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Testimonials

Testimonials convey enthusiasm for and trust in your products and services,
straight from your customers’ mouths or keyboards. Since they come from an
unbiased third party, testimonials work well as less aggressive sales pitches,
yet they still drive home key selling points. In addition to communicating with
your audience, another essential goal of our marketing materials should
involve building as much trust and credibility as we can. Our customers don’t
just want to know that we can solve their problem – they want to know that
we can do it better than anyone else. To that end, customer testimonials are
incredibly effective – particularly in the world of print.

Graphical representation of the testimonial section:

Carousel
The carousel is a slideshow for cycling through a series of content, built with CSS 3D
transforms and a bit of JavaScript. It works with a series of images, text, or custom markup. It
also includes support for previous/next controls and indicators.
In in this section, we have to consider the following statistics:

 According to one study, the regular use of customer testimonials can


help us generate roughly sixty-two percent more revenue not only from
every customer but from every time they visit our shop’s website.
 Ninety-two percent of people said that they read testimonials when
considering a purchase.
 A further eighty-eight percent of consumers said that they trusted these
reviews just as much as personal recommendations, according to the
same study.
 To top it off, seventy-two percent of those who responded to the survey
in question said that positive reviews and testimonials helped them trust
this website significantly more.

Here, we have used a slide where we can put the review of our shop from the
customers, that is, the testimonials. And a Responsive pagination - an option
for navigation. This is a series of bullets, short lines, or numbers found at the
bottom of the slide. It helps to indicate which slide in the series we are at.
Footers
Footers can be found at the bottom of almost every web page,
and often take many forms, depending on the type of content
on a website. Regardless of the form they take, their presence
is critical (and highly underrated).

Graphical representation of the footer section:

In this footer section, we may get less attention than the top of the page,
but they still receive a fair amount of use. These are the two most common
using cases for footers in the shop’s website:

 A second chance to be convinced


Maybe a user has decided, after reading all the details, that he/she
doesn’t want to buy cake from our bakery website, but she was still
impressed with the shop’s institution and wants to become a
customer. The footer here is a good opportunity to remind or teach
potential customers about our shop’s website’s other offering.
 Users intentionally scroll to the footer to find information they
expect to appear there, such as contact information, details about the
shop’s Opening and Closing hours, social media posts or links, or
even to discover new or related content on the site.

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