dental industry enewsletter
3 Strategies to Stop a Common Mistake You Could Be Making on Your Dental Website
Our grandson is sharp. As a six year old he’s also incredibly random.
He blends his thoughts with the skill of a chef. And it’s most entertaining when his conversations shift-without-a-clutch as he jumps from one topic to another.
Yes, we laugh a lot when he’s around. Good times.
Randomness has me wondering. I don’t often rant in my posts…but today…well…here goes.
These days it appears that many dental professionals (and I suspect other industry pros as well) still don’t get-it when it comes to their dental web page content.
Cliche’ ALERT!
If I’ve heard it once I’ve heard it a thousand times from clients – “We want more substance on our internal web pages….Why bullet points…Where’s the (self-indulgent) information about our state-of-the-art thingamajig…??” Geez!
I’ll stop there. But I won’t stop my bold appeal – there’s a place for information and so-called substance and it’s not necessarily on your standard, internal web pages (Hang tight, I’ll clue you in shortly.)
Do your dental website readers really care?
That’s a good question. And you should give significant strategic thought to it.
As a copywriter and content strategist I certainly do. In fact, that question is where I live when writing.
Put yourself in the shoes of a potential new patient or a client (if you’re a dental business other than a dental practice). They find your website or content as result of a search.
Typically that search is driven by the use of a specific keyword or key phrase. But actually reading your content when they arrive is a completely different issue.
Is there more to online search success than SEO?
It’s not necessarily because you stuffed your internal web pages like the gluttonous rampage of a person on their third trip to the all-you-can-eat buffet line. Today’s search success (leading some to prophesy that “SEO is dead”) has more to do with usefulness and authority than it does keyword strategy.
Say again…?
That last sentence will perhaps get me in trouble with some. But I’m worn-out with crap content that attempts to game the search engines and funnel people into something more than it informs, educates, and provides solid solutions.
Maybe it’s because I’m not an SEO rock star (I’m really somewhat okay with that). But the more I learn and expand my bandwidth, the less inclined I am to be a “gamer” with my new-found knowledge and skill.
Mostly, I want to help people because I believe in the power of words to persuade, coach, help, assist, create breakthroughs, lead, feed, encourage, serve, promote, compel, on and on I could go. I love words.
And you should love the power of words too.
But not random, misplaced, or otherwise overused words. Who reads them?
And frankly…who cares?
1-Deliver value and your value will increase.
Design your internal web page content (Home page, About page, Services/Product pages, etc.) as crisp, to the point, and benefit oriented as possible. Trash the industry-speak, “feature-focus,” “est-syndrome (greatest, latest – you get the picture), and “state-of-the-art-cutting-edge” drivel.
2-Lose the idea that high word count (on internal pages – see above) is the ticket to search success.
Maybe it helps (and I said, “maybe”). But maybe you’re better served by serving your readers with more words on those pages that are capable of delivering the value you want to deliver. Internal web pages (again, see above) are for one purpose – to establish a credible call-to-action. For the dental practice that’s a scheduled appointment. For the dental industry business that’s a client lead, inquiry, or purchase order. Period. Why numb your readers/visitors with the sound of your own voice because you think you must?
3-Build your authority and increase your “word-count” where it has greater valued readability.
Blog, write informative articles, create high-value digital newsletters, podcast, use images, info-graphics, video, and social media channels. Words carry more weight there than they do tucked away on internal pages where people are numbed and disinclined to visit…much less read.
Web visitors and content readers these days are onto you. They know the gig, especially when clicking on a dental practice website.
One pretty, smiling stock photo image says it all. And the response is all too familiar – “We’ve been here before…Tell us something about your dental practice (or even better – your expertise) we haven’t already read a thousand times…”
Want to build credibility and authority?
- Be different than the dental practice or dental business down-the-street in your website content.
- Focus your site visitor’s and reader’s attention on information they can use and that’s packed with solutions.
That’s not random. These days it’s the most strategic thing you can do in your dental marketing via your website.
Try Free-Flying Content Creation and Watch Your Dental Marketing Soar
Sometimes you do it just for the sheer joy. That’s what came to mind as I watched the bird soaring overhead.
Call it your “sweet-spot” or your “wheelhouse.” The expertise you have gives you a certain freedom that you can use to your dental marketing advantage.
