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Setting up Your For Hire page: Do’s and Don’ts

October 11, 2011 · 46 comments

This is a guest post from @IvanWalsh, a blogger and online marketer with over twenty years of IT experience who has been online since 1992 which is as early as you could BE online. He has skills in all the Internet Marketing Strategies you need to take your business or blog to the next level.

Hire me

Click Image to Read How to Get Your Prospects to Hire You

Do you rarely get asked to provide consultancy services?

If so, you need to examine your For Hire page. Look at your For Hire page and ask yourself:

  • What do others think of this page?
  • What do I want them to do next?

How can I improve my For Hire page so that passive browsers become active customers?

Why Set Up a For Hire Page?

Why do you need a For Hire page? Because it is one of the top three ways to earn an income from your skills and talents.

There are three ways to make money online:

  1. Products
  2. Services
  3. Advertising

If you want to provide services, such as writing designing and
marketing, you need to create a sales page for your services.

So, let’s look at how to set up a For Hire or Services Offered page and attract more clients.

Before we start. What goes into the For Hire page?

What prospective customers want:

You need to break it out into five sections:

  • Who you are – keep this brief, use a real name (or even a pen name) and include a photo. People like to see who they’re dealing with.
  • What you offer - list three to five services you provide. Don’t write a laundry list. Keep it focussed.
  • Customers – list customers you’ve worked with. If you’re new to this area, discuss who you’ve worked for in the past. If you’re totally new, highlight the sites you’ve guest posted for. It all helps.
  • Credentials – highlight qualifications, endorsements and other types of social proof that position you as an ‘authority’. More on authority later.
  • Contact – provide multiple ways for prospective clients to contact you. I added my telephone number recently and was surprised (read: amazed) that people started to phone instead of emailing.

These are the five areas to concentrate on. If you look at
blog superstars, you’ll notice that… they DON’T do this.

Why? Because they’ve already established their authority, you know what they offer and you probably already follow them. And they’re after corporate clients. Maybe you’re not.

With that in mind, develop your For Hire page for the ‘specific’ customer profile you’re trying to attract. This is very important. Let’s look at this for a moment.

Create your For Hire page so that it matches your prospective customer’s deepest:

  • Pain points
  • Urgent needs

People come to your site because they have a problem.
How do you solve it?

TELL THEM!

They need to fix it now – how will you help them do this?

Design your For Hire page along these lines and you’ll get more inquiries.

How to Set Up a For Hire page

The next step is to create your services page. This will take a few drafts until you get it right, so take your time.

Don’t overwhelm readers with text. Write the page to be scanned. Use lots of H2 headings and bullet lists.

  • Summary – identify what you offer in twenty words. Be ultra specific. Remove waffle. Keep it tight.
  • Bio – provide a short pen portrait of who you are and link to your About Us page; include a warm, friendly photo.
  • Services – bullet points for the five services you offer. Link each service to its own dedicated services pages. This gives readers the in-depth information they’re after while keeping your primary (For Hire) services page focused.
  • Social Proof - this means that the reader can see who you’ve worked with, what qualifications you have (degrees, published papers, awards), who recommends you, what sites you’ve written for and anything else that reduces their anxiety, doubts, or concerns.

Your goal here is to reassure that reader that you’re a real person,
that others trust you (your testimonials or recommendations)
and that you’re an authority in your field.

Another way of looking at this?

The Purpose of your For Hire Page:

  1. Establish yourself as a definitive authority (one reason to write a book as it gives your status almost immediately)
  2. Show who else believes this (endorsements, guest posts etc)
  3. How you provide value for money

SEO Considerations:

While we write for humans first, we also need to consider search engines.

  • Page Title - Write a short focused keyword rich title.
  • Page Description – As this will appear in the search engine results, write it as a question. For example, ‘Google Analytics?  Ever wonder what they really mean? Contact us today to… ’ This will get you more visits as it addresses the reader’s pain/needs.
  • Linking - Add links to this page from blog posts. I know this sounds obvious but most bloggers forget to link to their For Hire page. Don’t over do it, but do add links where it makes sense.

6 Mistakes to avoid:

I think you get the idea of what we need to cover. So, what happens if you’re not getting leads?

  1. Authority - have you demonstrated that you’re an expert? If not, why would someone hire you, right? How can you do this? Create very long detailed tutorials that establish you as the definitive authority on this topic. Create a suite of articles (5-7) and interlink them. Pretty soon these will become the most trafficked pages on your site. Then link from here to your For Hire page.
  2. Credentials – how do I trust you? Ask your colleagues, friends and others for recommendations. If you’re new to blogging, look for ways to generate goodwill (e.g. ghost write a set of posts, design graphics, setup Facebook pages for non-profits, etc). People will return the favor in time.
  3. Examples – link to your best work; add logos/badges of sites you’ve written for. If you don’t have any clients, then provide cheat sheets, FAQs, and presentations that demonstrate your expertise.
  4. Social Proof – If you have 300 followers on Twitter, it’s unlikely that others will see you as an expert. I know you can ‘buy’ followers, but try to avoid this. Instead spend 30 min every day building up your network and engaging with others. The fastest way to generate goodwill is to put others first (i.e. big up your friends) and ask for help later on.
  5. Contact – It’s shocking the number of bloggers that don’t include their address on their blog. I don’t mean street address but even a PO Box or telephone number. What’s the worse thing that can happen if you put your telephone number online? Now think of the best :)
  6. Drive Traffic – Find ways to drive traffic to these pages. Besides using onsite links, look for ways to create back links from other sites and social media networks. One trick is to ask others to ‘critique’ your For Hire page. You’d be surprised the number of comments you get if you do it right.

Conclusion

Let’s wrap up. One a scale of one to ten, how important is your For Hire page? It should be nine or ten, right?

