Substack Podcast Studio with Jen Rogers | Podcast Strategy & Lead Generation for Christian Women Entrepreneurs
Stop Asking for Testimonials the Awkward Way You know that squirmy feeling when you know you need a testimonial, but too much time has passed? The client had a great experience. You know they did. They said kind things in Voxer, on Zoom, in a DM, maybe even through tears after a breakthrough. But then life happened. You forgot to ask right away. They forgot to send it. Now you’re staring at the message thread wondering if following up makes you sound needy, pushy, or mildly unhinged. I’ve been there. In this episode of The Substack Podcast Studio [https://thejenrogers.substack.com/podcast], I’m talking about why strong testimonials do not magically appear just because someone loved working with you. You have to ask well. You have to remove the friction. You have to give people a clear lane so they know what kind of testimonial would be most helpful. And yes, vague testimonial requests create vague testimonials. A sweet “Jen is great” is kind, but it does not help a future client, event planner, collaborator, or buyer make a decision. In this episode, I’m sharing a recent testimonial I received from Remi Roy, founder of Podground.io [http://Podground.io], after I asked her for a speaker testimonial. I share the exact kind of request I sent her, then I break down why her response worked so well. Not because it was polished or fancy. Not because we overproduced it. Because it was specific. Remi’s testimonial touched on the things event planners care about but do not always say out loud: · Will the content be useful? · Will they show up prepared? · Can this speaker hold the room? · Will they understand the mission? · Will this person be easy to work with? · Will they respect the people in the room? That is the kind of testimonial that builds trust before you ever get on a call. In this episode… · Why testimonials get awkward when you wait too long · Why asking “Can you send me a testimonial?” creates too much friction · How to guide someone without scripting their words · Why different testimonials need different prompts · What made Remi’s testimonial strong · The difference between a kind compliment and a useful business asset · How testimonials can help future clients feel safer saying yes · Why clarity always beats vague praise · How testimonials can give you language for future marketing · Why testimonials are assets you intentionally steward I also break down the key pieces of a strong testimonial: Context | Credibility | Specifics | Experience | Outcome | Recommendation If your testimonials are missing those pieces, they may sound nice, but they won't do the heavy lifting you need them to do. 🎂A little birthday-week invitation This episode is landing during my birthday week, and through June 21st at 1:00 PM Eastern, I have some birthday goodies waiting inside the paid tiers of The Substack Podcast Studio. If you’ve been circling the Studio, this is a beautiful time to come in. Right now, the annual promo is $99 for the year [https://thejenrogers.substack.com/p/studiomember], which includes 24 opportunities to connect with me inside the Studio, plus templates, strategy, behind-the-scenes support, and practical resources to help you turn your voice, your podcast, your Substack, and your client experience into profitable business assets. We are not letting your testimonials sit in awkward land anymore. We are turning them into profitable assets. Your Next Step: Step inside the Substack Podcast Studio [https://thejenrogers.substack.com/p/studiomember] as a paid subscriber if you are ready to stop creating episodes that sound good but go nowhere. Inside, we are actively building your podcast pipeline, strengthening your positioning, and dialing in messaging that moves people directly toward your offers. Go here to claim one of the final founding member spots before the price goes up: thevirtualpodcastschool.com/substack [https://thevirtualpodcastschool.com/substack] This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thejenrogers.substack.com/subscribe [https://thejenrogers.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]
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