dental marketing
Is Your Marketing Content Stealing Your Profit?
Talk of the economy depresses, bores…or empowers (for those not so inclined to believe the sky’s falling every other day). Economy themed communication typically surrounds money, investments, foreclosures, etc.
But…
There’s another realm where an economic forecast could be profitable to your dental industry services.
Being called upon as a copywriter to communicate in writing on a regular basis I’m tuned-in to the economy as well…the economy of words, that is.
When communicating – whatever the form – it’s necessary to maximize your words without minimizing your message. And most bankrupt their intended message through poor word management.
How Word Economy Adds Value to Your Dental Industry Marketing Strategy
Add the term “economy-of-words” to your dental marketing vocabulary. It’s a a fundamental principle for effective copywriting and marketing content.
In business, words add value. But the right words increase your profit and improve your bottom-line. As a professional copywriter I diligently study my craft to understand and utilize the persuasive, compelling power of words.
I know how the right words (e.g. in dental marketing) can lead to more clients, improved client relationships, and the bottom-line – increased business and sales. In an article I read by veteran copywriter, Bob Bly, he asked this question…
“What words sell best?”
Let’s apply his question:
1—Consider the copywriting/content in your dental marketing resources and/or informational products.
Think web pages, enewsletters, email promotions, brochures, product info packets, print newsletters, direct mail, ad copy, etc. Even social media content too (Twitter, Facebook, Blog). Are these a mere afterthought, “micro-waved leftovers”…or a strategic element of your business?
2—Ask yourself and those responsible for your marketing resources 3 important questions.
>Is the copywriting/content you currently use enhancing your image and improving your profit picture?
>Is it an accurate reflection of who-you-are
>Are you measuring its effectiveness?
3—Take necessary steps to improvement.
Does it need re-crafting, editing, or a total re-do? If so, get after it!
Economic decisions matter – with dollars and words!
Can You Cut-to-the-Chase?
Working as a copywriter I’ve learned that simplicity rules. I often post about being conversational in your copywriting – whatever you’re promoting (I realize some industries require a more technical…perhaps formal approach but generally speaking, casual rules).
Akin to simplicity is not going to-the-moon-and-back trying to make your point. The USP (Unique Selling Proposition) does the trick – helping your stay on target. It answers the question, “what makes this product/service outstanding…unique…over-the-top among competitors…?”
When creating your dental marketing promotions, it’s essential that you cut-to-the-chase. It means knowing what the compelling message is.
A compelling message simply stated will do more for your promotion than driving your compelling message all over the map with useless words.
3 Ways to Create a More Compelling Marketing Message:
1) Ask yourself – “what’s the ONE-THING I must communicate?”
Clearly there are numerous facets and angles to highlight when it comes to your product or service. Too much info (TMI) will lead you away from the *big idea* you desire to communicate.
Choose ONE (big idea) and build your wording around it. You’ll be surprised how much information gets attracted by your commitment to be clear about that ultimate…unique aspect among all the others.
2) Be unafraid to leave a few-things-off-the-table.
As with conversations, copywriting means prioritizing what you intend to communicate. Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy unfettered, boundary-less moments of conversation – when you can just talk wherever the moment leads. Though…with written promotions you’ve got seconds (yes, seconds) to keep the reader engaged.
Roam down an irrelevant path and you lose attention. Write what’s essential to the moment. There are exceptions, of course. But, develop fearlessness about what didn’t get said – you’ll have your opportunity if you stay focused from the get-go.
3) Read it one more time before you’re done.
I’m not advocating the endless edit here. Trust me, I can be the *Monk* of obsessive-compulsive copywriters…fearful that one more tweak here or there will lead to perfection.
Forget perfection! Think…but not too much! Let the words cook for an hour or two…perhaps even a day, if your deadline allows.
Read it casually before you call it done. This simmering…final review might (and occasionally does) reveal a gem of an edit that will send your writing over-the-top.
There’s more to be said on this topic…but I’ll keep is simple…for now.
Subscribe to this blog for more tips and insights about dental industry copywriting and marketing strategies.
Would You Say It Sitting on a Barstool?
Does your dental marketing message make sense? Is it rising above the noise in today’s marketplace?
I’m referring to the impact of your product(s), services, or ideas.
As a professional copywriter it’s essential that what I create on paper or on the monitor connects. Clients pay me for the connect-ability of my writing to their target audience and market. When it connects, people buy, use their services, make an investment, etc.
After all, the essence of marketing is connection – making the sale – however you define “sale.”