Set aside an hour this week and review your page… through the eyes of a prospective customer. Look at other sites in your niche and see what works best. Don’t be shy about asking for help. Reach out to trusted friends and ask for their opinion.

Remember, this is the one page on your site that has to convert.

Over to you.

What’s the most important thing to put on the For Hire page? What mistakes do you see others making?

NOTE from GAIL @GrowMap: Working with someone with experience – someone who actually MAKES MONEY ALREADY and has a vast business background – are the most important attributes needed for success.

When you’re in the market for a social media marketing consultant or mentor, put Ivan on your short list.

If you enjoyed this post consider following Ivan on Twitter @IvanWalsh, on Facebook and on LinkedIn. See his contact page for direct links.

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{ 44 comments… read them below or add one }

buffalo website design
Twitter:
April 5, 2012 at 3:35 am

Twitter: @matthewacoleman

this is a great guideline for newbies in the business..you managed make it brief and concise

Reply

iPhone App Development January 30, 2012 at 12:09 am

For Hire Page is really important and combines with many expectations. Many want more and more people (customers) look at this and click it. Yes I agree with you it should be enough to pave the customer’s requirements. Each and every points that have listed here are really very effective if implement properly. I get a lot from this stuff for my For Hire Page. Thanks for amazing stuff.

Reply

Noel Addison who writes about Web Development Ventura
Twitter:
December 11, 2011 at 3:06 am

Twitter: @addisonskanks

When creating a hire me page you let people no not just who you are but also what you can do help them and how can your service resolve their problem.

Reply

key recorder October 28, 2011 at 4:42 pm

Leaving a phone number on your web site is a smart move, clients are always after the best deal and the most qualified.. thanks for the article :0)

Reply

Greg who writes about Buy Snow Blowers October 26, 2011 at 10:53 am

Credentials and Work samples are two important things I used to consider when hiring somebody or whenever I apply for any kind of work. As we all know, clients are after of these two no matter if you’re apply online or offline, so they could decide whether they could trust you for any of their business operations.
Greg would love you to read ..Yard Machines 31A-2M1A700 21-Inch Snow Thrower ReviewMy Profile

Reply

Linda Wise who writes about Cocoa Beach fl real estate October 20, 2011 at 12:01 am

Good tips. In this case, we are the ones that should make the adjustments because honestly we need them way more than they need us.

I think your tip about putting our telephone numbers on the site is really great. Not many people do it. The pros definitely outweighs the cons on this one. The worst that could happen is we get a few prank phone calls but I’d take that any day because of the better chances I get from a potential client calling me up.

Reply

Noel Addison who writes about Web Development Ventura
Twitter:
October 19, 2011 at 4:23 am

Twitter: @addisonskanks

If you really want to offer a service or product don’t be afraid to put a “Hire Me” page in your blog or site. And following the instructions/ tips above are really helpful in creating a Hire Me page that will attract more customers.
Noel Addison would love you to read ..Selling Ice Cubes to EskimosMy Profile

Reply

Shara October 18, 2011 at 3:13 pm

Thanks for the well written article. I will soon need to create “hire me” page, since my company is getting bigger and bigger and I’m in a need of new employees
Shara would love you to read ..DubTurbo, Yes or No?My Profile

Reply

Ira who writes about Chicago and Suburb October 18, 2011 at 4:27 am

This is a great post. Relatively related to my line of work. I agree on all the don’t. I have some disagreement on some dos but then they are still reasonable so I will just shut up. :)

Reply

PSD TO XHTML
Twitter:
October 18, 2011 at 2:09 am

Twitter: @csschopper

Great post “IvanWalsh” . I really like this section “What prospective customers want:”. Great to find all the tips in one post

By Devashish PSD TO HTML Developer

PSD TO XHTML would love you to read ..Are You About Launch Your Own Website? Follow the Check ListMy Profile

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growmap
Twitter:
October 18, 2011 at 6:59 am

Twitter: @GrowMap

Hi Devashish,

I was 99% convinced this comment was going to be auto-generated and it came a hair width from being deleted as spam until I did not find any others using that specific wording in search.

When you comment you are doing TWO things that will get your comments deleted:

1) Adding a link in your signature. I would understand why you would want to do that in blogs that do NOT offer KeywordLuv but we do and two links to the same place with the same anchor text provide little or no additional SEO value. In blogs that offer KeywordLuv use it and do NOT add another link in the comment to the same landing page using the same anchor text.

[If I don't delete the comment I usually edit those out, but I left it this time as an example.]

See How to Use KeywordLuv. It is also better if you use a first name in the name field. If you do not wish to use your own, choose a first name for each site you comment for and be consistent about it. [Write them down - save them in Tomboy Notes (free keyword searchable notepad app) or whatever you use.]

2) A comment that looks like you had a computer program fill in the blanks. I really like this section: _________________ looks computer generated – and maybe it is and you copy and paste it in?

No blog is more small business friendly or better understands the challenges of assisting them in getting more visibility on the Internet. Working together wisely, we can improve the discussions, build relationships and build beneficial links. See the link I put in CommentLuv in this reply and my post on How CommentLuv Grows Businesses and Blogs.

growmap would love you to read ..CommentLuv Your Way to Business ProsperityMy Profile

Reply

Thomas who writes about Boise Condos
Twitter:
December 23, 2011 at 1:56 pm

Twitter: @HughesGroupRE

Good stuff for small business owners everywhere. Blogs are as powerful a marketing tool as anything I’ve encountered.
Thomas would love you to read ..Boise Real Estate- Time to Buy?My Profile

Reply

John who writes about Real Estate Naperville October 14, 2011 at 9:20 am

great post, i really like the mistakes to avoid section. It can really help people keep on the right track when offering their services to the world.

Reply

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