Dental social media
13 Clues Your Dental Website is Leaking (And a Few Strategies to Fix It)
Words I don’t like to hear – “Honey, the carpet in the extra bedroom is damp.” My first thought: “We’ve had a ton of rain in recent days….,”
But that wasn’t it.
Perhaps you can relate on an entirely different level. Like, “Hey, our dental website doesn’t seem to be generating many leads lately.”
It’s a common issue. And it’s especially true if your site is one of those business “necessities” that you had designed and have not given much thought to since.
My household disaster culprit was much the same. The out-of-sight-out-of-mind hot water heater had begun to fail and slowly leak.
The end of its usefulness
Websites, like household appliances, wear out. In our case, we got a ton more years out of this faithful water heater than should be expected.
It’s a good thing when your resources last longer than expected. And it’s better when you get a heads-up that a change needs to be made before more damage is done.
Is your website leaking?
A strange question, right? But a solid, up to date, useful website platform is essential to your digital marketing success today.
Let’s diagnose it for a moment.
Your website is “leaking” if:
1-The copy/content on your pages hasn’t been updated in, like, 2 or more years!
2-You rely on flashy, moving, revolving, explosive, eye-candy (shall I continue…?) banners to call attention to your pages.
3-Your page copy is a technical, wordy, encyclopedia-like collection of “dental industry speak” that only you and anyone with enough CE credits would understand.
4-You use fine-print to tell site visitors/readers the real “deal” about your services and promotional offers.
Your website is “leaking” if…
5-The word count on your main pages and sub-pages is bloated with more than 500 words each.
6-It’s so keyword dense that the copy doesn’t flow.
7-You use the words, “state-of-the-art,” “cutting-edge,” “Welcome…” and other basically irrelevant, feature-heavy words to describe your services.
8-The word “you” is rarely if ever used because your copy isn’t reader focused.
9-Your copy doesn’t offer compelling benefits focused on why your readers should choose your services.
10-There are few if any calls-to-action that guide the reader where to “click” or navigate to next.
11-The bottom-line of your site doesn’t compel readers to schedule, request more information, hire you, read more, or take some relevant action.
12-You say, “Blog?…What blog…?…I don’t have time to blog…?”
13-Or…”Social media buttons…what are those?…and what would I do with them if I had them?”
Any of the above mentioned true? If so, your website could be leaking as we speak.
Let’s fix this, shall we?
For starters…
- Make your dental website a platform instead of a digital brochure.
- Use your website as a content delivery machine. Update your content consistently via your blog or article page.
- Showcase your authority and professional expertise by having an educational mindset.
- These days information creates opportunity. Create an informational stream relevant to your specialty or services.
- Think blog posts, webinars, podcasts, downloadable simple, short ebooks. Answer your patient’s and client’s questions through these content sources.
Begin to plug the leaks in your website with these strategies. And ask for help if you prefer to stay in your wheelhouse of daily expertise.
Leave website copy and content creation to…well…those who do this all-day, everyday.
How to Build Your Dental Marketing Plan Like a Dance in the Summer Rain
I envied her the moment I saw her walking along the curb in the street outside my office window. Nothing was stopping this mom and her two preteen daughters from thoroughly enjoying the drenching downpour of a summer rainstorm.
What if you could free yourself from boundaries in your dental marketing? Being aware you have them is the first step towards a new era of effectiveness.
The mom’s and daughter’s laughter made me curious. And my curiosity was quickly turned to thoughts of how freeing it is to lift your arms into a summer downpour with no fear of getting soaked to the bone.
Everything in me wants to live that way. More of that freedom desire is in me for how I write, market, and run my growing dental content and consulting business.
Think free-range
Most of my life, I’ve been an outside-the-box, color-outside-the-lines kinda guy. Cliche’ as that sounds, the core value could be the difference in how you connect with your patients and/or clients through your marketing.
You build an audience these days by…
- Content that sounds like a conversation more than a used-car-lot sales pitch.
- Connecting with people in a social media environment more than an invasive, in-your-face marketing campaign.
- Compelling people to do business with you as result of your freely shared, easily accessible, useful knowledge and expertise more than dropping people into a sales funnel to see who survives the process.