Take a look at the words used to get your dental industry service point across. Word quality is important. But consider this – so is tone, quantity, and let’s not forget delivery.
Occasionally, I’m paid to talk (nearly 30 years of speaking experience). And I’ve discovered that writing is basically talking on paper or via the computer monitor.
Conversations, whether speeches or content on a page or screen, go one of two ways: people get bored and think – “when is this person going go shut-up…,” they turn the page, or they *click* away from the website.
Or…they stay engaged – “tell me more…I’m listening…give me more information…let’s talk again soon!”
Your marketing approaches keep the conversation flowing or they’re just another piece of paper, a website or talking-head voice. Remember how Charlie Brown’s teacher sounded in the classroom. You never heard an actual voice. All you heard when ole’ Chuck or a classmate asked a question was “wah-wah-wah-wah-wah…” Seinfeld’s George Costanza would say, “Yada…yada…yada.”
Writing requires proper voice or it’s just words (yada…yada…wah…wah…wah). For maximum impact, evaluate the words you use to market and promote your dental services, products, etc.
Here’s the big idea: keep it conversational. When writing imagine you’re sitting on a barstool in a conversation with a friend, colleague, family member, or someone you just met. You’re sitting there…it’s casual…you’re comfortable…they’re comfortable and you’re just having a chat.
Five “Barstool” Copy Tips:
1–Write like you talk.
Imagine a casual moment, sitting on a barstool. If you were telling someone about your company, product, service, or idea, how would you describe it? Would you go all technical on them? Would you use big, industry words only you and a few others understand? Would you explode into a hype-driven, sales-y tone? Or would you just talk?
2–Make an impression without trying to impress.
When the person you’re talking with leaves the conversation will they remember you more for how impressive you were or will they recall the easy-going, comfortable nature of the dialogue? Would they say, “Let’s talk again soon…” or think, “Could we do this again say…during the next solar eclipse…” The impression you make brings people back for more.
3–Let communication work for you.
The goal of marketing is the sale (the impression). Merely impressive marketing efforts may or may not achieve that goal. Given the choice of being impressive or making an impression, which would you rather have in terms of the bottom-line?
4–Dress your language less formal and more casual.
Some are more comfortable in a suit, others in jeans. There’s a time and place for both but good content is comfortable like your favorite jeans.
When writing most can’t get the image of their English teacher out of their mind (I know…thanks for reminding you). You stress over crossing all your “t’s,” dotting all your “i’s,” watching your sentence structure…and don’t eeeeven get me started on grammar.
I’m not saying “slang-it-up,” get lazy or sloppy. What works on the barstool – formal or casual? Use good judgment. What’s easily read gets remembered. And what’s remembered gets purchased, used, or applied.
5–Communicate effortlessly.
Envision Tiger Woods teeing off…Kevin Durant taking the ball to hoop or sinking a 3-pointer – effortless! The skill appears second nature, fluid. Make your writing invisible.
Be aware of how writing about your product, service, and business gets in the way of the benefits or the intended result. Remember – features entice. Benefits sell!
Give your copy and dental marketing approaches the “barstool test.” Evaluating the copy/content and applying these tips to your biz communications could be the difference between increasing or decreasing profit.
Why Word Choice Could Make-or-Break Your Dental Marketing Content
A discussion in a meeting I once had reminded me of the value of guarding your words.
For example…
Make an unsubstantiated claim in an online marketing piece and a sensitive spam-filter may flag your content with a warning.
Relationally speaking – fire off an email or text message to a colleague, friend, or co-worker and you put a relationship in jeopardy (I can vouch for this…stick with me).
Words matter. They can heal, help, compel, sell, promote, and persuade.
Words also wound. They can cut, berate, hurt, and castigate.
Not too many years ago I made a costly mistake with words. I let my frustration and anger get the best of me. Through an eloquently worded, yet sharp-edged e-mail, I took a colleague to task. Following a cursory edit, I hit *Enter* and the rest is history – and not the kind of history that bears repeating.
I admitted in the aforementioned meeting that I would handle the circumstance differently, given the opportunity. I’d pick up the phone instead of applying my writing skill.
There are times when spoken words – where emotion and body language can be observed – gain you more mileage than written words. Even though I’m a professional word-smith, I must occasionally rely on verbalizing my message – especially when a relational misunderstanding is in the balance.
No doubt – words are powerful and they matter. But words must be used effectively and contextually if we want positive outcomes.
My experience prompts the value of weighing…choosing…crafting our words – especially written ones.
