skills/meta-analytics-ops/meta-social-proof-system/SKILL.md
Systematic collection, organisation, and deployment of social proof across all digital touchpoints — using Bly's six-source taxonomy to build credibility and reduce buyer hesitation. Invoke when a client needs to increase conversion rates, when a website or proposal lacks credibility signals, or when the client wants to build trust in a market where digital commerce is newer and first-time buyers are more cautious.
npx skillsauth add peterbamuhigire/social-media-skills meta-social-proof-systemInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Source: Bly (2018) The Digital Marketing Handbook
SKILL.md; do not skip mandatory steps or required fields.references/ directory is added later, treat its files as the deeper source material and keep this SKILL.md execution-focused.Ask for the following before generating any deliverable:
strategy-multigenerational-digital)Buyers are uncertain. Social proof reduces uncertainty by showing that others — people like the prospect — have made the same decision and benefited. In East Africa, where digital commerce is newer and first-time buyers are more cautious, social proof is especially important: it bridges the trust gap before the first transaction, reducing the risk the prospect perceives in buying from a business they found online.
Apply all six sources where available. The goal is breadth — multiple proof types from multiple categories outperform any single strong testimonial (Bly, 2018).
Written or video reviews from real clients, with full name, organisation, and photo. The most common and most trusted source for service businesses.
Collect: after every successfully completed project or positive service interaction. Format: video (self-recorded on a smartphone is acceptable and often more authentic than polished production); written as a fallback. Content template: "In 2–3 sentences, describe: (1) the problem you had before working with us, (2) what we did together, and (3) the specific result you achieved."
Recommendations from recognised authorities in the client's field: an industry association, a professor, a respected publication, a well-known consultant, or a regulatory body.
Most valuable for: B2B clients, professional services, healthcare, education. Collect: request a quote from an industry association president, a university department head, or a sector publication after a notable piece of work.
Recommendations from public figures with large, relevant audiences.
For EA clients: local celebrities (musicians, athletes, media personalities, respected business leaders) often outperform international names because their audiences trust their judgement on locally relevant purchases.
Caution: See 08-influencer-marketing-strategy and ai-influencer-strategy for vetting process. Do not deploy celebrity endorsements without verifying audience alignment and engagement authenticity.
Statements that use volume to signal popularity and safety: "Over 500 businesses served", "Trusted by 12,000 subscribers", "4.8 stars from 300 reviews".
Rules: Numbers must be genuine and significant. Do not fabricate or inflate. Do not use crowd proof if the numbers are not yet impressive — wait until they are, or use a different proof type. EA context: In markets where digital reviews are less common, even 50 genuine reviews is significant social proof. State the number with context: "50 verified Google reviews — more than any other [industry] provider in [city]."
Referrals from friends, colleagues, or professional networks. The highest-trust source and the hardest to manufacture.
Design referral mechanics to activate peer proof at scale:
ISO certifications, industry association memberships, award badges, media features ("As featured in [publication]", "Winner of [award] 2024").
Most valuable for: Generation X and Baby Boomer audiences, who place high weight on institutional credibility signals (Rageh, 2026). Display: logos on website header, footer, and proposals. Refresh annually — expired certifications undermine rather than build trust.
Multiple sources of proof from multiple categories outperform a single strong testimonial (Bly, 2018). A prospect who sees a customer testimonial, a crowd-proof number, and an expert endorsement on the same page is more confident than a prospect who sees only one — even if that one testimonial is excellent.
Target: Deploy at least three proof sources on every primary conversion page.
| Touchpoint | Recommended proof types | Placement | |---|---|---| | Homepage | Crowd proof (total clients, star rating) + 2–3 short testimonials | Above the fold; visible without scrolling on mobile | | Service pages | Expert endorsements + testimonials specific to that service | Adjacent to the service description and CTA | | Proposals and credentials | Case studies (full story with context and result) + certifications | After the proposed solution; before pricing | | Email campaigns | One testimonial per email | After the main offer; before the CTA | | WhatsApp sales conversations | Screenshot of a relevant testimonial or review | When handling a price or quality objection | | Checkout / payment page | Star rating + "X clients served" + a short reassurance quote | Alongside the payment form |
Maintain a living register of all proof assets. Minimum fields:
| Field | Content | |---|---| | Proof type | Bly category (testimonial, expert, crowd, peer, cert, celebrity) | | Source name | Full name and organisation | | Date collected | DD/MM/YYYY | | Format | Written / video / screenshot | | Topics covered | Which service or product does this proof relate to? | | Approved for use | Yes/No/Restricted | | Placement | Where is it currently deployed? |
Review and refresh the register quarterly. Archive proof that is more than 2 years old unless it references a long-standing track record.
Output meets the standard for this skill if:
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