What I’m saying is – untether yourself from how it’s always been done…how it’s currently being done (in some instances)…and get out there in the downpour of possibilities.
What’s possible?
Let’s get practical. You own a platform on which your services are the main course.
As a dental provider you’re known for providing treatment that helps people eliminate their pain, maintain their health, and look better. If you’re a supplier, consultant, or marketing firm you’re a connector that delivers the goods to help dental providers do their job effectively.
None of that’s ground breaking information, I’m guessing. But it’s a perspective that shapes a few possibilities you might have forgotten or not pursued in your dental marketing.
Build your dental marketing plan like a dance-in-the-summer-rain (Why it’s okay to free yourself from how you’ve always done it)
1-Get comfortable with creating useful content around your professional expertise and services.
The easiest and yet most ineffective thing about your dental website?
You can set it and forget it.
But forgetting it no longer has the effect it once had. Why?
Google values content…content…content. Not just any content, rather content that’s fresh, relevant, and useful to your market…and delivered consistently.
Keywords matter (don’t misunderstand) but they’re no longer the magic dust they once were.
Use them. Just don’t abuse them.
What do I mean?
Baiting your website with keyword data to get the search hits is old-school. And it’s especially confining (not freeing at all) if it’s ALL you rely on to get found in your local search results.
Pay as you go is another, still popular, option. Google ads are effective but their scalability is lacking if you want to invest available marketing dollars elsewhere.
Here’s your elsewhere…and it’s totally free-ing!
- Brainstorm all the topics you can think of that serve your patients/clients. Then consistently create blog posts, enewsletter articles, podcasts, etc and share them with your list.
- Listen to your patients/clients. What are they telling you about their pain, problems, need for solutions, etc.?
- Scan your testimonials and reviews for “nuggets” of info you can build content around.
And if all this sounds time consuming and out of your wheelhouse –
- Hire a copywriter/content writer to do the “heavy-lifting” while you stay on your game in dentistry.
Sound good?
2-Build relationships with social media and use the connection to help people with your expertise.
Social media isn’t all cat videos (those are hysterical), images of your latest root canal procedure (gross), or a group photo standing under your latest proclaimed state-of-the-art technology or service you invested thousands of dollars to promote at your booth at the recent industry convention (who cares…wait…that was rude…sorry – but you get my point…hopefully?).
Conversation is the essence of social media. And it’s dialog that often, if not most of the time, revolves around the sharing of knowledge based content – yours or someone else’s.
Social media is a wasted tool, if…you’re only talking about yourself and not helpfully engaging people in conversation around…wait for it…your “greatness.”
I use that term “greatness” loosely.
Face it, you ARE great. You have skills, expertise, authority…and by-golly people like you! Or they should, right?
Dance in the social media rain, my friend.
- Post useful info/content on your dental practice Facebook page.
- Link to your blog, latest podcast episode, or another industry colleague’s content via your Twitter feed.
- Picture your practice culture on Pinterest or Instagram.
- Tell a story with video on your YouTube channel.
And remember…
3-People do business with those they know, like, and trust.
Trust grows over time when you help people deal with their pain, problems, and related challenges. It’s vital to your marketing relationships (that’s what they should be) that you don’t give the you’re-just-a-name-on-my-huge-aren’t-you-impressed-with-the-size-of-it-list impression.
Lists are essential (treasure them). Marketing funnels work (careful you don’t abuse the privilege of your list trusting you to promote to them).
Marketing is ultimately about sharing information or services that help and potentially change people’s lives.
And you can do it with an effortless humanity that people feel more compelled to give you their time…and money.
Be that person. It’s the principle behind why I stopped working for a moment to watch a mom and her daughters dance joyfully in the rain.
- Lose the marketing tone, schtick, or whatever you want to call it. Be yourself by talking like a human being to other human beings.
- Evaluate your marketing copy and content by it’s dance-in-the-rain, conversational, realness. Write (and market) like you talk!
- Preserve people’s trust once you’ve earned it. Keep giving away content (blog posts, podcasts, newsletters, reports, webinars, etc.) because it helps them.
Then…
Enjoy the returns on your investment. Celebrate them like a soaking dance in a summer downpour.
