social media
One Thing That Will Make Your Dental Marketing Content Different (and Better) Than Most
It happens a lot when consulting with a dental practice or dental business about their webpage copy or other related content. They share a favorite site link or two with me and say, “We want our copy/content and/or website to look and “sound” like this…!”
My review often reveals what’s common with not just dental industry copy, but most:
- Heavy feature focus (“Latest…greatest…best…”) less emphasis on benefits
- Full of industry-speak
- Written to a crowd instead of one person (lack of “you…”)
It takes courage
You must step away from the crowd. Connecting and then compelling your audience requires a new kind of fearless content.
Play it safe.
Sound like everyone else.
And you’ll be another face in the crowd!
Same sounding copy and content produces the same results. It will require more marketing dollars to get attention.
And why?
The online world is somewhat dominated by pay-to-play strategies. Create and fund a strategic enough funnel and you’ll “capture” more leads and potentially more patients and thus increase production.
Sound easy?
It is (in a way) if you have time and cash-flow to invest in it. And we’ve not even talked about the differentiating yourself from the competition and noise they’re creating.
Being different isn’t about being creative
There’s more to standing out from the crowd with your dental marketing than creative, indulgent eye-candy on your website or social media channels.
Being different has more to do with being yourself. Nick Usborne (whose content inspired this post by the way) says,
”You have to find a way to step out from behind the curtain and show yourself. Even when the services you offer are very similar to those of your competition, there is one point of real difference you can turn to.
And that point of difference is YOU.” 1
Filling your copy and content with features and professional sounding language isn’t enough…and frankly, it’s not even close to effective by comparison.
Rising above the dental marketing noise requires being unafraid to let your patients or clients see the real you.
And to see the real you your content has to sound like you!
- Can they relate to you through your content?
- Is it apparent that they can trust you through your content?
- Are they put at ease enough to schedule with you through your content?
And a theme covered a lot on this blog…
- Do they get answers to their questions through your content?
If you’re hiding behind someone else’s style, voice, website design, and general content theme you’re missing a most valuable marketing asset – relatability.
Step away from the crowd with more compelling dental marketing copy and content
Write and share content in your own voice
This is the essence of writing like you talk. To do this you must get out of your head.
And to get out of your head requires that you get into the mindset of a patient or client.
- What do they fear?
- What’s their desired goal?
- What’s their motivation?
- What are their questions?
Your audience searches for you based on your expertise. But they will listen to you and stay with your copy/content when you share your expertise in conversational tone.
Why?
Because online communication these days (and I don’t suspect it will change soon) is everyday, somewhat chatty, and certainly brief and to the point.
Jargon alienates. Industry-speak confuses.
So why waste precious dollars and your audience’s time by numbing them with it?
- Stop writing like a marketer!
- Stop writing like a dental professional!
- Stop writing like an educator!
Instead…
Write like you! Or hire a professional copywriter or content strategist who can tap into your voice and write accordingly.
The results?
- Unique (not merely creative) copy and content
- Useful (not noisy) copy and content
- Uncharacteristically compelling (not manipulative) copy and content
Sure, it’s scary and feels like uncharted territory. But you will stand out from everyone else not because it’s easier but because it’s courageous, it works, and it potentially has a better return on your investment.
Are You Listening? And Why It Matters to Your Dental Copy and Content
I know why you procrastinate when it comes to creating your dental marketing content. No arrogance intended but it might have something to do with a key element of all content creation.
It’s easy to believe that writing is a burden or something that requires some sort of magical gift (I’m particularly fond of this idea).
There’s nothing really “magical” about the craft. Sure, skill is involved. Yet that skill favors something all writers and content creators know.
And I share it for the benefit of your dental content marketing.
”Effective writing comes from a very specific kind of homework. From empathetic listening. From spending time with the kinds of folks who make up our audience, and striving to see the world through their eyes.” 1
So, how do you become all-ears to your audience?
What habits help you get-all-up-into why they would choose your services and/or products?
They’ve got-a-problem
Actually your patients or clients have a number of problems. Content and copy can effectively point them in the direction of solutions.
It’s easy to forget that you also have problems. Being all-business…all-day can plug your ears to what your audience is dealing with.
To them it’s often very emotional!
Feel their “pain.”
Wrestle their issues alongside them.
Bear the “weight” of their current problem(s).
