How important is it to have an appealing Web site?
According to comScore, a digital analytics company,
more than 139.1 million consumers utilize the
Internet to seek health-care information from health-care sites
on a monthly basis. Remember, even prospective patients who
hear about you from family or friends are still likely to check out
your practice Web site before making the decision to book an
appointment. So, in this day and age, when most, if not all, of
your competitors have a Web site, how does your practice stand
out? Your prospective patients are online. Once they find your
Web site, what will make them choose you?
Your Web site is your best opportunity – outside of
a face-to-face discussion with a patient – to communicate
what you and your staff value, and what
makes your practice unique. Building a Web
site that is primarily focused on patient
needs, is user-friendly and is search
engine-optimized can be challenging.
It starts by asking yourself
the following: “What will
prospective patients look
for when they visit my site,
and what elements could potentially turn them away?” To help
answer that question, here are the top 10 mistakes to avoid when
building a dental Web site.
1. Irrelevant Content
What makes new patients browse your Web site in the first
place? They visit to learn about the treatments you offer, as well
as learn more about you as a doctor and your practice, not to
learn about your hobbies or things that are unrelated to the
dental industry. Dental health is a great topic to discuss, but remember not to get carried away with general health topics as
that might cause people to tune out.
Think about it this way: You have less than 90 seconds to
engage prospective patients and persuade them to further
explore your site. Having more than 25 pages on your Web site
can be overwhelming for prospective patients.
The content on your Web site should emphasize how much
you and your staff care about your patients and their families’
well-being. A positive attitude such as, “I love my patients!” or
“We love our community!” can go a long way in building trust
with patients. Having text that accentuates your warm, caring
feelings toward patients or listing your continuing education credentials
and how they benefit the patient in a compelling manner
are all-powerful. Mobile Web sites with condensed versions
of this content also present a short and sweet version of this
important content. Lastly, reinforcing how much you love your
job as a dental professional is part of conveying how much your
practice cares about patient well being and the premium your
staff place on high-quality care and a positive patient experience.
The pages you should have on your Web site include “meet
the doctor” and “meet the staff ” pages, information on what to
expect during a patient’s first visit, before and after photos, frequently
asked questions, financial information and directions to
your office.
2. Impersonal Doctor and Team Member Bios
Patients love getting to know their doctor, and spend a lot of
time finding out “who you are.” When getting ready to compile
photos and bios for your staff, think about someone who has
never stepped foot in your office, or perhaps feels nervous about
visiting a dental professional. Most patients are typically not
eager to visit a health-care practitioner. Your bio gives you a
chance to show them, not just tell them. A photograph of you
with a family member, child or pet can reinforce your commitment
to treating not just the patient, but the patient’s entire
family as well. Instead of merely listing credentials and using
medical terminology, tell patients in easy-to-understand terms
what your credentials, experience and continuing education
means for them and their family.
Doctors also love individual photos because they are easy to
update (they don’t require re-taking group photos) and
are more personal than group photos; just add a new
photo or swap one out. Simple.
3. Clinical Photos and Images
In other words, less photos of a
hygienist reaching into a patient’s
mouth… Tools, scrubs, blood or
masks might scare off someone who
is already apprehensive about visiting
a dentist. When choosing photos
for your bio, it’s important to
keep it personal, but not too personal.
Since patients will be spending
one-on-one time with your staff,
they like to see who they will be
working with – they want to “premeet”
you and your team before
booking their initial visit.
Including happy, cheery photos
of confident people throughout the site,
and especially on the home page, underscores
the office’s warmth and approachability
while helping your patients relate to you. In fact,
featuring actual patients or photos that feature people
who look like your patients, gives a personal, unique
touch. Photos of actual patients not only show off your
work, but also show a strong relationship between you, your
patients and the community. Warmth always wins!
4. Buried Contact Information
Imagine visiting a Web site and being unable to find the
phone number or other contact information. Remember, the
name of the game is to get patients to call you. Make sure your
office’s contact information is readily available for new patients
to be able to book that first appointment. Put it this way: If
you’re visiting a Web site for the first time and are interested in
its products or services, you’d probably want a phone number
prominently displayed on the homepage and throughout the
site, right? Research shows patients are more likely to call rather
than e-mail to schedule their first appointment or consultation,
and they’re more likely to do so if they find the information
they’re looking for on your Web site. And what’s more helpful
and convenient than having the number available to them displayed
at every click? Another option is a mobile Web site with
a phone number and map to your office readily available.