2 Core Content Strategies That Give You an Edge in Your Dental Marketing
Our soon-to-be six year old grandson lives every moment full of anticipation. And we love the satisfaction of being able to respond to his hopes for fun.
You’re in a unique position to be responsive in your dental marketing. And the satisfaction of your patients or clients depends on you being prepared with a core content strategy.
All our grandson had to hear was the word, “Zoo!” The mention of that word signaled what my wife and I already knew would make him happy.
It’s a grandparent thing. We know him. And we know what fills him with hours of joy.
Start with what you know.
When you know someone you’re in a position of leverage. In recent posts I shared the true value of your website platform (PC) and what leverage means to your authority (AC).
Knowledge also equips you to respond.
People expect a response these days. You send someone a text and if you get the “bubble” (indicating they’re reading it) on your screen with no reply you think – “Hey what’s the deal?”
Or you send an email or leave a voice mail. Hours…days go by and no reply. Wow!
Customer service rises and falls on quick, adequate, satisfying response.
Responsiveness rules.
Think of your patient’s or client’s digital (online) presence as a sort of third “ear.” It’s where you apply your responsive listening skills through the use of what let’s call “Responsive Content (RC).”
You’re essentially in the problem-solution “business.” People search for you and your services because they’re in pain (problem), lack knowledge about maintaining their health (problem), or perhaps lack the resources to solve either circumstance (problem).
Communicate where people are listening.
What’s the quickest way to respond these days? And where do your patients/clients access that information?
It seems appropriate to respond digitally rather than using snail-mail or direct mail. If you want to connect in real-time you can’t beat the digital response.
Two digital content strategies you must be prepared to use if you want to master a responsive reputation.
Work your email list.
The most abused and at the same time under-used responsive content (RC) tool you have is e-mail.
Why abused?
Because you could fail to understand the intrinsic value of permission. And if you have permission don’t discount what it means to treasure it as a trusted relationship.
Certainly, you know what it means to be spammed. If not, scan your email inbox and evaluate those who emailed you.
What’s their relationship to you?
Someone you requested info from?
Someone whose content you find useful?
And while we’re on the subject of “usefulness,” here’s how to get the most from your email promotions.
- Be untypical. Inform your readers via a relevant story, idea, or theme.
- Connect the story, idea, or theme to the action you’re asking them to take when reading your email content.
- Ditch the formality. Treat your email like a one-on-one conversation. Write the message in a way that sounds like a casual conversation with one person (your reader).
- Avoid salesy words and common cliches’. The quickest way to get your emails spam-filtered is to sound like your “selling” something. Think about your language.
- Invest in your subject line. The key to emails being delivered (not filtered), opened, and…drumroll…read…is your subject line.
- Share a benefit in your subject line that compels them to open it.
And #2
Connect with social media.
The key is connecting. I hesitated to use the word, “engage,” because it’s often overused and has lost its impact.
That’s sad since social media is really about engaging (there, I said it!) your patients/clients in an online conversation with you via your content.
There must be more to your social strategy than contests, promotions, and images of office parties (important, don’t get me wrong) or dental procedures. Keep your social media channels “human,” but don’t miss the advantage of having a (hopefully) growing “fan base” because of your content value.
- Link to your own relevant, useful content. This is the importance of having a consistently updated blog or article page on your website platform.
- Curate and share other valuable, helpful content that’s relevant to your dental practice, dental expertise, and dental products or services.
- Balance content with the occasional (and I emphasize, occasional) promotion. Social followers are numbed when every other post is about your latest “Like”-our-page-share-our-page contest for a free give-away.
- Avoid violating privacy issues. But don’t allow your fear to keep you from legitimately and effectively connecting with your patient/client base on social media.
- Review and respond in as much real-time as possible to comments or direct connections on your social channels. If necessary, designate, or better, hire someone to manage your social media content and communications.
Responsiveness gives you an edge in today’s digital marketing. And timing is on your side when your mindset is aligned with two of the most effective strategies.
How to Make Your Dental Website More than a Digital “Brochure”
The squirrel was efficient, I’ll give him that. But as I watched him, I wondered about something.
And it prompted my thinking about the set-it-and-forget-it approach to your dental website.
These days a website is essential…but it’s far from enough.
