Marketing for dentists is often a sticking point for many dental practices. An innovative marketing platform can help attract new customers, encourage repeat purchases, and boost overall profit and growth for dental practices.
But to truly evolve your dental practice, all marketing activity must be patient focused. After all, the ultimate goal is to help your patients; to grow your practice whilst staying true to their wants and needs.
So we have created a guide to help dentists promote new products and treatments, with a responsible and clinical approach…
Before you start promoting new products and selling services to patients, it’s essential that you lay the groundwork. Without a strong platform to begin with, your marketing efforts are bound to fall short.
To start, ensure you have the following:
Once you’ve established the initial platform, you should be ready to successfully market new products to patients.
Over the last few years, there has been a consumer-driven phenomenon to achieve the perfect smile. And it’s no surprise…
But how can you approach your patients regarding their smile, and help them achieve their goals?
Here we look at three ways you can market new products to patients and help deliver the smile makeover they’ve always wanted.
In-practice marketing can be a really effective and valuable technique to promote new services without the demand for heavy investment. And it is really simple to implement…
The key is to highlight the benefits of the product, showcase the results and encourage enquiries.
Many dental practices believe external marketing is just about attracting more patients. But it can also be used to promote new or popular services to a targeted audience.
A great place to start is with your local press. Whether it’s advertising or public relations, it’s a simple way to build trust and awareness in your community and position your practice as dental experts.
Offer human interest stories and comments on new trends - the content that is going to be of real interest to potential patients.
Once you’ve established your business as the dental specialist in the area, you could also create ties with local lifestyle brands.
The perfect smile is becoming increasingly important for more and more adults, so targeting businesses that exude similar values - like boutiques, beauty salons, spas and gyms - will help you reach a valuable audience with news and offers on your latests treatments.
Another great example of external marketing is paid advertising. Making sure you feature inside the right publications and target the right audience all comes down to your understanding of your customer base - so be sure to speak to your patients and establish who you are trying to reach.
Just remember to use engaging imagery, a punchy message and a captivating story to grab the attention of your target audience.
Most practices now have established social media accounts over a range of social media channels. Whether sharing before and after results, practice information, customer testimonials or sharing new products and treatments, social media is a valuable tool for many dental practices. There are lots of social media channels that dental practices can use, our full guide on instagram marketing for dentists explains how to use social media to get the best results.
Again, sharing images, videos and stories that your patients will be interested in, will help increase engagement and build relationships with patients.
Patients want to know that they can trust you. They need to know that you are going to properly care for them and their teeth. And typically, this means research on your website.
If your website doesn't do the job it needs, if it’s vague, confusing or misleading this will prevent users from returning which means you’re risking missing out on new business.Here are 5 essential components of a successful dental practice website that we think you need to consider.
You should approach your dental practice as a brand, rather than just another dentist surgery.
From the moment your patient visits your website or walks through the practice doors, to meeting the dentist and undergoing the treatment, your brand should appear consistently throughout.
This means an attractive logo is not enough. Instead, carry your brand through each of your marketing materials and use it across all of the products and treatments you offer too (where possible).
For example, if your patient has to take a product home, weave your branding into the product packaging. After all, there’s nothing more powerful than word of mouth advertising, and seeing other patients leave your practice with branded bags will help spark enquiries.
Although you may not think dentistry and marketing go hand in hand - they do, and should. And as long as it is focused on improving the patient experience and their end results, you should be looking to be as creative as possible to differentiate yourself from the surgery down the road.