The Mississippi Kites nesting high in the branches of our backyard tree “get it.” This species of bird, common to my region, appear to fly because they can but also because it’s such a joy.
I’ll sit on my patio watching them. They freely ride the thermals in the summer sky – dipping, gliding, soaring.
Freedom with no agenda
Marketing is a strategic endeavor. Seldom do you share content, a tweet, a Facebook post, or an email without an “agenda.”
What would happen if you took a “just-because” approach? And what would that look like?
The kite (bird) soaring above my neighborhood experiences a kind of “just-because” freedom you should pursue in your dental marketing.
Picture this…
When you have something to say or share, why not send an email, publish a blog post, post on social media for the sheer joy of doing so.
Share your knowledge and expertise without expecting anything in return.
That might initially seem like a waste. After all, you earned your position, built your practice or business with your bare hands and buckets of sweat. Right?
I don’t blame you for wanting some credit. And certainly the best credit comes in the form of compensated services.
These days, people flock (speaking of birds) to authority. This is vitally true in the online, digital space via your web content.
Let the R.O.I. (Return On Investment) take care of itself.
The R.O.I. of your online, digital content extends way beyond your intentions. You can SEO-it, measure it, analyze it – and I recommend doing that within reason.
But the ultimate test of your investment is how useful you are to your reader or page visitor. Once they give you their time and then their trust by returning for more of your content you are on the way to a new kind of marketing freedom.
I’ve said it before, the days of building a dental website, setting-it-and-forgetting-it are gone! You must return again and again with consistent, useful stream of content to see a return.
Why?
Web visitors are easily bored, overloaded with information, saturated with industry-speak, and hungry for useful, authoritative expertise.
It’s your “wheelhouse.” Grind it out!
I’m not suggesting that you make content creation a daily, heavy “grind.” Quite the contrary.
Rather, approach it like the Mississippi Kite soaring above my backyard. “Fly” free, my friend…!
Free up time and resources to freely create free content. These days nothing builds authority and showcases your expertise more than marketing via relevant, useful content.
- Launch, re-launch, or replenish your current blog or article page. Give more attention to your ongoing content feed than you do the eye-candy design temptations or word-count concerns common to dental website design. Consistent, useful content holds your readers attention and delivers value. If they trust your expertise they’ll more likely give you their time and business loyalty.
- Provide multiple channels of content access. It’s safe to assume that some are readers (blog posts, enewsletters, email, ebooks, Twitter, Facebook posts, etc.). Others are listeners (audio content, podcasts, audio chats, etc.). And some are viewers who prefer visual content (YouTube, Pinterest, Instagram, webinars, etc.). Know your “tribe.” Patients and clients come in all flavors and so should your content (and how it’s delivered).
- Expect and ask for feedback. What you ask for can be measured. Reviews, shares, mentions, retweets (on Twitter) – these are votes for (or sometimes against) your services and the content you use to promote them. Ask, survey, and turn those nuggets of vital feedback into more useful content that serves your growing “tribe” of patients and clients.
Freedom isn’t necessarily “free.” But it is freeing to soar above the noise of today’s marketing landscape.
Freely create content or hire someone to do it for you. Whatever you do, give some “wings” to your expertise. The sky’s-the-limit!
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.
The Case for “Simple” and What Works on Your Dental Website Platform
I’m not here to debate their music. In fact, I’ll go on record and say that I’m a major U2 fan.
It’s their platform – like your dental marketing platform – that enables them to deliver consistently whenever and wherever they choose to make music.
Speaking of wherever, New Yorkers were drawn to a gathering of “street performers” on a subway platform. Imagine the signature sound being created not by some local tribute band but Bono and crew themselves.
I experienced U2 a few years ago in a massive, produced, high-energy, sold-out stadium show. It was epic and I would expect nothing less from an impromptu, street gig as well.
It’s what fans expect from an iconic band.
And it shouldn’t surprise you that the simplicity of an unplugged, street-level gig would have the same awe inspiring impact. That’s U2.
Whatever your “music”, simply deliver
These days dental website copy and content seems to migrate towards a massive, produced, shiny-object approach. Maybe it’s an attempt to legitimize your services in an increasingly competitive market.
