Archive for October, 2009
Aesthetic Physicians Critical Marketing Questions and Catherine’s Answers
Posted by: | CommentsI recently held a webinar and had an excellent question and answer period at the end. Here are some of my favorite and, I think, most pertinent questions as well as my answers. These are all very important questions to ask when you are thinking about marketing your practice.
- 1) Does my practice NEED a designated marketing person – how much money should I be spending?
I can tell you the really successful aesthetic practices don’t leave marketing to chance.
They realize it’s ongoing so they have people accountable for seeing to it that promotional projects get done consistently and on time.
If you have a staff person who loved planning her wedding or her sister’s baby shower, start with her. Give her 5-8 hours per week of blocked time to concentrate on your promotional efforts. If you absolutely don’t have the staff or the time, outsource it to someone else who will see to it the marketing gets done.
Regarding how much you should spend, a general rule seems to be 3-5% for a mature practice and more for a growing practice; however, those numbers should increase a bit during tough economic times because your patients need more guidance (and reasons) to see you.
- 2) What is a reasonable budget for effective use of the web/website? How to measure ROI?
I have seen numbers all over the board for website design from some of you spending $500 you paid to your nephew who knows computers to $25K for a really neat website with flash.
But website design is only one part of it.
You need to make it friendly so your prospective patients who visit but it also needs to be friendly to search engine spiders so you are found on the internet and that takes sophisticated back-end coding.
So, in answer to your question, here’s what I would say: work with a reputable vendor who understands the aesthetic industry so you are not paying overtime to get them up to speed.
They will most likely charge you $2,500-$5,000 to design your website to maximize it and
An additional $1,500-$5,000 per month to maintain it and keep it fresh for the search engines.
They will also provide you with very specific reports about traffic to your website and that will help you understand your ROI.
- 3) At what point should I lower my prices? Does cost become the main obstacle in this economy?
There’s a saying that says, “if they come for price, they will leave for price” so I would be careful starting a new aesthetic patient relationship with discounts – it can set up the wrong tone for the rest of your relationship.
And, one of the big reasons patients are shopping around for price is because they have nothing else to compare it to so I would rather see you use my internal marketing strategies to build those on-going relationships with your current patients who trust you and will continue to stay loyal to you.
Now with that said, here’s some reality. Everyone likes a good deal so give your favorite patients a little something extra. Give them added-value rather than discounts. For example, give them a little extra Botox on their next treatment. Throw in a little mole removal or give them a free product on the house.
It will help solidify your relationship and their loyalty.
But, if you do want to discount, do it strategically with perceived value. And do it for a reason- for example, rather than offer them $50 Off, give them a $50 gift card for their birthday that’s good towards any of your MI procedures. They will perceive that as a gift of free money and that’s a good thing.
- 4) How do I optimize my website on a budget?
For starters, don’t pay extra for flash. It’s outdated, annoying, slow and expensive
But do use videos of you, your practice, your staff and your patients. And, the more photos, the better. It adds the proof your prospective patients are looking for.
And the home page should be all about the patient and the benefits they will receive from you.
And, then you need fresh content on a regular basis because content is king on the internet.
Write 300-500 word articles on topics your patients would be interested in, and upload them continually to keep your website updated and relevant.
If you don’t have the time or the interest, you can hire ghost-writers on the internet at reasonable rates. You can also hire videographers for $20-50/hour.
- 5) How do I compete with non-plastic surgeons for facial non-invasive and smart lipo spas?
If you build relationships with your current patients, you shouldn’t have to compete aggressively with these others.
Here’s an analogy:
You know when you’re dating someone and you have all of their attention for about one year and then after that, they start taking you for granted, picking their friends over you and not treating you like you were special?
Doesn’t that open the door for someone else to swoop in?
Well, it’s the same way with your patients. Don’t give them a reason to wander off to your competitors.
So, in case you didn’t like that answer, here’s another one:
Be sure your patients know just how skilled you are. Use your association, hospital and medical society logos in your communications. And, be sure your patients know you are board certified and exactly what that means in terms of education and training that went into it since most lay people may have heard of the term but are not real sure what it means.
