dental email marketing
Fundamental Reasons Your Dental Email Promotions Succeed
The hummingbird attracted to our patio feeder is a consistent creature. In a strange sort of way it’s habits remind me about the core value of dental email marketing content.
Our hummingbird friend counts on the ample supply of sweet, red colored sugar water we provide. Because it returns many times a day it’s vital that we not disappoint.
Email remains as a consistently trusted source of content delivery. In spite of its spam-able potential, your dental services will benefit from using it as a consistent list communication tool.
And speaking of benefits – dental email marketing success depends on your commitment to deliver useful, beneficial content.
Email copy smells like spam the moment you abuse it.
Avoid the hand-slap by remembering it’s a permission based channel – so don’t intrude on people’s in-box privacy unless invited.
- Include an opt-in request on all your business or practice forms.
- Simply ask new patients and clients for their email address at their first appointment/meeting or phone conversation.
- Word your request appropriately. Say, “Is there an email address we can use to contact you…?”
People are accustomed to digital communication. Like text messaging, email is an acceptable and normal channel in people’s digital world – so be unafraid to ask for the connection.
Their permission opens the door to casual, friendly, and consistent communication with you.
Well-crafted and well timed email content delivers useful information. Connect your dental email content to a service, new promotion, or timely need and measure the impact.
The hummingbird returns to our patio because he’s accustomed to our generosity. Patients and clients will respond to your email content as you consistently provide them a beneficial reason to do so.
Be generous with your offers and content value. Because you are, people will trust their in-box, time, and dollars to you.
Email loses it’s impact when it looks, sounds, and feels like every other sale-sy message that pings their in-box. Keep your dental email copy relevant to your reader and their needs.
Much of this sounds simplistic, I realize.
There are reasons an email is opened and there are reasons it compels a response.
For now…
- Adjust to using email more consistently to promote your dental services.
- Ask for the opportunity/permission to email your dental patients and clients every chance you get.
- Acquire trust with useful, beneficial, generous email content.
There’s an art to dental email marketing. Stay tuned here for more tips related.
What hang-ups or challenges do you have about using email to promote your dental services? Comment…
What’s unique about you?
My wife and I enjoyed dinner and good conversation with a friend last evening. Part of our conversation was about the value we bring to our work and the opportunities the marketplace gives us.
Our friend is pursuing new job opportunities (and I happened to renew/write her resume – another value-add benefit of knowing effective copywriting skills). Though she’s transitioning back into a different field she’s able to transfer many if not most of her skills and passions into this new venture.
Most businesses and organizations – like individuals – have transferable benefits. It’s essential to remain ever-aware of those benefits and highlight them as much and as often as possible.
Isn’t that part of what marketing does?
When I’m writing an email promotion, an online or print sales letter, an email autoresponder series, a case study, a client’s blog post…even an individual’s resume (as with my friend) – I focus on the transferable benefits of the business’s product/service to a particular solution their prospects/clients seek for solving a problem.
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What value do your products/services deliver to your market?
Consider what your top-level clients/customers are saying about you. Listen to their feedback and survey comments (you are asking for this…right?). Between the lines of what your clients tell you is “gold” you can mine and use in your marketing content.
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How do your unique benefits stack-up next to others in your market?
This isn’t a question of one-upmanship. In fact, I encourage being so focused on your own unique-selling-proposition (USP) that you seldom (if ever) fall into the trap of comparing your marketing value to that of others. But it does help to know what’s working and not working for those with similar or same product/service solutions.
Live and learn…then develop your unique benefits to deliver to the marketplace. The more uniquely specific those benefits – the better!
Our dinner conversation gave me some valuable food-for-thought. Go…serve-up some value to your market today!
Put super-power ability to work in your marketing
I’m often asked about my copywriting. When someone asks me if I write this-or-that kind of copy I hesitate.
It’s not a hesitancy that results from questioning my ability to write a particular kind of copy. It’s more a matter of thinking how best to answer the question on-task.
“On-task?”
For example, when someone says they’re “on-task” they’re implying that they’re in the process of doing a particular thing. It could also define focus and diligence.
It’s a way of saying – “I’m working on it!” “Consider it done!”
I’m an on-task copywriter. I know how to write content that leads a prospect to a response. Most often that’s a sale.
The word, response, could refer to the intended obvious – the bottom line transaction that involves dollars being exchanged for goods or services.
Response could also describe…
- …a “click” through on an email promotion I write that leads one to a more lengthy, descriptive online sales or landing page.
- …the process of selling someone on your products’/services’ unique ability to solve a problem through a well-crafted case study.
- …a series of tweets (on Twitter), Facebook page posts, or blog posts uniquely designed to engage prospects in a social media dialogue about your products and services.
And yes, it’s intentional!
Copywriting must be intentional. It mustn’t be unfocused, manipulative or merely creative wording.
I’m all for creative copy (I dislike manipulative copy). Especially if words can be creatively organized to promote an otherwise run-of-the-mill, one-among-a-thousand products or services in a way that leads to a measurable response.
A super-power ability.
Dan Kennedy says, “The ability to organize words that motivate people to buy is a super-power.” That’s an excellent description!
In essence, effective marketing and the copywriting that drives it has to do with the ability to organize words to ignite a response.
I’m intentional to provide copywriting that creates a sales response! I’m super-powerful that way not because of any innate ability or physical stature.
No, I don’t carry a big-thunderous hammer like Thor. And I don’t have Green Lantern super-powers.
But I do understand that words work. And I’m on-task to organize them for that purpose.
So yes, I can write your this-or-that copy.
Should we be talking…?