Next…
Open the “map”
Well…before you open the map it makes sense to create one. Mapping is the idea that to solve audience problems you must have a clear scope on what they’re “seeing, thinking, doing, and feeling.” 2
- What words do they use to describe their current situation, problem, or perspective?
- How do they describe their current, past, or future experience with what you have to offer?
Your copy and content will resonate with your audience when you immerse yourself in their challenges.
Put your ear-to-the-wall
Yes, you can listen-in without appearing a “creeper.” In fact the more you lurk around where your patients or clients “talk” the sharper your perspective becomes.
And the better your dental content and copy will be!
As it relates to “social listening” – it’s not about a particular platform. Some “talk” on Facebook, others on Twitter, some on Instagram, others on LinkedIn.
- Avoid platform-paralysis. Meaning, don’t just favor one over other.
- Let your audience tell you where to “cup” your ear. Listen where they are regardless of platform preference.
- Mine online reviews – even the negative ones. Talk isn’t cheap and opinions matter when it gives you valuable insight.
”Your job is to shut up and listen. Stay open to all of the ways that folks are talking about meaningful problems – including the ways that challenge your preconceptions.” 3
Listen for audience problems. But also listen to the language they use when sharing what’s on their mind.
Buy them a “drink”
What’s in the glass or cup isn’t the issue. The casual-comfortability is!
Picture them sitting across a table or next to you on a barstool. Copy and content that resonates feels and sounds more like a casual chat than a technical, jargon-filled, irrelevant discourse.
When the conversation digresses so does your opportunity to compel them to take action.
Your solutions to their problems will be lost on your inability to converse conversationally via your content. And this is often the problem of much content!
Effective dental marketing content is a one-to-one conversation.
The extent to which you understand this and do your related “homework” is the extent to which you’ll make a connection…and compel a response.
How to Use Your Dental Blog as a “Home Base” to Engage Your Patients or Clients
Say what you will about having a dental blog. But your dental practice or dental business has an opportunity to capitalize.
According to Heidi Cohen you’re in a “renaissance” era for blogging.
“Blogging pioneers, Copyblogger’s Brian Clark and Problogger’s Darren Rowse, are leading the blogging renaissance. It’s documented in their discussion ‘Blogging is Back.’
They want to recapture the power and human essence of blogging, especially as an owned home base.”
Speaking of “home base.”
A high percentage of my work as a dental copywriter is invested in writing and/or rewriting webpage copy for dental practices or dental industry businesses. Another increasing percentage of my work is on the dental content strategy side of things – writing blog content for those who understand (by default or instinct) this “blogging renaissance” idea.
Yes, you need an engaging, conversationally written dental website. No doubt about that, my friends.
But building that “house” (so to speak) and not inhabiting it with ongoing, credible, and useful content (via a blog) can disconnect you from your audience.
Who’s your audience?
It’s those who search for information relative to their dental needs and/or questions. As I say to clients, “People aren’t looking to bookmark dental website copy or clamoring to read it…”
That said, they ARE searching online for answers to their questions about dental treatment, dental procedures, building their dental business, growing their dental group, etc.
Your “static content” (i.e. Your standard Home, About Us, Services pages) needs the support (now more than ever) of an active, consistently fresh blog and/or article page. Thus “home base” content that YOU own and that’s posted on YOUR online property (your website).
What’s wrong with social media?
Nothing, fundamentally. The exception is that it’s becoming more difficult for your business (including dental practices) to have, for example, a Facebook page you can effectively and profitably use without having to invest your valuable marketing dollars to maximize your reach.
What this means for you…is that you need an accessible, information-rich source of content your audience can consume consistently.
How to Use Your Dental Blog as an Engaging Home Base
1-Create and publish blog content that answers the core questions your “audience” is asking.
Start with needs. Your patient or client questions are a bread-crumb path to what’s front-of-mind related to your services.
They search…but are you answering?
“I have info on my Services pages…,” you say. Good, but remember that’s static content (meaning it rarely, if ever, changes or evolves).
Cohen highlights the 5 types of information your audience seeks,
- Product information
- Customer FAQ’s
- How to’s
- Product (or Service) styling or best-in-class practices
- Ratings and reviews
Answer questions via your blog posts that tap into those areas of interest. Use their language and speak to their emotional desires.
2-Publish dental blog posts consistently to establish presence and availability.
Consistency isn’t about being obsessive. It’s more about being present as a go-to source of useful information (content).
Know your audience and their needs. Again, this relies on your listening strategies.
