People don't buy on facts or information. You see it
every day in dental practices everywhere. The dentist will
explain a treatment plan to a patient, telling her what percentage
of a certain type of restoration typically fails or the
chances she'll get paresthesia or what her insurance will
cover, producing nothing more than a blank stare or a
remark like, "Well, I'll think about it and I'll call you."
But when someone presents the treatment plan with
enthusiasm, excitement and emotion, people buy into it.
I learned this the hard way 25 years ago when I
would present a treatment plan to patients and maybe
half of them would schedule treatment. I asked my assistant,
Jan - who is high energy, on top of her game and
radiates enthusiasm - to review and answer questions
about diagnosed treatments with our patients to be sure
they understood everything. When she started talking to
our patients about treatment, people just got excited!
Then when it came time to schedule treatment, our
Treatment Coordinator, Dawn, would continue the positive,
uplifting discussion. Instead of merely getting a necessary
filling done, Dawn would even talk them into getting
their teeth cleaned first, then she would sell them into
whitening their teeth because then we could do a tooth-colored
filling so everything would match properly. Then she
would say, "Another way you could make those teeth
brighter is to contrast your teeth with darker
lipstick. Oh my goodness, you're going to
have a million-dollar smile and it's only
going to cost you a few hundred dollars!"
Any questions patients had about
financing, Dawn would answer and
provide great payment options such as
CareCredit. The way Jan and Dawn
reviewed and presented these treatment
plans really spoke to our patients' needs
and desires. Patients got excited about it
because Jan and Dawn were excited
about it and because of this
patients would agree to
come in for treatment.
There's a funny
cartoon that depicts
evolution
and the meaning of life (see page 18), where all of the animals
leading up to the evolved human have three things
on their mind: eat, survive, reproduce. Then when you get
to the human, he's wondering what it's all about. Well, if
you talk to any evolutionary biologist, it's still all about
eating, surviving and reproducing! When Jan and Dawn
review treatment plans, they enthusiastically appeal to our
patients' base needs: eating, surviving and reproducing.
You can't eat very well without teeth; you need to eat to
survive, of course; and if you want to reproduce, you want
to look as attractive as possible. Functional, aesthetically
pleasing teeth hits on all three of those needs. I can present
all of the facts about a case to a patient, but the difference
in case acceptance is because Jan and Dawn elicit a
deeper response from the patient, which boosts their
dopamine and serotonin levels because Jan and Dawn
excitedly appeal to the patient's base needs.
The way you present an effective message applies to
social media, too. I really got into Facebook about three
years ago. In fact the main reason I got into it was because
I read an article about Facebook reaching 400 million
users. It was exploding and I wanted to see what it was
all about. Since then I've branched out onto Twitter,
Google+ and Pinterest. I've really enjoyed learning about
and measuring this marketing medium, and it's interesting
to see the correlation between an effectively presented
treatment plan and an effectively marketed message.
I see so many Facebook pages with posts that read,
"Did you know that one in three people have this disease
or that disease?" It's all facts, figures and information.
There's never any excitement. Nobody clicks "Like" or
shares those posts because they're just white noise. There's
no reason to interact with a message like that.
Mothers make a major percent of all health-care
appointments. Of all of the users on Facebook, more than
60 percent are women (according to a July 2012 article
from the Huffington Post); but Pinterest is truly the social
media site for women; in fact I've read that of the 70 million
users on Pinterest, 80 percent of them are female. I
have a Pinterest account and I find it amazing that almost
all of the 1,500+ people who follow me on Pinterest are
women. When women post on Pinterest and Facebook I
see a lot of meal plans, diets, healthy snacks, etc. But it's the base need of reproduction that is the most meaningful part
of life, and that's why a lot of women who have children
post pictures of them on social media. People draw the
most purpose and passion from reproduction - that's why
three out of four married couples have babies. Women are
hard wired with maternal instincts, and when you start
posting anything about babies and children on social
media - like when you should bring your baby in for his
or her first check up, or the germs that live on your baby's
toothbrush - it gets viewed, commented on and shared. I
mean it just comes alive.
One of the biggest posts we had on my practice's
Facebook page (www.facebook.com/todaysdental) was
when one of our staff members had a new baby. It's one
thing to post about the new laser or CAD/CAM system
that you just got in your practice, but if you want more
excitement or shares of what you're posting on Facebook,
post a photo of your newborn granddaughter. Post about
the people who work at your practice. Post about the
community outreach function everyone participated in
over the weekend. That is the kind of stuff people will
click the "Like" button for, comment on or even share.
The average dental practice Facebook page has about 300
followers, and when you post something to Facebook,
those followers have 300 followers of their own. If they all
share what you're posting, you have the potential of reaching
up to 90,000 people - it's huge!
The only way your social media efforts are going to get
you new business is when your existing patients see what
you are posting, make an emotional connection and share
it with all of the people who follow them. There are three
things you can do on Facebook: you can like something,
you can comment about it, and you can share it. Sharing
something is the big deal. You want people to share your
Facebook posts, because all of their friends and followers
will see it on their timeline. Facebook users almost never
share high-quality dental information or facts about disease,
and they certainly don't interact with it. What they
share are the things that make them secrete dopamine and
serotonin. And for the majority of people who make dental
appointments - women - the number-one thing they
share is anything that has to do with babies and children.
My practice always increases its Facebook "Likes" when we
make our posts more personal.
Here's something else you should consider in regard
to social media: When you share information and it ends
with a period or an exclamation mark, the person viewing
it sits there, takes it in and moves onto the next post.
They don't do anything with it. But when you end your
post with a question mark, you are engaging with them.
So if you post something and end it with a question,
they're more inclined to answer, and that's how you
engage people on social media. That's how you get people
on Twitter to answer you back. That's how you get
people on Google+ to actually post back. Instead of making
a statement or a fact about you or your dental office
or your dental technology, engage with them. Ask them
a question. If you ask your fans a question, they will
answer you. When they answer you, all of their followers
will see it. This is how you can judge how successful your
social media campaign is going. There are a lot of companies
that do social media for dental practices, and dentists
will often show me how great they think their
Facebook page is. What I usually see is a page with a
plethora of information, with zero likes, zero comments
and not a single share. The dentist thinks her Facebook page is good because her page is filled with a bunch of
great scientific dental information that could really educate
all of her patients. But there's no interaction whatsoever.
The dentist might as well be putting all of her
practice's marketing efforts into direct mail - a one-way
conduit of information.
Real social media is about interacting with your fans
and followers - so do it the right way! Remember the cartoon
on the meaning of life: eat, survive and especially
reproduce. Women have maternal instincts and are a lot
more likely to communicate about their children than
men. They are far more likely to show up to a parentteacher
conference, or a PTA meeting, or schedule their
kids for a recall than dad. So engage with them. Post
fewer facts. Get personal! Show them your babies. Tell
them what you're doing for their babies. Ask them what
they are doing for their babies. Get focused on children.
Aim your marketing around babies and children, share
the personal side of your practice, and you will absolutely
crush the meaning of life and get more new patients.
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