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In October 2010, I attended the American Dental Association’s annual conference in Orlando. Just a few months before, I started a Facebook page for our practice and was struggling to come up with new and interesting posts. So, while at the conference, I attended a presentation on Social Media to learn how to use Facebook to benefit the practice.
In October 2010, I attended the American Dental Association’s annual conference in Orlando. Just a few months before, I started a Facebook page for our practice and was struggling to come up with new and interesting posts. So, while at the conference, I attended a presentation on Social Media to learn how to use Facebook to benefit the practice.
I picked up a few good ideas and especially appreciated the Q&A time to find I wasn’t the only one struggling with this new marketing approach. However, I had one question that hadn’t been addressed, so I stood in line for the microphone and when it was my turn, I asked, “What if you’re in a group practice and the dentists won’t use Facebook? Do you have any recommendations for what the office manager should do?”
This turned our poor speaker just about inside out – he immediately recommended that I turn over the administration of our Facebook page to a dentist in the practice and that only a dentist should be responsible for what is written about the practice online. When I gave the speaker additional information about our group – the handful of specialists are all part-time independent contractors and of the GPs, the owner is 60+ and has never used a computer, the one younger male GP refused to join Facebook and the new hire GP is too busy with her new baby.
So, I tried again – if I (as the 12+ year experienced MBA office manager) don’t take responsibility for Facebook, then no one will – and we just sat for more than an hour listening to your presentation on how Facebook is the future of marketing! At this, the speaker simply restated his position – the office manager should not be posting on Facebook, only a dentist.
It just makes sense
Thankfully, I ignored the speaker’s advice and to this day I am responsible for managing Facebook in my practice. I believe the office manager is a very logical choice. This new era of social media marketing takes a mountain of time – and that’s one thing most dentists just don’t have. Why not give this task to your office manager – and then as the dentist, monitor her performance?
The guidelines I use for managing our Facebook presence include:
Develop a plan
The biggest challenge for most practices is answering the question, “What should we post on Facebook?” and my best approach to solve this problem is to create a calendar.
On one page, I write the date of each Monday – and then I write the name of a topic for each week that I will write/post about. At the bottom of this page, I keep a summary of all the procedures we offer in the practice, plus a list of general ideas such as staff anniversaries, holidays, insurance remaining letter, flexible spending plan, etc. On this page, I usually have room for about 3 months’ worth of topics. Every Monday morning I pull the calendar out, I open up Facebook and write about the topic planned for that week.
Because I’m planning in advance, I usually avoid writer’s block (what will I post today?) plus I can get a photo to match my topic before I need to post it. I also can ask my dentists and staff for ideas when I create my calendar. This turns my Facebook management into a system instead of a last minute panic.
Our number of Facebook fans is growing thanks to these efforts. I’m up to 187 fans and I read somewhere that once you hit 350 fans you should start to run Facebook ads because that is the magic number that makes them effective. I don’t know if that’s true, but Facebook did send me a coupon in the mail last month (snail mail, ironically) for $50 so I ran an ad for a few weeks – and then canceled it when we ran through the $50.
Thanks to DemandForce, I have an app on my practice’s Facebook page that allows people to request an appointment – and that’s tracked though my DemandForce dashboard. Unfortunately during the weeks my Facebook ad ran, I didn’t add any new patients through my Facebook page. So I definitely feel that I am still learning how to turn the time I spend on Facebook into a productive marketing approach.
It makes a difference
I do believe I am helping the practice by managing our Facebook presence. Although we can’t yet track success by measuring new patients, this is an important facet of ‘telling our story’ online so new patients can learn about what we have to offer and what our practice’s personality is, helping them feel welcome. I know the dentists in my group don’t have the time to do this work. But they read all the journals along with business magazines, and nearly all of these publications talk about social media marketing. So they know how important this tool is, and they appreciate that I am taking care of this new marketing effort.
I encourage all office managers to get involved with their practice’s Facebook presence. Perhaps you are blessed with a dentist who loves to spend time online and posts fabulous before/after pictures and interesting stories on Facebook daily – great! Then help him out by commenting and liking his posts. This helps the practice by increasing the views. Offer to track the fans for him so he can see the growth month after month. Document where new patients find out about you – and if you get someone who becomes a new patient after reading your Facebook page, then celebrate!
If you’re in a practice like mine, where the dentists just don’t have time – then here’s a great opportunity for you to step up and make a difference in your practice. This will be a great skill you can learn – and once you turn your Facebook marketing into a steady stream of new patients – your dentist will appreciate the work you are doing.
Jill Nesbitt is a dental consultant and practicing office manager for a multi-specialty private dental group. Nesbitt has managed the practice for 14 years, has state-level quality training, and coaches dental teams to improve the business-side of their practices.