The diligent squirrel outside my office window makes sure he has adequate food supply. He finds a food source, searches for a storage location, and buries it.
It’s fascinating to watch (and often a significant distraction). My question: does he remember where he buries all his resources?
That’s a question of survival for the squirrel.
What about you?
Will YOU survive?
I’m not talking existentially. What concerns me here is whether or not you’ll survive the online marketing landscape.
You were wise – however long ago it was – to bury (invest) a significant amount of marketing resources in your dental website. Having a website is as basic as…well…brushing and flossing is to your oral health.
But what good is a website, really?
For starters, your website home page and/or about page captures your reader’s attention. The unique benefits of your practice story and culture should compel readers to click through to the all-important reason they visited your site.
We’re talking treatment, right?
Your dental services pages highlight the benefits of your treatment expertise. And the copy/content should compel them to ultimately click to your contact page to schedule an appointment or connect with one of your team members via email (an ongoing gold-mine if you use it effectively).
Hopefully, your website copy is designed to accomplish those primary functions. If not, we should talk.
The bigger issue
I intentionally omitted what (these days and I suspect for a long time) is the linchpin of an effective online presence.
Be warned, if you’ve adopted my friendly squirrel’s approach – burying it and forgetting it – you’re missing something that will turn your precious website into nothing more than an electronic brochure (and we know what people do with brochures once they’ve read them…).
Back to your dental services – this is where your current and potential new patients often decide via their ever present smart phone or tablet to schedule. A keyword (e.g. dental implant, dental fillings, dental veneers, dental crowns, etc.) landed them on your site.
But here’s the scary part.
They could have landed on any of the 100’s of dental websites locally. How do you stand out?
You tell me…you’re the expert!
I’m not being sarcastic. Actually, I’m paying you a compliment.
The missing element that sets your dental website a part from the crowd is content. Your expertise is the reason people schedule.
It’s also the path to how today’s search engines rank you. No longer is it enough to have a website.
You must have a reason for existing online. Being useful and helpful is first and foremost.
3 Basic Strategies to Prevent Your Dental Website from Being a Wasted Investment
1-Blog consistently
This is content-101. A regular channel that provides useful information is now a marketing essential.
But this is vital!
The content you post, publish, or otherwise share on your blog must be relevant and above all useful. Your blog content will be ignored and possibly penalized (by Google) if it’s lacking authenticity.
By authenticity, I mean – true to your voice, practice culture, expertise, etc. No longer can you post warmed-over, stale, keyword-baited “crap” just to “tease” the search engines (they’re smarter and for good reason).
Be useful! Enough said.
- Dial into the questions your patients are asking (are you listening?) and write blog posts about THAT!
- Make your content interesting at the same time you make it search effective.
- Give patients, site visitors something they can use at the bathroom sink when they’re practicing good oral hygiene.
- Provide first time site visitors something they can share with others about good dietary choices and their link to healthy teeth.
- Be the go-to dental expert in your local search area for not only good dental care but also outstanding dental information.
They find you by your dental keywords. They return by how well you create content around those words via a channel like your dental blog.
2-Showcase your authority with sidebar content (ebook, case study, Podcast, YouTube channel, Social media, etc.)
Think of this as the “something-extra.” Sidebar content is the mint-on-the-pillow (throwback to when 5-star hotels did this kind of thing).
No one comes to a dental website expecting anything more than smiling stock photos of pretty people, right? (That’s another post for another day…don’t get me started.)
Give them more than they expect.
Now, I’m not suggesting that people are reserving precious reading time for your 10 page ebook on teeth whitening. But, they will consider you above the norm if you provide them a compelling title and useful info to go with it.
Make it easy access. Ask for their email address (this is gold). Deliver content to their inbox or smartphone at the click of a sidebar button.
And speaking of smartphone – make certain ALL your online, delivered content is readable on a smart phone or tablet. You greatly reduce your reach and your relevance by missing this all-important benefit.
Use a variety of content products.
- An ebook (10-20 pages) on a frequently asked question (what are patients asking about – teeth whitening, veneers, non-metal braces, etc.?)