Consider three factors in your dental marketing content and written communications:
*Weigh your intentions*
[The simplicity factor] Whether it’s an e-mail or a memo, a tweet, Facebook or blog post, a marketing brochure or a case study, a web page or a press release – weigh the intentionality of your words. Ask yourself – what *promise* am I making that – if my words flow effectively from it – will deliver something of benefit to the reader? Emphasis on benefit(s)!
*Choose your tone/language*
[The emotion-factor] is revealed by the tone you establish early in the communication. Circumstances, as do products and services, require a point-of-view (POV). Choose a tone that fits. The image or picture you want your reader to have throughout is the result of choosing a tone or language. Some products/services require an intellectual tone…others are best pictured with a more gregarious tone. Whichever you choose be certain your tone is *conversational* (i.e. write like you talk).
*Craft your desired outcome*
[The persuasion-factor] clarifies your intentions and tone. What you’re communicating is going somewhere. Where? That’s your persuasive duty. Persuading someone to listen and understand your POV and ultimately follow your words is the essence of the craft of writing. Those who craft compelling messages achieve desirable outcomes. You will have persuaded them to act positively, negatively, or…neutrally.
Combine each [factor] in your dental marketing content and you will communicate more thoughtfully. And thoughtful communication doesn’t provoke…it more likely will persuade.
The Stop-Look-Listen Principle of Effective Copywriting
What takes place between-the-lines (so to speak) of a page’s copy increases the power of your marketing conversation(s). Stories could be told…and that’s precisely the point.
The story approach is a key to leading your prospects to picture themselves actually benefiting from your product or service.
Story-based copywriting does for the reader – in the moment – what buying…using…and benefiting from the product or service will do – once purchased. In a way, it’s a what-you-see-is-what-you-get kind of experience. Only at this point it’s putting what you see…in writing!
I wrote a sales letter for a supplement company. The word image I created told the story of a confident, male prospect who – for too long – put off getting healthy.
For example I could start a story-line this way…
“I think you’ll agree – looking in the mirror, at times, feels awkward…like the first glance at a blind-date. Mirrors don’t lie. And this time the truth doesn’t hurt. There’s only speechless admiration…”
Wonder where those few lines of copy are leading? The words – “looking in the mirror”, “awkward”, “blind-date”, “speechless admiration” – tell a story. Like a movie script they set-up the plot and hook you. They remind you of similar feelings and experiences.
Perhaps there are other and better story-lines to follow. But you must wade-in somewhere and get your feet wet before you can start making waves in your prospect’s mind…in route to their hearts.
Remember – people buy for emotional, not rational reasons.
Image-rich, colorful words tell the story your product or service is prepared to deliver. On occasion, use, and follow captivating story-lines when creating your promotions.
Try this: Stop…Look…Listen…
>>STOP…the camera within your personal experiences. You know how it feels to be on the receiving end of marketing. What turns you on? Off? More so, how did the wording lead you to buy or use the product or service? Write collectively…from the emotional and mental images of your experiences.
>>LOOK…at the “shoes” your clients and prospects are wearing and (as the saying goes)… put yourself in them [their shoes]. Then…write about that journey from your prospect’s or client’s perspective. If your product or service solves a particular problem, it helps to understand what the problem feels like. (This is where gold-nugget research pays!)
>>LISTEN…to life. Dial into the good and bad your clients (and you) are experiencing. Listen for – fears…wishes…deep desires…joys…beliefs…feelings…etc. Effectively worded copy has an *ear*-for-the-details. And remember this about products/services: features talk…benefits listen.
Every life tells a story. So does copywriting that connects…between the lines.
3 Ways to Stimulate Response with Your Dental Marketing Copy
I’m a visual person. I tend to think in pictures and images. When I set goals I see the process, the path, the end-result of achieving it. And I move forward in that direction (at least that’s the plan).
Visualization stimulates energy. Imagination taps into emotions. Images ignite thoughts and compel actions toward creating preferable futures – all things considered!
When searching products on-line, for example, I usually click the “see larger image” button on the site. Give me the 360-degree view.
At the movies the preview trailers for upcoming flicks keep me in my seat. I’ll forgo the concession line to make sure I don’t miss one Preview of Coming Attractions. There’s promotional power in watching action-packed, laugh inducing snippets from soon-to-be-released films (occasionally the trailer is better than the movie itself…but that’s another discussion).
Show someone using your dental product or dental service in an embedded site video (e.g. YouTube) and you’ll increase the odds they’ll be hooked. That’s the power of strategically utilized imagery.