5. Lack of a Call to Action
Once a prospective patient reaches your Web site, it’s up to
you to compel them to learn more about your office and pick up
the phone to schedule an appointment. Adding a “free consult”
or “schedule your regular checkup” button on your homepage or
one that is prominently displayed within your Web site compels
patients to make that first move. If your office targets the working
demographic or a particular area, a button that reads “We’re
in the heart of Manhattan!” might also be a good idea.
Again, the point of your Web site, besides your virtual introduction
to a potential patient, is new patient acquisition. It’s all
about the patient. Avoid sounding “salesy” or gimmicky with text
such as “Purchase one tooth whitening, get the second free!”
6. Splash Pages and Animated Introductions
Splash pages, or the pages the user sees before they actually
visit your Web site, are typically built in flash (an outdated animation
platform) and offer some kind of introductory animation.
Not only are splash pages outdated, they are also terrible
for your Web site’s search engine optimization (SEO). Search
engines such as Google, Bing and Yahoo look at the content on
the homepage to determine what the site has to offer. If your
page is designed entirely in flash or includes other animated
introductions, chances are search engines will not be able to spider,
or crawl, any text on it.
The bigger problem, however, with splash pages, sometimes
called landing pages – or any kind of animated introduction is distraction. In this day and age, people are looking to save as
much time as possible. Remember, most visitors to your site
want to be informed, not entertained; they are looking to solve
a problem like crooked teeth or schedule an appointment to
relieve tooth pain. Any animation on your site is a major barrier
to getting people to pick up the phone and call. A simple distraction
like a splash page can turn a potential patient into a
mere passerby.
7. Music
Again: distractions, distractions, distractions. Prospective
patients might want to visit your site privately, without anyone
else being within earshot of your Web site's music, such as
at work or at a local Starbucks. So, unless you sell music, it’s best
to stay clear of music on auto play. If music, which makes your
Web site look dated, absolutely must be present, give viewers the
option to opt-in. In other words, give visitors the option to turn
the music on manually. But, by default, keep the music off.
8. Thematic Web sites
Patients visit your Web site to learn more about dentistry,
so your marine- or golf-themed Web site might not necessarily
appeal to a mom in search of a dentist for her pre-teen
daughter. No matter what, all content must be patient-focused
and appealing to women. After all, marketing research tells us
that women make the majority of health-care decisions in
their households.
What you should be focusing on are teeth, not your hobbies.
Besides being confusing and looking out of place, your themed
Web site might also inadvertently cause a potential patient to
scratch their heads and ask, “Am I paying for his ski trips?”
9. Broken Pages and Bad Links
There’s no way for patients to imagine what you might have
said about a service you offer or a current promotion. Broken
links, or dead links, provide a bad experience for anyone visiting
your site. Search engines tend to send visitors to sites they know
are maintained and trustworthy before sending them to a site
that hasn't been maintained in months.
Bad links or pages that are labeled “under construction” or
“coming soon” not only prevent potential patients from accessing
pages on your Web site, they might also annoy them to the
point of moving on to a competitor’s site. Missing and broken
links also send a bad message to prospective patients: If you can’t
take good care of your Web site, why should people believe you
can take good care of their teeth?
10. Slow-loading Web Pages
Because Google wants to provide a positive experience for its
users, the search engine will try to send users to Web sites that
load quickly. Currently it’s a moderate ranking factor, but
Google and Bing have both declared that this will be a metric
they will be placing more focus on with each update.
Again, anyone who is visiting your site will want to find what
they’re looking for pretty quickly. Avoid any distracting elements,
such as pop-ups, at all costs. In fact, avoid pop-unders as well.
These days, popular browsers like Firefox block pop-ups by
default, but when in doubt, remember: pop-ups are dead. Patient appealing
elements include having a clean, modern design with
alluring graphics, clear and consistent navigation, as well as easy to-find contact information.
Conclusion
Avoiding these 10 mistakes will help you design a successful
Web site – one that helps you better connect with current
patients, reach new patients and stay relevant on search engines.
It is essential, however, that you continue to monitor and maintain
your Web site to better connect with patients. In fact, by
steering clear of the aforementioned mistakes, your Web site
might even act as its own independent team member.
Sesame Communications recently launched Website
Evaluator, a free online tool designed to help dentists, in a
matter of minutes, determine the overall effectiveness of their
website. This tool provides practices with general guidance and
a customized report showing their website score, along with
specific recommendations for improvement.
Visit: sesamecommunications.com/web_eval
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