Stop “Selling” Your Dental Services-Try This!

I started selling when I was around 10 years old (give or take a year or two). If I knew then what I know now, well, who knows?

“Selling” your dental services (I was tempted to use “marketing” because it sounds less,…salesy. More on that in a moment) means being comfortable with the process. If you’re not careful your perception will get in the way.

My involvement in scouting organizations introduced me to sales opportunities (in a roundabout way). It wasn’t the organization itself – though I enjoyed my experiences – it was the collateral.

My scout membership entitled me to a direct mail publication. Boy’s Life would arrive in my mailbox monthly and I’d leaf through the magazine to the back portion.

There, in the back pages, was the marketplace! And what I saw there I considered my ticket to a new bicycle, new shoes, or whatever held my attention at the time. No, it wasn’t the offer of those items but the process I believed would get me there.

An emotional connection

Back of the magazine ads hocked everything. And I dove into the sales funnel head first!

I sold garden seeds, greeting cards, stationery – you name it. My door-to-door-in-my-own-neighborhood taught me some valuable lessons.

I now realize I was more courageous then than I am now. Perhaps my goals were different.

Back to basics

You don’t need to be a master at sales to sell. You simply need to understand the basics of the process.

The secrets to more people and/or dental patients “buying” your dental services isn’t rocket science. Frankly, there’s no need to manipulate the process or engage in the latest shiny-object marketing trends.

“The Three Fundamental Rules of Selling”

I credit my virtual mentor and master copywriter, Michael Masterson, for the following sales basics. You will improve your marketing copy and content a thousand times with his insight.

1-“People don’t like the idea of being sold.”

Goods and services move daily from marketplace to consumer, from dental supplier to end-user, from dental practice to dental patient. Billions of dollars change hands annually in the sales process.

If sales make the world go round, why is it taboo? According to Masterson, “People want to buy, but they don’t want to be sold. Buying implies control. Being sold, the opposite.”

This explains why you prefer to browse. It’s comfortable. Browsing puts you at ease as you view your options.

Perhaps it explains why “browsing” is commonly associated with web usage. The purchases and choices you make online don’t include an invasive, in-your-face salesperson putting the “squeeze” on you.

Put people at ease when marketing your dental services. Give them a “browsing” experience not only on your website (you do have one…right?) but most certainly with your copy and content.

A blog that’s consistently updated with fresh content, a social media presence, and engaging, story-focused, non-salesy email content are effective dental marketing tools. These approaches engage people in the buying process – they compel more than they manipulate.

2-“People buy things for emotional, not rational, reasons.”

Rational people wouldn’t spend the significant amounts of money they do on cars, trips, food, etc. Consider the debt people take-on for those and countless other shiny-things.

People try, buy, and use your dental products and dental services for a reason. You assume that your diagnosis and related treatment plan makes complete rational sense.

But the out-of-pocket costs would say otherwise (even if dental insurance is in play).

For example, why do you buy cars, houses, clothes, jewelry, or take trips you can’t afford? Why do you eat food you know isn’t good for you?

Because it makes you feel good!

There’s an emotional connection to what you invest in or spend money on. Tap into emotions and you’ll connect with people.

Fear, greed, vanity, lust, pride, envy, laziness are a few emotions in your operating system. These powerful emotions have led to the success (and the downfall) of countless people (including you…and me).

Include them in your dental marketing copy and content and you’ll see positive results. Consider what the driving emotion (the real motivation) is behind your client’s or patient’s decision.

This means you’ll need to listen for clues (personal benefits) more than you drone on and on about your latest state-of-the-art this or that. Stop talking about what you/your services can do.

Listen…

  • Listen to what results the client/patient wants. They’ll get personal (i.e. emotional) if you listen effectively.
  • Listen and learn. Then write (sell) to those emotions.

Sell to the heart first. The mind will follow.

And speaking of the mind…

3-Once sold, people will justify their emotional decision with rational reasons.

This is why (and I’m stretching here) television ads have a remote chance of connecting  and selling their products.

Think about an automobile ad.

You see a breathtaking image of a scenic highway. A speeding blur of an image (a car) flashes by on the screen. Leaves erupt from the pavement against the sound of a finely tuned, high-performance engine.

The camera pans to the drivers seat. A gloved driver with sunglasses strokes the wheel with one hand. The other hand is on the thigh of his gorgeous female passenger.

For a brief moment, as the commercial concludes, a voice pitches the car, make, model and he latest purchase or lease financing available as the tail lights disappear into the distance and the music fades.

What just happened?

You’re still thinking about the stunning passenger seated next to the driver, aren’t you? Or you’re recalling the sound of the engine as it gripped the road, right?

Either way your heart is racing. But here’s a bigger (more valuable) question…

Why does the commercial clutter up the eye-candy with a list of data?

Answer:

Engine size, torque, fuel economy, interior space, financing options, etc. are designed to make you feel good about the decision you’ve made to consider the purchase.

Fuel economy speaks to your frugal, money-saving self. The ABS braking system and road-gripping suspension appeals to your sense of protection for you and your family.

Good, effective selling appeals to emotions. How you stir those emotions varies.

What’s important is to know what motivates your prospect.

You must ask yourself – “What am I actually selling, promoting, sharing, giving to people?” It’s not the surface features of your dental services, the latest technology in your office, or the newest approach to oral health care.

What do your services deliver to your patient’s emotional desires? Answer that question and promote to it.

Lead with the heart. The rest will follow.

Question: What bugs you about “selling” your dental services? Comment.

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