THE PROMOTIONAL RIVER
I sometimes receive emails and calls from chiropractors requesting a quick fix for their lack of new patients. I often wonder if they ever got the idea of symptomatic care versus corrective and wellness care.
Effective marketing requires more than just a killer advertisement or long copy reactivation letter or a spinal screening. It has been said that good marketing doesn’t depend on one promotion to get 50 new patients, but rather 50 promotions each generating one new patient.
Generating a high volume of new patients in your chiropractic office requires multiple channels of communication. Consider how a river grows – through lots of tributaries. The Mississippi starts out like a creek, but then other creeks run into it and it grows and grows.
We call this the promotional mix – the blend of different approaches you use to communicate the benefits of your services.
On the following page, we have listed just a few important categories of effective promotions for your office. Of course, there are others, but we have found that these work well and can act as a good foundation.
FOUNDATIONS OF PROMOTION
Effective promotion starts with individual and team motivation. It then should be entwined with all of your basic routines each day, from the way the phone is answered to the consultation and patient examination.
Beyond this, you can schedule specific health topics months in advance and offer them as workshops or “Awareness Weeks” where you provide a free screening exam and info.
Occasional special promotions should be scheduled, such as “Kid’s Day”, and community services should also be scheduled, such as screenings, relationship building with external referrals sources, and workshops.
Your presence on the Internet has to be constantly added to.
These are some of the main categories of your promotions, though advertising and public relations events can also occur now and then.
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KEY PROMOTIONS
1. Motivation. You and your team’s desire to promote the benefits of your services create the energy to make your marketing work. Constantly nurture this. Start with WHY?
2. Basic Service and Chiropractic Care Procedures. This is your foundation. Marketing is embedded in the heart of all the basic duties you do every day. You should constantly review and try to improve on the marketing aspect of your procedures. Be ever more cheerful, more genuine, more caring, and giving of extra-ordinary care and service. Have “Present Time Consciousness.” It is helpful to have a checklist of these procedures to review. Little things can slip aside and go unnoticed and a checklist helps flush everything out for inspection. Work on a procedure or two every month so that you are constantly improving.
3. Special Promotions. These are promotional events that can be internal, external, or both. For example, flowers to women on Mother’s Day, a Kid’s Day, Community Appreciation Day, Anniversary Day, etc. They can be tied in with holidays, community days, parades, donation drives, etc. Most have an offer for a free service, but not all. These are IN ADDITION to the monthly education themes. Schedule these every other month or so. Promote these on the Internet and in newsletters.
4. Community Education Program (Monthly Health Themes) We have found that this program gradually builds momentum and if managed well, brings in more patient referrals, external new patients, and returning patients directly and indirectly. Here are some steps to make it successful.
a. Select monthly themes around a condition or healthful topic. Can include headaches, kid’s health, motherhood, nutrition, cooking class, exercise, golf clinic, etc.
b. Schedule a workshop time or “Awareness Week” (free screening exam last week of the month) at the end of each month.
c. Customize a poster. Samples on our Members site or make up your own.
d. Do a YouTube video on the subject the month before. Post on Facebook, web site, YouTube channel and embed in your email
e. Send out an email notice promoting the event, with a link to the video Health Tip, testimonial, etc.
f. Send a hard copy newsletter with testimonials mailed to some of your patient files now and then (3 months) and all files every 6 months.
g. Posters distributed locally and as statement stuffers.
h. Press releases can be sent to local papers/electronic calendars.
i. Ads are an option.
5. Community Services. These are scheduled each month and include screenings, workshops and external referrals source development (MDs, businesses, DDS, auto body shops, etc.)
6. Keep The Conversation Going: Internet And Newsletter. Update your Internet presence and post new info regularly. Set a goal of how many hours it gets worked on each month, eg. 1 hr a week. You could also use a checklist (we have one on our PM&A Members site). This would include Facebook postings, YouTube, directory sites (Yelp, Healthgrades.com. etc.), and search engines (Google, Bing, etc.). And, of course, your website/blog. Add patient testimonials, photos, and health tips. Keep posting – but keep most of the info local and “newsy,” just short of gossipy. Also, send out electronic and hard copy newsletters with similar newsy content and notices for upcoming promotions, talks.
7. Public Relations and Advertising. Radio ads and print ads promoting specials events can be helpful now and then. Public relations such as press releases and donation drives can add long term good will and should be done a few times a year
3 Month Marketing Planner [Link]
This is excellent! I shudder when DCs tell me they don’t market. Sure, nothing beats referrals, but just think of the hundreds if not thousands of people in their community that they are not reaching.
I always kept a busy marketing calendar as you taught me – and it really works!
Thanks Dr. Potisk!