- A podcast or downloadable mp3 featuring you and a noted expert on a popular dental product (Sonic Toothbrush, oral cancer, etc.). Portability is key here. Many might not read your expertise but they’ll listen to it on a walk, run, during a workout or on a commute to work.
- Social media relationships. Set up and maintain an active Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, Vine, etc. relationship with your patients and site visitors. And by active, I mean more than a random post every 4 weeks. Or only when you’re promoting an office special. And please stop gaming your social relationships with prizes (they get the angle and it makes you look…well…you get the picture).
Connect just because. And if you maintain an active blog presence you should have plenty to share and engage with via social media.
3-Use email better than most (newsletter, blog links, promotions)
This is why I earlier said the email address is “gold.” Once you have this resource you can communicate freely.
Be careful…
Don’t always be hitting their inbox with promotions, treatment specials, and product pitches. This will numb your readers and they’ll hit delete or unsubscribe quicker than you can rinse and spit.
Be intentional, strategic…and (once again) useful with your email content.
- Give as much thought to your subject line as your email content (this will make or break…open or spam your content).
- Balance your email content – less promotions, more usefulness (are you seeing a theme here).
- Tell a story in the first few lines to gain reader attention (like my squirrel story in the this post – you’re still thinking about that spunky lil’ guy arent’ you?)
- Transition naturally from your intro story to your reason for emailing and your all-important call to action.
- Link to your valuable, useful content (speaking of a call-to-action).
And about that squirrel.
He does remember where he keeps his food supply. I’ve watched him.
Instinct is a fascinating thing.
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.
The Connection-Factor that Creates Full Schedules for Dental Practices
In addition to my freelance copywriting and content strategy work in the dental industry, I’ve been a team member at a local dental practice. My countless hours of experience in the trenches (so to speak) has sharpened my perspective about dental industry marketing basics and how they fit in this new age of social media.
Much of my energy was focused on working with the hygiene coordinator to keep the hygiene schedule filled. Why? Because one of our values – and I suspect that of most dental practices – is “as goes the hygiene schedule, so goes the practice.”
It’s about being patient centered. And aside from patients who schedule for treatment or present with a tooth issue, doctors typically diagnose treatment based on that initial hygiene appointment.
Patient to practice to hygienist to doctor to treatment is a connective process.
And connection is the real reason patients maintain a relationship with their dental service provider.
How you connect is up to you. I recommend a blend of perceived old-school tools (phone, direct mail, etc.) and new media (Twitter, Facebook, Blogs, YouTube, etc.)
Use these tips for blending the “old” and “new” to create stronger patient-to-practice connections that keep your schedule full:
Use the phone.
These days we’re growing more accustomed to non-voice communications via social media. It’s refreshing to have a human voice say, “Hi…how are you…just reminding you that you’re due for an exam and cleaning.”
Remember that many people chose your practice before we started using new media. And the voice they responded to (yours) is still a viable connection point.
Besides, your voice carries an emotional connection too. It translates that someone is actually there who knows my name, remembers something important about my dental health, and took the time to focus on me.
Find your “voice.”
Script your phone calls and all communications to be natural, conversational, and engaging. Avoid outbound calls that sound robotic or too rehearsed.
Whether phone, text, email or social media – keep it real and authentic.
Be in the “driver’s seat.”
Script your calls, write texts, emails, and social media content to highlight benefits and direct a response. A benign request to call for their next appointment, or one that sounds too generic (mass produced) undermines the engaging approach you want to value in your practice.
Remember the sales principle of stating specific options. Confidently asking, “Morning or afternoon?” is more effective than “When would you like to come in…”
Again, this is a new era of connection. People (including your patients) are accustomed to more frontal and direct forms of communication thanks to social media.
Communication is about connecting.
Dental practices and dental businesses that use available tools authentically will increase their connect-ability and profits.
Comment. How are you connecting with your patients and/or clients these days? What’s working? Not working? Needs improvement?
Twitter 101 for Dentists & Dental Industry Businesses
Are you still trying to figure out how to use Twitter to build your dental business? Clarity comes with understanding the difference between building a business and building a following.
Whatever business you’re in – dental providers are no exception – talk surrounds growth. And hopefully that growth equates to financial gain, especially in today’s economy.