Use social media listening by scanning your page feeds, comment history, etc. Open channels in your clinical and/or consultant and sales force zones – what are your assistants, consultants, etc., hearing or being asked?
Publish on theme.
For example, April is Oral Cancer Awareness month, Spring and Summer is wedding and reunion season. What are your patients thinking about during those seasons – prevention, improving their appearance, etc?
Post about the value of oral cancer screenings, preventive dentistry that decreases oral cancer risk. Publish content about teeth whitening, “professional whitening vs. DIY whitening,” porcelain veneers, dental bonding, etc.
3-Spotlight and re-purpose your dental blog content via accessible channels.
Post the content primarily on your “home base” (your dental website).
Use your email list to broadcast new and available posts. Do this when new content is published and to repurpose content that informs your patients or clients about relevant questions they’re asking (those theme seasons, etc.). Provide a blog post snippet with a clickable link to the actual, full post.
Publish an e-newsletter to your list using the full blog post as the content. Include links back to your website and use the newsletter format as another opportunity to share current promotions (do this without being salesy).
Start with these. Soon you’ll be capitalizing on the current blogging renaissance.
How “Irritating” is Your Dental Content? And is That a Good Thing?
Years ago, I heard author/consultant, Jim Collins (Built to Last, Good to Great), speak. During his talk he said something I will always remember.
Your dental marketing influence on new patients or new clients rises and falls. It will achieve greater consistency when you create and use content according to what I remember Collins saying.
He made this statement about the sharing of ideas and principles – “I want what I share today to be like an irritating grain of sand stuck in the folds of your brain…”
Not to say that you want to “irritate” new or potential patients/clients into action. But the principle applies.
Content irritation?
The goal of your dental marketing content isn’t to irritate in the purest sense of that word. It’s more a matter of sustained front-of-mind presence.
Your potential patients/clients seek their information differently these days. It’s short of reflexive to reach for a smart phone or tablet device and “Google” the answer to their “burning” question.
What shows up in the search queue is vital to your ongoing ability to reach and compel them. More often than not a link to an article will pop-up in their search results.
Are you there?
I’m talking “there” in the sense of having a consistent presence via content that’s useful and relevant to their search. They’re looking for you, a dentist, or you as a dental industry professional and their “pain-point” is the motivation for seeking your services.
Or your new patient is sitting in your operatory following the exam, x-ray, and teeth cleaning as result of your latest promotion. Treatment is necessary.
A treatment plan is being presented. They have a decision to make.
Are they prepped and equipped with the information to make the decision?
Information flows
Your target audience makes decisions based on the compelling quality of the information presented to them. It would make sense that the more, compelling, informative, useful, and available information…the better, right?
Content creates a river effect. It flows towards expectant and otherwise seeking-to-be-informed people, not unlike yourself.
You’re reading this blog for much the same reason. A need or desire for the information prompted you to click a link and read it.
Or it was shared with you via a respected colleague, friend, or social media connection (always appreciated, by the way).
Welcome to the new era of content community.
How to Use Consistent Content to Inform and Compel New Patients or New Clients to Take Action on Your Services
Use the echo-effect.
Become a voice that “echoes” in the consciousness of your patients/clients. This happens when you show up consistently on their “radar” via compelling content.
You have limited hours of operation, marketing dollars to invest, and time to maximize your connections. Content works for you around-the-clock, so to speak.
Create “echo-points!”
- Create and send emails to your patient/client list. Link to relevant blog posts, articles, and/or social media channels. Limit how much you email promotions compared with the amount of “content-echo” you distribute to your list. A will timed email with a link to a relevant content channel could tip a new or current patient/client to take the next step.
- Use voice-mail (if you must rely on phone contact) more strategically. Craft the message (content) you leave with unavailable patients/clients to include a call to action. Avoid saying “call us back,” etc. Give them a reason to feel they’re missing out on something if they don’t return your call.
- Make audio/visual content available for after-hours “echoes.” Use short podcasts, YouTube videos, Periscope, Instagram, GIFs, SnapChat, etc.
Construct a go-to archive of valuable information.
Your online presence (via a website) should resemble a library more than a digital brochure. Archived content (blog posts, articles, videos, podcasts, etc.) set you up as an authority.
- Catalog your posts and articles by category. This improves eye-scan impact and ease of access.
- Use your content platform as reference point for patient/client questions – “What’s your email address? I’ll forward you a link to a blog post/article/podcast that will answer your question…” This gives you an opportunity to “echo.”
