally attest to the fact that many customers who arrive on a confirmation page and are uncertain whether or not there is anything else they have to do to complete the order. But on it’s most basic level, a confirmation page’s entire purpose is to do just that. A good example of a confirmation page that clearly shows the order is completed is from ashampoo, who use breadcrumbs at the top of the page.

ashampoo confirmation page

2. Say thank you – Your mother taught you this when you were young: When someone does you a favor, you say, “Thank you.” In a sense, every paying customer is doing you a favor – they’re allowing you stay in business, and that favor should be acknowledged. It would take too long to explain the psychology behind the power of these two little words, but suffice to say,”thank-you’s” go a long way in maintaining relationships. Subscription companies especially, who depend on reducing churn rate, need to make sure the confirmation page is the first (though not the last) place in which they thank customers for their business. Uniblue is one of the many companies who include a thank-you at the top of the confirmation page.

Uniblue Confirmation Page

3. Browsers close, but an email is forever – The confirmation page is first displayed in the customer’s web browser. For many reasons, the customer will need to refer to the confirmation page at a future time, well after the browser has been closed: Maybe they aren’t ready to download and install the product just yet, or maybe they need the receipt for later on. It’s a best practice therefore, to send an email version of the confirmation page. However, sending an email isn’t helpful if the customer can’t find it. That is why it is also necessary to remind the customer to white-list your company’s domain name and to check their spam filters in the event they cannot find the confirmation email. Here is an example from Malwarebytes:

Malwarebytes confirmation page

4. Contact methods – No matter how many precautions you take, some customers are going to need more care than others. It’s why every business has a customer support team. The key here is not to make customers hunt around your website for contact information. Provide a toll-free number and an email address that the customer can use to contact you about the order. If you’ve got live chat capabilites, make sure its known right off the bat, like Zeobit does. And, of course, always include a reference number the customer can use when asking questions about their order.

ZeoBIT Confirmation Page

5. Product information & payment method – The confirmation page needs to confirm which product was bought and how it was paid for. These two should be obvious, but they go on the list because they’re an absolute necessity. Also make sure to include a downloadable PDF version of a receipt, as some customers may require this. And just in case your customers are not as tech savvy as the rest of us, provide a link to download a free PDF reader like Adobe.

6. Download link  – As we explained above, digital products are delivered a little differently than a sofa, for example. The confirmation page not only confirms the customer’s purchase, it provides access to the product itself. The download link is important because A.) You should not assume the customer already downloaded the product through a trial version, and B.) The customer might need to download the product onto a different machine later on.

7. Entitlement – This is the license or activation key. It should be accompanied by very clear instructions on how to properly activate the product. Don’t forget the copy and paste instructions – I can’t tell you how many customers I have encountered who are unfamiliar with this process. It is also helpful to supply a link to a knowledge-base on your site that includes some common issues faced by your customers during the installation. Parallels is a company that provides this type of important information on the confirmation page.

Parallels Confirmation Page

8. Refund policies – Whether you have liberal or conservative refund policies, making those policies clear in the confirmation page can prevent a lot of customer and employee frustration in the long run. If customers are allowed to request a refund at any time, let them know it. If they only have 30 days to do so, let them know that as well.

ashampoo Confirmation Page

9. Subscriptions & cancellation options – Customers can become upset if their credit cards are unexpectedly charged, and rightfully so. For subscription products, the confirmation page should make it clear at what intervals and for what amount the customer will be charge by subscribing to the product. Make it as easy as possible for customers to cancel if they need to.

Uniblue Confirmation Page

Preventive care

It is useful to think of the confirmation page as preventive care, the things a patient should know and do to avoid a visit to the doctor’s office. All the above best practices should be in place in order to prevent customer contacts. Not because you don’t value your customers and don’t want to hear from them. Rather, these elements are in place precisely because you care for your customers and want them to have the smoothest experience possible with your company.

Keystone

Confirmation pages are an excellent way to effectively assist customers with minimal effort. The payoff of a well-designed confirmation page is reduced contact rates and more satisfied customers.

This list is by no means exhaustive. Tell us your critical confirmation page elements in the comment section. We’d love to hear your input.