Who would argue with financial growth? It’s how we pay the bills and expand our stable of services.
The rub comes in social media when expectations exceed our understanding of the medium.
Social media is about connection. It’s referred to as engagement most often. And basically that means relationships.
So, it helps to think in terms of relational capital first, instead of financial capital, when using social media. And bringing it to the bottom-line (you knew I’d get there sooner or later) it’s a tool that works extremely well in that order.
I suspect this is the first in a series of posts. So I’ll not feel as though I have to cover every point here.
For starters, here’s a few building blocks to increase your understanding of how to use – in this instance – the social media workhorse, Twitter, to build your dental practice, business, and/or product/service brand.
>Be conversational
Talk isn’t cheap in social media. Remember Twitter (and social media in general) is a conversation.
Relationships matter. And conversation fuels them.
Guard against using social media to merely blast out your latest deal or special. People will grow numb to your messages. They’ll feel like you’re talking at them rather than with them.
Unless you’re boring, irrelevant, or (forbid) a “creeper,” you’ll gain more social media capital when you converse.
Ask real questions that bring real answers. Use answers to reflect back to your followers/tribe that you’re listening.
Re-purpose the answers in useful posts. Think – “how can I keep the conversation going?”
>Remember the “Dr. Oz factor”
A lot is said about oral health. I’ll leave it to the professional’s opinion – but it’s safe to say some is accurate. And some is bunk.
Agree?
Regardless, stay current with what’s being said in the news about the dental industry, dentistry, dental care, etc. I call this the “Dr. Oz factor.”
He represents the public buzz about health trends. And lately he’s been stoking the connection between overall health and practical oral care.
When Dr. Oz speaks people listen. They talk. And the talk turns to buzz.
What do you do with buzz? You ride the buzz-waves by affirming it via a series of tweets that link to content sources.
Counter the content buzz with your own take on it. Connect to it by expanding the topic at hand in your own blog posts. Then tweet talk points that encourage meaningful convo on Twitter and your Facebook page.
>Be a thought-leader
Your expert opinion counts. Showcase it by staying ahead of the curve in dental trends, new products, etc.
You’re already a trusted source as a service provider. People connect with you because you deliver a specific expertise they need.
As a dental professional, (like other medical professionals) you’re there for a patient’s specific need. And you deliver a specialized service.
I realize that people don’t typically continue a dialog with their dental provider until a need arises. At some point, their circumstances demand answers and related care.
The need for your expert knowledge stays fairly consistent as patients age too. Why not position yourself at the crossroads of those seasons of need and age.
Be a dental thought leader. This will increase the chances you’ll be front of mind when someone is having an issue. Or know someone in their circle who is.
Social media brings immediacy to this. If you’ve been in “conversation” with them via Twitter, for example, imagine who they’ll turn to when they or someone they know has a need.
The introduction becomes more natural and immediate. In a way it’s – “Meet my dentist, __________. He/she will take care of you.”
>Find & share
Research and uncover useful info your patients would be interested in. Know your patient base well enough to know what each segment/group (i.e. seniors, parents, teens, middle age, etc.) want to know/need to know.
I have go-to people throughout my social media connections. When I want information for a blog post I know where to connect.
Your patients should feel that way about you and your practice. When they want the latest information about products and services be front of mind. And you get there by showing yourself to be a well of information.
Do your homework. Subscribe to content feeds that keep the flow of info constant.
Curate the content. Use it when it’s needed via links within tweets. Expand the content through blog posts, articles, webinars, ebooks, etc. (more on these in future posts).
>Be a customer service champion
Twitter makes a good customer service rep. Speed of response is part of the magic with social media.
The days of the comment box at the front desk are over. People’s opinions and the speed at which they’re shared run close to the speed of sound.
A colleague recently “outed” a top airline on his twitter feed after having a not so pleasant experience with one of their counter agents. The tweet to thousands of followers and a follow up to the airline’s customer service department received quick response and apology.
Businesses who tweet are at an advantage. They’re at an even greater advantage when they monitor their social media feeds for dissatisfied and satisfied customers.
A quick, authentic, and (if necessary) apologetic response can salvage a dissatisfied customer and save money. More so, it increases the kind of capital you can take to the bank again and again – social media capital.