Release your collective influence.
This follows the previous tip. Your content becomes a second voice of influence beyond yours and that of your team.
Again, having content to share increases your authority and influence. Plus, not all of your team members (you included) are rock-stars at closing the “deal.” (treatment plans, etc.).
And content relieves all that “salesy-speak” that’s so easy to use when trying to close treatment or a sale.
Content gives you permission to keep promoting – even when you aren’t present…or as a reference point when you are.
Front-of-mind consistency is the strength of your dental content. It’s the type of “irritation” you shouldn’t mind having.
Are There “Gaps” in Your Dental Website That Expose You to Failure?
The recent winter weather did some damage to our property. It’s not significant but some minor repairs are in order.
Timing isn’t always on your side when the weather is involved. But the timing is always right to evaluate your current dental website and close some of the gaps that make your marketing vulnerable to failure.
A gap is precisely what I have in my fence as result of the strong winter winds that blew through my region recently. As I early mentioned, the damage isn’t significant by comparison but my suburban property feels exposed now that I lost two sections of privacy fencing.
Close the gaps
I write a significant amount of webpage copy for dental practices, dental consultants, and dental industry businesses. There’s a gap these days between those that are riding the wave of content marketing strategy (one that I do not believe will go away anytime soon) and those that are either satisfied with their online (website) presence or assume that having one up-and-done is enough.
The gap is widening. If you’re on the side of the fence that values consistent, useful content published via a blog, newsletter, podcast, online course, ebooks, email series’, etc you’re positioned to take your “world” by storm.
On the other hand, if you’re resisting or uninformed about the value of content to stimulate your dental marketing, brace yourself for a storm of frustration. You could find yourself wondering why your dental website visitors arrive but don’t stay…or more important – don’t schedule.
It’s time to close the gaps. You shouldn’t feel exposed to frustration or worse waste your valuable dental marketing dollars over the next 12 months on a website that’s basically a digital brochure.
Exposing Your Dental Website “Gaps” and the Strategic “Repairs” You Can Make to Increase Your Value to Patients or Clients
Assess the “damage”
Your patients/clients visit your website for one, primary reason – to access information about your services. Their response hinges on what they discover in the first few seconds of arriving there.
“Gap”: Thinking it’s necessary to differentiate yourself with flashy web page banners or spotlighting your brand image/logo. You can damage your online influence if you’re solely relying on “creative, visual elements” to compel your site visitor to schedule or contract with you.
Damage assessment solution: Build credibility and potential for repeat site visits by providing simple, understandable answers to the questions your patients/clients are asking.
- Fill-the-gap with blog posts/articles published a minimum of two times per month, a downloadable podcast, a consistently published Q&A-like newsletter, or an easy to access and read ebook.
- Spend your available annual marketing dollars on those strategies that provide useful, valuable information your visitors are seeking.
Clear the “debris”
No doubt, dentistry is a technical industry. Healthcare relies on skilled expertise to diagnose and treat effectively.
“Gap”: Thinking it’s essential to thoroughly explain the technical details of your dental services, treatment, and procedures so your patients/clients will want to schedule/use your services. In essence, believing that the more they know, the more likely they are to view you as an expert and schedule.
There’s a better way…
Clean-up solution: Your authority/expertise is recognized more by your ability to speak your site visitors language. Leave the industry-speak to your communication with colleagues, at conventions, or your local study-club.
- Eliminate “jargon,” “fluff-content,” over explained services/procedures, high word count descriptions, and unnecessary credential data.
- Create a compelling connection with your site visitor through every-day language via conversationally written web page copy, blog posts, articles, newsletters, etc. (to keep the language conversational and every-day it’s a good idea for someone to write it other than you…no offense).
Restore the “solution”
Clarity rules. And simplicity shouldn’t imply poor quality or design.
“Gap”: Thinking that a graphically intense, creatively unique, high word count website will build trust with your audience.
Repair solution: Creative design, more words, and indulgent graphics can make your website more difficult to navigate, to understand, and unclear about what visitors should do next. Ditch the mindset that says, “(Our) website must compete on a creative level with every other dental industry site in our area/region….”
Your patients/clients will visit, stay, return, and schedule your services for one fundamental reason – you provide clear, compelling answers to their questions or solutions to their problems. Clarity and simplicity trump creative.
- Stand out creatively through informative and consistent content. Distribute your creative-vibe via your social media channels (Facebook page, Instagram, YouTube, etc.).