Equally popular is the trend towards content “fluff.” Dental-speak, tech-speak, call it what you will.
And even more trending are the easy-way-out, set-it-and-forget-it website platforms that replace your unique “story” (your dental practice brand) with cookie-cutter branding.
It’s time to simplify.
Your dental practice story deserves a platform. In fact, to cut through the noise, it’s required.
You’re in the business of providing dental services and skilled treatment to people. As you’re aware, those who seek your services are, more often than not, motivated by pain (e.g. a tooth ache, swollen gums, tooth loss, etc.).
They don’t wake up daily with the notion of, “Hey, I think I’ll surf the internet for dental information…” But if they’re in pain or if they’re aware of the benefits of dentistry to their overall health, your opportunity to create a “fan” is higher.
So what’s unique about your website?
I’m not talking about graphics, flashy design, pop-ups, sliders, slide-shows, YouTube videos, stock images of beautiful people with Hollywood smiles, page headlines that include the words “state-of-the-art” (promise me you’ll STOP using those words…PLEASE!) and any words that end in “-est.”
Think simplicity.
Okay, let’s define it.
Ready?
Be useful.
Time is of the essence when you capture the online attention of a current or potential dental patient. They stop to listen for one reason – they found YOU.
YOU – in a massive, produced, crowd of dental websites.
And they aren’t there to admire your website.
They want information. Easy to read, easy to understand, take-action-on information.
Information they found by a simple question or word typed into a popular online search tool (Google, Bing, etc.).
The question that defines how “useful” you are: Do they find an answer?
Here are some simple strategies to help:
- Publish blog or article page content that’s readable, conversational, lacks dental-speak, and could be understood by a 5th grader (not sounds like it was written by one…there’s a difference).
- Create downloadable, free information (e-book) on a trendy, seasonal dental topic (teeth whitening for wedding season, back to school dental care, how to use your insurance benefits before it’s too late, etc.).
- Produce a 5 minute weekly podcast episode on Frequently Asked Questions (answer one question per episode…how’s that for being simple and useful).
- Design a monthly or quarterly e-newsletter available by (free) subscription only. Give your readers your behind-the-scenes stuff here and make it appealing to belong to your “tribe” (special offers, promotions, etc just for joining).
- Brainstorm more ideas. Let your mind run free (or email me and we can start a conversation…why not?).
Remember this…
Your online success doesn’t depend on your ability to impress. It does depend on your ability to deliver simply what people have come to expect when they find you.
Simple, useful information.
3 Online Dental Marketing Assets Worth Controlling
I have control freak tendencies. Why are you giving me that look?
Come on now. You have your issues too!
Truthfully, this sometimes freakish behavior has value.
For example, you should consider it a good thing that you want to maintain control over your dental business assets. I marvel at those who face the wind while building a vibrant business (online or offline) – especially those who knock it out day in and day out with “sweat-equity.”
A recent post on Copyblogger stoked my control-freakiness. In this instance it’s a good thing.
I encourage you to read the entire post and let it prompt whatever useful insights it should in you. But I’ll cut to the chase and share what the writer, Sonia Simone, had to say about your dental business’s most valuable assets worth protecting – on the marketing side of the equation that is.
Simone affirmed the 3 assests you should be building – and for practical purposes – controlling:
1. A well-designed website or blog populated with lots of valuable content
2. An opt-in email list, ideally with a high-quality autoresponder
3. A reputation for providing impeccable value
In essence, your dental marketing content, connections, and character are of utmost importance to the lifetime value of your business.
>Content
I think you’d agree we live in an information-rich era. Social media has raised the water level somewhat. From blogs, to Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and more we’re a content fueled culture. And it’s not likely this will change.
But what must change is our due diligence to create and protect this asset (See Simone’s full post for her provoking insights on this).
Just as you’re not soon to stop promoting your dental industry products and services – you’ll not soon stop thinking of new and better ways to create compelling content.
Do a quick inventory:
-Do you have a blog? What’s the date of the most recent post? Who wrote it? Did it appeal to your niche? Was it actionable/practical information? Are your posts keyword-strategic? How are you curating content? (Curating? Huh!).
-Are you engaging your industry…clients with social media? How often do you post to Twitter and Facebook? If you’re a location based business do people have the option of “checking-in?” Do you give them any “love” for checking-in?