I promise aesthetic patients are interested in price but most are just as interested in safety and reassurance they will get consistent results.
The Importance of Branding Your Aesthetic Practice
Posted by: | CommentsIs your aesthetic practice unique and special? Everyone believes that we are members of a truly unique practice or organization but how do we convey that to our existing patients and to potential new patients? Branding is an opportunity to create a name, a term, a symbol, or design that identifies and defines your cosmetic practice and will differentiate your practice for other practices. This article will discuss the concept of branding, how to create a brand for your practice and why a brand will make your practice appear to be the only practice that patients will want to use to solve their cosmetic problem.
What Does Your Personal Brand Say About You?
Have you thought of yourself as the best in your field in your community? Or the best surgeon for specific cosmetic procedures, such as liposuction or blepharoplasty? Or even the best cosmetic urologist in your hometown? Do your patients see you as the superstar and do they know about your specific areas of expertise? If not, you need to build a more cohesive image using branding. Branding is the art of attracting your preferred patients using very specific messaging that will get their attention.
What is Branding?
The American Marketing Association (AMA) defines a brand as a “name, term, sign, symbol or design, or a combination of them intended to identify the goods and services of one seller or group of sellers and to differentiate them from those of other sellers.
Branding is actually more than that. It’s everything you do to attract and maintain quality aesthetic patients. Branding is not sales. Branding is emotionally attracting the type of aesthetic patient you want in your practice who chooses you over your competition. Your personal brand is who you are, what you do, and your leading attribute in the eyes of your preferred target market.
Branding: Hype or Sales?
Branding is more critical than marketing or sales. Branding is influencing and changing the way people think. Branding appeals to desire and touches emotions. The goal is to emotionally predispose potential patients into entering into a relationship with you because they believe you are the best choice – for them.
With more information at their fingertips, today’s aesthetic consumers are too sophisticated and skeptical to be sold. They want to arrive at their own decision on their own terms. Branding is helping them get there. Branding “pre-sells” your expertise, or you, before the patients even meet you. These potential patients call to make an appointment because of the aura or the impression that you have created that you are, indeed, the best at what you do. They also believe they will receive outstanding care from you and your staff.
Branding offers you an opportunity to sculpt your practice exactly as you would like. Your brand can attract only cash-paying patients, patients of a certain demographic such as age or location, exactly the procedures or problems that you would like to treat and the problems or conditions where you truly are the expert, and finally, the patients that provide you with the greatest satisfaction of providing them your medical care and expertise.
Just as successful practices have a mission statement that serves as motivation to their staff and a guarantee to their patients, a brand is your opportunity to declare your promise to your patients about the outstanding service that you will provide them.
For more information on my services and to sing up for free videos, go to Cosmetic Image Marketing
Catherine Maley of Cosmetic Image Marketing was an invited speaker at AAFPRS’s Annual Fall Meeting help in San Diego, October 1-4. The meeting was attended by more than 600 aesthetic physicians from a variety of specialties and mainly facial plastic surgeons and plastic surgeons.
Having worked with Aesthetic Practices for over a decade, Catherine outlined for the physicians in attendance the typical mistakes they make when promoting their aesthetic services:
- Not Knowing Who’s Really on Their Team
- Ignoring Their Patients
- Assuming Their Patients Will Refer
- Working IN Their Practice Rather Than ON Their Practice
- No Plan in Place
Catherine Maley, President of Cosmetic Image Marketing was quoted as saying, “If aesthetic physicians would set up automatic, predictable processes, a lot less money would fall through the cracks. It’s the little things they are missing that would add up to thousands of extra revenue dollars in terms of increased conversions, referrals and patient value.”
About Catherine Maley, MBA: Author of the ASPS endorsed book, Your Aesthetic Practice: What Your Patients Are Saying , a noted speaker, and was recently interviewed by the New York Times.
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For more Free tips and videos, visit www.CosmeticImageMarketing.com . Catherine Maley, MBA is Author of Your Aesthetic Practice/What Your Patients Are Saying and her firm offers everything you need to succeed in aesthetic medicine. You can call Catherine at (877) 339-8833 or email her at info@CosmeticImageMarketing.com. For more on this topic, see a separate post here.