- Be an authoritative resource and you’ll compel trust…and action. And speaking of action – restore your web pages to include a clear call-to-action (e.g. “Contact us to schedule…,” “Click here for more information…,” etc.).
These simple repairs will close the “gaps” in your website and your digital marketing strategy. It’s best to create good exposure for your authority and expertise than to be exposed via ineffective web page content.
4 Strategies to Raise Your Dental Marketing Expectations for a Successful New Year
It wasn’t at all what he expected. And the outcome he experienced reminds me that setting your expectations accurately and appropriately can create new beginnings in your dental marketing.
Our grandson recently asked to “chase” his distasteful medicine with a “spoonful” of sugar. I agreed, casually grabbed a spoon from the drawer, dipped into the container, and delivered his request to a smiling face.
His reaction was priceless. He jumped up from the sofa, sputtering, spewing, and reported his distaste for what was served up saying, “That’s CREAMER!”
In my defense, I do not use sugar in my coffee. That said, I’m accustomed to only spooning a dash of creamer into my morning brew.
I instinctively reached for the creamer thinking it to be sugar. We laughed, as did our grandson after he cleansed his palate with the aforementioned requested sugar treat.
Meeting expectations
You should trust that you’ll receive what you expect. That’s often not the case.
Your audience comes to your dental practice or dental service business with a load of expectations. These days what’s expected has shifted a bit due to how information about your services is consumed.
And speaking of information…
Now’s a perfect time to review and hit refresh on informational content that can help you set your dental marketing expectation for the coming months. And being intentional with your expectations can improve your approach to those nagging New Year’s resolutions you feel compelled to make but fail to fulfill.
Consider this post a dental marketing reboot of some common themes from the past few months of posts.
How to Raise Your Dental Marketing Expectations and Experience a Compelling Amount of Success This Year
Renew your thinking about dental SEO
As I’ve written here before, I do not consider myself to be an SEO expert or specialist. I know enough to be “dangerous” in a sense.
And maybe that’s my point. Too much SEO thinking can blind you on your path to online success.
Here’s the deal (and this much I do know) – SEO isn’t about “gaming” or “baiting” your online presence. True SEO creates search expectations around the delivery of useful, informative, valuable content.
This is SEO, of course. But it’s not the SEO you’re perhaps conditioned to believe you must have on your website or else…
Think SEO but…think about it differently!
- Create content around solutions (answers) to the problems (questions) your online visitors are experiencing (asking).
- Make your website content savvy and the SEO will satisfy your online dental marketing expectations.
Check out more related insight here.
Revise your dental website
A website is only the beginning. It’s not a one-and-done dental marketing strategy.
Think of your website as a platform with access to multiple content channels. Those channels are where your dental “consumers” should be able to easily navigate information that (once again) provides solutions (answers) to their problems (questions).
- Lead with your blog/article page. Lose the mindset that you must have high word count, information-heavy, dental-speak fluff on your service/procedure pages (people read what informs them…not what you think they need to know about x, y, or z dental procedure – that’s your world…not theirs).
- Give your website visitors easy to access, readable, visual, audible content. Think blog, YouTube, and Podcast instead of a Wikipedia-like dental procedure glossary. Instead of a tired-does-anybody-read-it-anyway FAQ page chunk those frequently asked questions into compelling blog posts.
Check out more related insight here.
Re-purpose your content
Having a blog/article page that you consistently publish to gives you options. The more blog/article content you have the greater your ability to re-purpose the content.
Remember…
Some website visitors are readers. Some are visually oriented. Some are listeners.
- (For your “readers”) Re-purpose your written content (blog posts, articles, etc.) into e-books, a call-to-action email series, a newsletter, a tip-sheet, etc.
- (For your “viewers”) Re-purpose your written content into a YouTube video (a vlog), a Periscope, a Slide-Share, an Infographic, or other visual content like a GIF, Meme, etc you can post on your social media channels (Facebook, Instagram, Twitter).
- (For your “listeners”) Re-purpose your written content into a podcast or downloadable MP3.
Check out more related insight here.
Re-orient your marketing mindset (think content)
How?
Rinse and repeat the first three points…because content rules!
I raise my expectations that you’ll continue returning here for more dental marketing perspective weekly throughout the year. Thanks for being part of this community…it’s appreciated!
Happy New Year!
