How to Create Irresistible Dental Marketing that People Respond to Again and Again

Hummingbird Feeding

The hummingbirds are back. How do I know this?

It’s the same reason people will choose your dental services without you feeling the need to hype up your marketing strategies.

Hummingbird market research (not sure if this is legit…but stick with me) says they return to my region in mid-April. And the experts are usually spot on.

But there’s another reason.

I hung my trusty feeder and filled it with an irresistible resource.

Hummingbirds find me because they seek out the bright, flower-like feeder that contains the sweet, delicious, sugar-water (nectar) I provide just outside my kitchen window. These fascinating creatures flit back and forth for the satisfying energy source countless times from April to October each year.

I just gave you 3 big ideas with my hummingbird observations. Did you catch ‘em?

1-Stop feeling the need to “hype-up” your marketing strategies.

Why do you do this?

Frankly, why does anyone do this?

My perspective? It has to do with the age-old, in-your-face marketing approaches we’re accustomed to.

Most of us were raised on TV and radio advertising that uses over-the-top techniques to get your attention (and they still do). And this was in the hopes that you’d remember them when it came time for a buying decision.

Each morning, my wife and I have the local news on our bedroom TV while we’re dressing and preparing for our day. And every morning, much to her frustration, I make critical, tongue in cheek comments about the advertising spots that run.

Many, if not most are local auto dealerships. Their repetitious, ear-worm inducing, hyper voice over specialists make me want to reach through the screen and shout, “Enough already!”

You get my point, right?!

Be careful that the ear-worm effect doesn’t infect your next dental promotion. Screaming at people to schedule, call, “Like” (Facebook ads, contests, etc), etc risks the same as those obnoxious ad pitches – changing the channel.

The downside (for you) – changing the channel translates to changing dental providers.

And if you’re marketing to dental providers (as many readers here do), be careful you don’t risk the same. I’ve watched your mailers being routinely tossed in the trash by the designated mail “screener” when I worked in a dental practice.

No one’s opening your mailer…because you’re not speaking their language. Or you’re using techniques that are a straight-up turn-off.

It’s the equivalent principle of me placing something less appealing in my hummingbird feeder. A couple of drags off that and those lil’ birds are off to sweeter fields.

It’s more attractive (effective) to create a conversation around your service, products, offers than it is to randomly shove it in their face. Because that’s-how-it’s-always-been-done isn’t a strategy, it’s a path to marketing extinction.

  • Build a relationship by providing no-strings-attached (free) content via a consistent blog presence on your website.
  • Send email that informs or delivers value (see our latest blog post, etc) instead of promoting something or asking readers to schedule.
  • Watch your language – or rather your tone – in each communication or content piece your deliver (ditch the salesy, pitchy tone).

2-Listening IS your market research.

Your patients or clients are asking tons of questions. And many of their questions aren’t obvious…unless you’re listening between the lines and in the margins.

Keep your ear to the ground. What are your patients or clients telling you?

Deep dive into your online reviews or post-treatment/post-sales surveys. Locate the truths below the surface (even the ones tough to hear).

Like Jack Nicholson’s character said to Tom Cruise’s in A Few Good Men“You can’t handle the truth!”

But you also can’t handle not learning from it and improving your service and marketing strategies.

And speaking of market research.

  • Survey your patients/clients with a purpose. Avoid routine, meaningless, corporate-ized, canned survey documents.
  • Brainstorm some strategic questions that help you understand what your patients or clients are thinking. Then…respond with like-minded content and marketing strategies.

3-Be the expert they’re listening to.

No one really likes to brag about themselves. Unless you’re a card carrying narcissistic, pompous individual (unfortunate for us all, some are).

The better approach – become brag-able. Translation: become a recognizable expert or authority.

You (yes, YOU) provide a unique, branded approach to whatever your specialty is. Perhaps you’re thinking, “But, there are 100’s of dentists in my city or region…!”

So what?

Here’s my question – are they recognized as a go-to provider, not just in treatment…but also with valuable information about that treatment?

Or…the science behind the treatment?

Or…the latest research (explained in street-level terms)?

Or…with clear, non-technical answers to the questions people are asking about the treatment (remember the earlier point on “listening”)?

These days, people want finger-tip access to information about what’s important to them in the moment. Will you be there…with answers?

  • If your website doesn’t have a blog or article page – start one…NOW!
  • Make your blog a virtual library of relevant, useful information specific to your expertise, services, etc.
  • Build a tribe of loyal readers and sharers by promoting your content to your patient or client list via email updates.

And if you’ve delayed starting a blog because you’re concerned about time or have a fear of writing…

  • Hire a content curator and/or a copywriter to research and ghost-write your content on a consistent schedule.

It’s your time to stand out as an expert by taking a few intentional steps. Create the content, share the content, and the results will show.

Let’s review…

Stop the hype. Listen as research. Highlight your expertise.

People, like hummingbirds, migrate to where they find what they need.

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