-How are you spotlighting your success-stories? Do you give clients, patients, constituents a feedback channel (surveys, etc.)? When someone provides outstanding feedback where do you feature it? Are you expanding your testimonials into benefit-rich case studies?
Just a few content questions to get your mind cranking.
>Connections
You can have outstanding content but someone has to read and benefit from it. Your list, “tribe,” or community is the all-important asset here.
People connect with you publicly when they frequent your business location (if you’re location based). If you’re online as well, and connecting there, your best asset is a combination of email and social media.
Are your social media connections one-sided? By that I mean, if you’re the only one talking without acknowledging and giving or receiving feedback – it’s one-sided.
Social media, in particular, is more of conversation than a promotional medium. Sure, it works both ways – and most of us do our fair share of promotion via Twitter, Facebook, etc.
What if you improved your approach? Instead of primarily thinking of ways to promote, sell, and market your dental services what if you gave as much or more energy to starting conversations around them?
Use social media to ask questions specific to your industry and niche. Respond to answers with a blog post or two (more connective content).
Give people an opportunity stay engaged and conversing with you by joining your email list. Reward those who connect with a content-rich special report and/or a regular enewsletter full of practical content.
Give people a reason to connect and stay connected.
>Character
80’s pop-star, Cindy Lauper sang, “I see your true colors shining through…” (If you’re too young and saying, “Cindy who?”, hop on I-Tunes and give it a spin.)
It doesn’t take long for our “true colors” to show in today’s 2.0 marketing culture – online and offline. We’re talking character here.
Reputation is everything. And character guides reputation.
Measure your character here by how much consistent and “impeccable value” you deliver to others. Does it bug you to give valuable content away for free via your blog or enewsletter? If it does, do some character inventory. You’ll be glad you did.
Remember conversations lead to relationships that lead to more clients/patients, sales, and beyond.
You’re in business to help people, right? And that’s the truest color imaginable.
Some things are worth protecting. Character ranks high. And these days so does your content and connections related.
How to Make Your Dental Content “Sticky”
I walked across our kitchen floor a few days ago and experienced that somebody-spilled-something-sticky-feeling on the bottom of my bare feet. Ever done that?
That’s bad-sticky! But when we talk about sticky-content…that’s good-sticky!
Speaking of sticky – do you know the story of the Post-it® Note? You know, those little yellow notes we can’t live without!
The Post-it® Note was invented as a solution without a problem (yes, you read that right). It was created by Dr. Spencer Silver, who happened to develop a unique, re-positionable adhesive. But (at the time) the 3M scientist didn’t know what to do with his discovery. Six years later, one of Dr. Silver’s colleagues, Art Fry, remembered the light adhesive when he was daydreaming about a bookmark that would stay put in his church hymnal. And as they say – the rest is history.
Today, the Post-it® Brand boasts more than 4,000 unique products. It’s become one of the most well-known and beloved brands in the world.
Content Stick-ability!
Most content exists for a simple reason. Consider your products and services. Why do they exist? For what purpose were they created?
Whether it’s offline or online marketing content or social media content that links back to your website, a landing page, or a blog post – your content must be evaluated by a simple analytic!
Max Lincoln Schuster said, “Never forget that people never buy things or services…they buy solutions for their problems.”
Solutions…without problems
Back to the Post-it® Note story. Recall the subtle result of its invention – “The Post-it® Note was invented as a solution without a problem.”
Marketers, copywriters, content creators and curators, bloggers, social media writers and users must remember – not all that’s written or created solves something. And if that’s the case our content becomes just more “word-noise” in an increasingly noisy universe already overloaded with information!
I’m passionate…no, I’m OCD (with respect) about relevance. I have a background in church leadership and hours of writing and public speaking experience in that venue. I was driven then – and still am – (come “hell-or-high-water”) to find and provide practical…actionable principles in what is typically irrelevant to modern life and culture.
When problems and their solutions often elude the masses, why create something that’s irrelevant? It’s like the proverbial carrot-on-a-stick (available but out of reach) to our readers, clients, etc.
How to be a solution-source through creating “sticky” content.