4 Strategies to Recover from Communication Failure in Your Dental Marketing Content
I’m close to certain that the following line is from the classic movie, Cool Hand Luke. Right or wrong it reveals something about the nature of being accurate and understood in your dental marketing content.
The line: “What we have here is a failure to communicate.”
I could create the (assumed accurate) movie scenario that featured the line but…if I’m wrong that would be weird and completely send my opening story crashing to the ground. So, I’ll assume I know what I’m talking about and continue communicating something of value in this post.
That’s the thing about communication. Sometimes you enter into a conversation – one to one or with a crowd – and you think you know what you’re talking about.
Then someone steps up and says, “No, you’re not correct…!” Or more often, “I’m right…listen to me.”
Either way, communication in that moment has the potential to stall. And when that happens “…failure to communicate…” is in full-swing.
What to do?
Communication is tricky business today. There are more channels than ever.
In fact, I’m of the shared opinion that social media communication has had a groundbreaking impact on how we interact with our words. For example, what’s implied in a text message, a tweet, or Facebook post is often misunderstood.
The reason – the face-to-face element is missing. Perhaps this is fueling the current surge in live, interactive video content such as Periscope or Blab.
Your dental marketing conversations can have equal confusion. Or more than likely what’s implied misses the intended target as result of “failing” to communicate in a way that delivers your message in a compelling way.
4 Strategies to Recover from Communication Failure in Your Dental Marketing Content
1-Be urgent.
Your services, products, or resources meet a need. At least they should or you’re in for other challenges.
Realize that just because your patients or clients know they need what you produce is no guarantee that they will. It’s vital that you stay front of mind (more on how to do this in a moment).
You must give your audience a real, street-level, where-they-live reason to want (desire) your product or service today, now, right away!
If you provide dental services, a high percentage of your production relies on pain as a “reason” for your dental patient to schedule. Pain creates urgency, no doubt.
But pain is only one “reason.” It does drive production but only for those experiencing it and who choose to act on it.
- Inventory your services, products, or resources. What deeper needs do they meet? Who needs them, when, and why?
- Explore your recent reviews, consultations, contact form requests, etc. What themes do you see? Are there seasonal trends, etc., that prompted someone to request your services, schedule, etc.?
- Engage the wants and desires you hear/see. Create “urgency” through special offers, promotions, testimonials. Use “urgent” language to communicate them – “now,” “what happens if you wait…,” “too late,” “schedule/order/etc no later than…” – you get the picture.
2-Be useful.
No one has time for fluff or irrelevant content. Communicate something of value to your audience.
- Deliver value through every dental marketing channel you use. This includes your email promotions, your website content, your blog posts/articles, your newsletters, your special offers, etc.
- Reevaluate everything by asking – Is this useful? Does it deliver value?
- Be courageous enough to revise it or…trash it if it fails to communicate usefully.
3- Be unique.
This does not mean be overly creative for the mere sake of being creative. Placing a bizarre, new, flashy header on your website isn’t the essence of being unique.
Uniqueness is about solutions. Even further, being unique is offering something that’s different in some way than every other solution currently available.
- Think (because marketing requires much thinking) about your products, services, or resources as a solution more than a commodity. What problem(s) are solved when someone schedules, uses, etc.?
- Ask your audience what problems they’re facing. Use simple surveys for post-treatment, product orders, service usage, etc.
- Create and deliver content around the problem and how your service, product, or resource is THE unique solution.
Remember, your uniqueness is the result of asking the right questions to discover the most pressing problem then delivering the most unique, compelling solution.
4-Be ultra-specific.
Being specific isn’t enough. Why?
There’s too much marketing “noise” these days vying for your market’s attention. Being ultra-specific is rising above the “noise” by consistently delivering value through benefits.
Stop being vague at all costs!
- Eliminate fluff wording in your promotions. Words like, “we would like to…,” “we’re pleased to announce…,” “Introducing…” are only the beginning. Why pick on these commonly used phrases? They numb your reader because it sounds like every other promotion they read.
- Cut-to-the-chase. Tell your reader what you want them to do (specifically). Call them to action throughout your promotion and especially at the close.
- Compel with specific benefits. Avoid being feature heavy in your dental marketing content. “Latest,” “greatest,” “state-of-the-art,” are too vague. Go deeper and inform your reader about the specific benefit(s) they will receive.
“Failure to communicate…” is one failure you can’t afford to make in your dental marketing. Rise above the “noise” with clear, compelling solutions.