
Tips for Your Patient Newsletter
Your healthcare practice is built on relationships, sustained through service and communication. Without ongoing patient engagement—active or inactive—your practice may struggle. A newsletter is a powerful, affordable way to maintain these connections, extending your office’s warmth, excellent care, and positive outcomes to patients’ homes.
A well-crafted newsletter keeps the doctor-patient dialogue alive, portraying your office as a friendly, health-focused space. It drives retention, encourages referrals, and serves as a low-cost marketing tool. While often overlooked or outsourced to generic pamphlet companies, a newsletter’s impact lies in its authenticity and simplicity.
Crafting a great newsletter requires some skill, but the key is to just do it! Here are practical tips to make it effective:
- Keep it concise: Aim for under 600 words. Include a brief doctor’s note, a health tip, a simple recipe, and a promotion.
- Make it personal: Write as if chatting with a patient during a visit. Share a story, case success, or health advice like recommending a lumbar cushion. Have a staff member transcribe your thoughts, then edit for clarity.
- Stay informal: Think of it as a casual check-in, like catching up with a friend or neighbor. Share what’s happening at the office in a warm, relatable tone.
- Show genuine interest: Highlight your passion for chiropractic care through patient success stories or testimonials. Include family and friends in your outreach to broaden the connection.
- Be authentic: Avoid generic or overly polished content. Patients value real, heartfelt communication over artificial or spammy material.
- Frequency: Send monthly, though more often is fine if manageable.
- Assign a coordinator: Delegate newsletter management to a staff member to ensure consistency.
Newsletter Checklist:
- Doctor’s Letter: A friendly note with a photo, written to one patient, tying into a case, event, or health tip.
- Office News: Share updates like new equipment, staff achievements, or recent seminars.
- Upcoming Events: Promote events like Patient Appreciation Day or a community 5K to show your office is vibrant.
- Patient Testimonial: Include a written or video success story.
- Recipe: Share a healthy, relatable recipe with a personal touch, like a family favorite.
- Health Tip (Optional): Offer a simple, relevant health suggestion.
- Use an Email Service: Avoid sending from personal email clients for professionalism.
Keep communicating with your patients to foster a thriving practice. Stay goal-driven!
Ed