>Listen
The phrase “you’re talking so much…I can’t hear what you’re saying,” applies. In today’s marketing-numb culture it’s profitable to listen. If you want the most ROI on your social media, online marketing, email promotions – whatever it is – develop a new bias…LISTEN!
Cup-your-ear to not only your customer feedback surveys but also your social channels. TweetDeck, HootSuite, News feeds, etc. can help you keep your-ear-to-the-groundswell of chatter about any industry niche – including your specific dental business niche.
Dental suppliers, dental manufacturers, dental practices, dental continuing education, dental publishers, dental marketers, and dental consultants are talking on social media. They’re promoting and they’re engaging there. Start listening.
>Leverage
Here’s where things can get sticky (in a good way). Content that’s sticky with problem-solving quality is your leverage point. If you’re listening to your industry and what they’re talking about – from patient to promotion – you’ll get a good idea about problems that need solving.
Become a problem-solving rock-star by using case studies, whitepapers and articles. Use some link-leverage by linking (more on that in a moment) back to blog posts via your various social media channels (Twitter, Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn, etc.).
You have more leverage (and the potential for it) than you think!
>Lift
Lift happens when you engage your “followers” and “friends” beyond the one-way conversation of content, content, content! And engagement happens when others retweet (RT) or mention your content to their “tribe” of followers and friends.
It’s called “social” media for a reason. Anti-“social” behavior gets sniffed out as fast as spam in your inbox!
Lift your stick-ability by lifting others and their content. Be generous with RT’s (retweets on Twitter), @mentions, #hashtags, #FollowFriday “love,” comments on blog posts and articles, “Likes” on Facebook pages, “Circle-friendly” behavior on Google+, and linking back to others’ (even competitor’s) quality content.
Let these tips “stick” as you’re creating problem-solving…solution-oriented content. Even better write them on a Post-it® Note and stick it…somewhere you’ll notice when creating content.
And if you want some help – contact me to create some stick-ability for you (I promise I won’t leave a sticky mess…like on my kitchen floor…oops, maybe that was my-bad!).
The web has changed – do you know what to do?
As a dental service provider or dental marketer, let’s agree you want a piece of the online action. But how does your web presence compete for the attention of today’s savvy web surfers.
And once you’ve established an online presence – that brings in business – how do you keep it?
You do know the web HAS changed…right!?
Securing that attention is both a technological AND content issue. The web presents countless waves of opportunity for dental industry and dental marketing pros like you.
Here’s a few reminders of how savvy, A-level dental marketers are strategically using the web for their front-line dental marketing efforts:
–>E-mail (Are you maximizing this tool?) – use product/service promotions, autoresponders (a series of strategically written email promotions that provide a click-through link to your website or promotional webpage).
–>E-newsletters or e-zines (Got one? – they work in ways you may not have considered) – keep your products/services front-of-mind through a series of articles and tips published weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly.
–>Blogs (For some they’re better than an e-newsletter and…they’re more than a place to vent or rant) – stay on the radar of the your target market through consistent, relevant content that establishes you as an authority – or at least one with your finger on the pulse of your industry. See it…say it – that’s the power of having a go-to blog.
–>Social media (Seriously! What are you waiting for?) – think Twitter, Facebook pages, LinkedIn, YouTube, Foursquare, Gowalla, etc. I’ll be as bold to say – “Get on board or be irrelevant (that’s a kind way of saying you’ll go the way of the dinosaur)!”
–>Home pages (perhaps the most strategically under-utilized and ineffective website page) – set the pace for your entire website here.
–>Landing pages…squeeze pages (could be the difference between a customer and potential one) – warm up your market with a product/service promotion before they even get to your website.
–>Podcasts (if you’ve got something valuable to say) – be the voice with a portable…listen-as-you-go marketing tool (IPhones, IPads, Blackberrys, and the Android market of smartphones make this a slam-dunk)! Embed it on your website and build your subscriber list. For some hearing is better than seeing (reading).
–>Webinars (nothing to fear…much to gain when used right) – create an online educational system. Save cash-flow on training travel and related fees. Offer the occasional free webinar to build your educational tribe.
New and efficient forms of communication require fresh, targeted content. Design is a significant feature of your dental industry website for sure.
But without benefit-biased copywriting all the *pop* and *flash* technology risks diverting attention…and the web, brothers-and-sisters, preaches the doctrine of attention!