Imagination motivates. It prepares you for action. Visualization energizes your receptivity to new ideas and the means to achieve your goals.
What you see is what you get. This says something about your approach to life just as it does the features of your product(s) or service(s).
Let’s talk about that for a moment.
What images…visualizations are you creating for your marketing approaches? Are your clients seeing what you’re promoting before they get it?
Crafting visually stimulating marketing words (copy) for your dental business promotions is essential if you want to captivate the imagination of your target market. Make them see themselves using and benefiting from your product or service.
Here’s how to stimulate your dental industry prospects’ and clients’ responsive imagination.
>Paint-by-numbers<
Frankly, this approach has stroked the artistic in most at one time or another. Effective copywriting involves numbers, i.e. facts, statistics, and relevant data. Provide proof that your business, product, or service delivers by coloring your copy with testimonial and/or expert information.
>Get real<
People (dental industry clients) have real problems. And you are in business to solve your applicable share of those problems. Help them picture the benefits your product or service delivers. Connect it to real life. This means you must know your prospect. Lead them with words to visualize the future – the future only your product/service can enable them to experience. Remember you’re promoting benefits – real…hands-on benefits.
>Show some emotion<
Again, knowing your dental industry prospect involves knowing what reaches, touches, and compels them. My business tagline states, among other things, that I write compelling copy. If writing doesn’t compel…you won’t sell (pardon the rhyme…although it is catchy).
Prospects and repeat clients require you to tap into their emotions. Write in a way that visualizes fear…greed…insecurity…happiness…pride…guilt…confidence…etc (all among common copywriting emotions).
Remember, *people buy for emotional, not rational reasons*.
Visualization stimulates the imagination. Give people an image that compels them to do business with you.
Watch Your Language – Especially When Doing This
On three particular occasions when I’ve answered the “tell-me-about-your-business” question, jargon caused a problem.
Jargon, or insider-language, creates communication gaps that can cost you opportunities.
Think about the “corporate-speak” you use when describing your business, service, or product to someone. Are you using language only those in your niche or who do your brand of work would understand?
Throw around jargon in a conversation and you might as well be speaking a foreign language no one in the room speaks, according to marketing consultant, Ilise Benun,
“If you were at a work-related function in, say, New York or Chicago, would you address people in Portuguese? Probably not. But you’d be surprised by how many businesspeople lapse into foreign “languages.” I’m talking about using technical or industry-specific jargon.”
She adds…
“Using words or phrases that have special meanings within an industry is a sure way to stop a conversation with someone outside the industry well before it’s started.”
In my previously mentioned conversations I somewhat casually answered, “I’m a copywriter…” A few minutes later I was re-explaining that…no…I don’t assure people their documents, marketing resources, brands, etc. are secure from people maliciously inclined to steal them and make them their own – that’s *copyrighting*!
Get the picture…
While those in marketing circles understand what copywriting is (my business) many, I’ve discovered, do not! My lack of language-sensitivity created an awkward moment all the way around.
So…here’s how to watch your language:
**Speak the native tongue**
I’m all about relevance…relevance…relevance! Keep your *talk* relevant to the moment. Remember the *barstool test*. Be conversational – ask yourself, “Would I use these words if I were in a conversation with them while sitting on a barstool…?” A networking opportunity or event is essentially that – a moment where casual, conversational language enhances opportunity. What are the “natives” speaking? Lose the jargon and industry-speak.
**Tweak your spiel**
You’ve got one…a spiel…right? I’m talking about your 10-15 second commercial for your business, product, or service.
Benun recalls, “…for me, instead of saying, “I’m a marketing consultant,” I could say something like, “I show people who work for themselves how to get the clients they want.” You get the point…”
As a copywriter, I’ve chosen to say something along the lines of, “I help business and service professionals create effectively worded promotional resources…” Or, “I write compelling resources that help businesses sell their services/products…”
Take a moment…review your resources…underline the jargon…decide to tweak the wording and how you talk to your prospects and clients about what you do/sell.
**Seek common ground**
Industry insiders know the jargon. To them, it says you’re in-the-know and credible. That’s common ground.
But…
When conversing or promoting to industry outsiders (the bulk of your business) listen…then speak and write to what you’ve heard. It’s more impressive – when gaining interest – to invest time picking up signals and language by listening than it is droning on and on until their eyes glaze over – unimpressed.
Good conversation like good written communication is an art. Learn to measure your artistic ability by how soon and often the conversation continues. Clear, compelling conversations lead to opportunity…and opportunity leads to profit.
Jettison the jargon!