3 Reasons to Add Case Studies to Your Website

April 22, 2024
4
min read

I've included case studies on my financial planning website since it launched in 2020.

With a brief background in door-to-door sales, I knew that I wanted to do everything I could to make the sales process easier & sell the service through the website language.

When knocking doors, you quickly learn that you can't sell everything to everyone.

In my situation of selling security systems, there were a few types of ideal clients:

  • People with an existing security system
  • People who just moved
  • People starting a family

Every sale I made was to someone that fell into one of those three buckets.

If I had my own security system company, I would highlight those three profiles on my website, write a background about their situation, and show how my system is the best choice for them.

So I did the same thing for the financial planning firm.

And I would say it's worked extremely well.

Prospective clients have referenced them on discovery calls and because we define our ideal clients, those are the exact kinds of people who reach out to us.

So today, I want to break down a few reasons why I think every firm should include case studies:

1) Ideal clients self-select

A lot of advisors are scared to niche down. And it makes sense. A full-blown niche isn't right for everyone. But you should have a general sense of what stages of life you serve best or enjoy working with, problems they have, or goals they want to accomplish.

Regardless of career, you can write a short case study to show common situations people are in when it makes sense to work with an advisor, and explain how the service you provide solves their problems.

You'll not only get higher quality inbound leads, you'll probably get more of them because someone can actually see what working with a financial advisor looks like & the value they'd get.

2) Showcases real financial planning

Most people don't really know what we do as financial advisors. Through case studies, you can describe an ideal client's situation, background, and financial problems.

Then, you can explain the different tasks & planning areas you'd address if they were clients so someone can start to understand the art of real planning.

3) Can replace a "list of services"

A majority of advisor websites I come across are almost identical. The names are different, but the copywriting could be switched around to different sites and nobody would notice.

And one of the biggest missed opportunities I see is describing the actual service of financial planning.

Similar to the point above, few people understand what "college planning" or "insurance planning" truly means. But when they're described in context, someone can start to imagine how the service would make an impact in their life - like these examples from our case studies:

  • Insurance planning = "Life insurance analysis to make sure their family was protected against events that could drastically hurt their financial picture"
  • College planning = "College savings plan for kids & utilizing the best accounts for flexibility and taxes, came up with a plan to refinance her private student loans since they were high interest and showed her how much to pay towards them every month"

Next week, I'm going to share more about how to write effective case studies for your website along with tangible examples.

🎡 "Regardless of career, you can write a short case study to show common situations people are in when it makes sense to work with an advisor, and explain how the service you provide solves their problems."