by Howard Farran, DDS, MBA, Publisher, Dentaltown Magazine
Everyone’s buzzing about online reviews as if they’re something new and different.
The fact is, we’ve always had reviews. They just haven’t always been posted online for
everyone to see. Online reviews are a digital version of an analog voice, and everyone
reacts to them differently.
Here are some facts about online reviews:
- 92 percent of people have confidence in online reviews (Wall Street Journal,
January 2009).
- 70 percent of people consult reviews or ratings before purchasing (Businessweek,
October 2008).
- 61 percent of reviewers are motivated to write reviews to give recognition to a company,
versus only 25 percent who write them to punish a business (Nielsen 2011).
- Women are more likely than men to write online reviews (Nielsen 2011).
Humans don’t like transparency, but when humans aren’t transparent, bad things
happen. I raised four boys. Whenever they all went into one of the bedrooms and shut
the door, I knew something bad was going to happen. It was a red flag that definitely
made me go check out what was going on.
Online reviews facilitate transparency. They’re a digital platform for checks and balances,
and reviews can be your best ally if you handle them right.
Sometimes patients will make a comment about how great their experience in our office
has been. Ask patients who you know are happy to write an online review for your practice!
Most of the time, they love to be asked. Don’t show them how to do it from your office computer.
Google is watching and if they see your reviews coming from your IP address, it might
affect your SEO optimization. The patients can, however, post a review from their cell phones.
There are hundreds of review sites out there—Yelp,
HealthGrades, Yahoo—but don’t waste your time on
these; Google drives the whole industry. Google and
YouTube (which is owned by Google) are the two
most-used search engines. If you Google a dentist and
they have a website of any kind, he or she will come up
on Google’s search results. This means the doc’s reviews
also come up (Fig. 2).
In my practice, we give out “Review us
on Google” cards (Fig. 1). These cards are
included with new patient gifts, in recall
goodie bags and are also available in all the
operatories. The card not only reminds
patients to write a review after they leave the
office but it also guides them through the
process of writing one.
Occasionally patients might have a bad
experience and surprise you with a nasty
online review. Say this happens. You’ve made a woman so mad that she’s gone home and registered on Google+ (which she
might have had to read instructions or watch a YouTube video to learn to set up) and
she’s gone through the process of writing several paragraphs about her practice experience.
This probably took her the better part of an hour start to finish.
For many dentists, their first response is to hire a lawyer or try to get Google to take
down the review. But you should be going the opposite way! This is an awesome opportunity.
First of all, how many patients who don’t come back take the time to write a letter
telling you what you can do better? Not too many!
Second of all, can you imagine if this woman, with the amount of energy and determination
she has, was rallying for your practice instead of working against it? If you can
rectify her bad experience, she’s a walking marketing campaign for your practice.
The best way to deal with a bad online review, whether it’s a minor complaint or an
absolute disaster, is to call the patient. There are often posters on Dentaltown who will
ask what to do about bad reviews. The initial answer seems to always be to show it to
your malpractice carrier. Really?
This patient is already in confrontation mode. Why isn’t your first response to call
the patient? Say: “Hey Sally. You are mad. Can you come down to the office and we can
go to lunch and talk about it?” Most the time, the bad reviewer just wants to be heard.
And by doing whatever you can to fix the situation, you’re not only addressing that
patient’s complaint but also creating good rapport for your practice overall.
In addition to online reviews, I’ve found exit interviews to be very effective for getting
feedback. Call all the people who haven’t been in to the office in 24 months. See why. It’s
important to keep track of why patients leave. Do you really think they all died or moved?
Who are you kidding? You’ll find some of them have moved, some of them changed because
of insurance policies or better scheduling. But what if you find out that a substantial number
of patients decided not to return because they hate one of your hygienists? What if you
find out a front office person is unwelcoming?
Most of your new patients are just old
patients from the dentist across the street,
which means you need to ask them why
they left their old dentist. When a new
patient comes in to the office, the person
fills out a health history. Why don’t you
include a question about why they left
their last dental office?
Sometimes you’ll get answers like:
They didn’t take my insurance or they
didn’t provide nitrous oxide as an option
or they weren’t open on evenings or
Saturdays. You might learn their previous
dentist was unapproachable or
talked down to patients or created a culture
of “don’t ask questions.”
How do you get feedback in your
office? Sign on to Dentaltown.com and
visit the Howard Speaks article for this
issue. I’d love to hear about what you do
to receive and track feedback.
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