Category Archive: Patient Education

April Newsletter, REVENEZ Praised as “Moving Art” That Educates

Friday, June 4th, 2010

How do you get patients in your waiting room to notice patient education that also gently markets your services? Well-known Eugene, Oregon plastic surgeon Dr. Mark Jewell feels that his new REVENEZ [REV-eh-nay] looping video does just that for his patients while they wait. “When you visit my office, you will see Candace Crowe Design’s REVENEZ product running on large screen video displays in the reception, medispa, and consulting areas… It provides lovely visual imagery that becomes very enthralling, [in fact] patients frequently comment, ‘Could I finish watching it before we talk about me?’”

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Wishing you a week full of profitable work, joy, and laughter,
Candace Crowe
President, Creative Director

Candace Crowe Design
Educating Patients. Marketing You.

www.CandaceCrowe.com
Copyright © 2010 | Candace Crowe Design | All Rights Reserved

This is the last of my four part series…

Monday, August 31st, 2009

This is the last of my four part series titled “SPONTANEOUS EFFORTS DON’T PRODUCE CONSISTENT RESULTS”.

Did you know? MARKETING IS RELATIONSHIP BUILDING.

Marketing is fundamentally a conversation between your patients/potential patients and your practice. All marketing, whether it is internal or external, needs to have the heart of great customer service and guide, educate, and encourage your patients. External marketing tells your target audience you have a service that can help them reach their goals. Internal marketing’s goal is to create and retain loyal patients who will recommend you.

Your website is a great example of external marketing. At its basic level, it can help new patients find you – but it can be much more than that. A great, patient-focused website will project an image that inspires confidence in your services.

Loyalty programs, keeping in touch with consults and patients through email, personal notes, phone calls, seminars, great patient education, a video loop that features all of your services for your waiting area, are all great examples of internal marketing. Internal marketing generally costs less and produces a higher return.

Focus on creating an integrated strategy, using both internal and external marketing to promote your practice to patients and prospects. Keep the conversation going and you will be rewarded with long-term, mutually satisfying relationships with the types of patients you want to serve.

Thank you for reading my four part series titled “SPONTANEOUS EFFORTS DON’T PRODUCE CONSISTENT RESULTS”.

Candace Crowe, President, Creative Director

Candace Crowe Design
Educating Patients. Marketing You.

www.CandaceCrowe.com

© 2009 Candace Crowe Design

compelling reasons for patient education

Monday, April 13th, 2009

Following are two very compelling reasons to implement a clear strategy and process for educating patients on your website, in your office, and to have take home education.

Patient confusion—driven by heightened cosmetic medicine competition and marketing—is perhaps the greatest threat to a plastic surgery practice. Patients may not understand the benefits of certain procedures or may have misconceptions about the outcomes. They may know about one treatment, but not understand how a series of treatments and procedures can work in combination for better results. Still other new patients may fear the pain and cost associated with invasive procedures. All of these and other factors mean that building trust is an essential process unique to each physician. But as the industry evolves, bringing with it a constant stream of new issues that impact cosmetic medicine, plastic surgeons should be mindful of the need to constantly reinforce patient trust through education.”

www.surgery.org –MemberGuide.pdf, page 15

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A website is one of the most important tools to educate patients even before they walk in the door and create compelling reasons to prompt them to schedule a consultation. Making the most of a website—whether the practice is developing one for the first time or optimizing an existing site—is an integral part of a successful cosmetic practice.”

www.surgery.org –MemberGuide.pdf, page 25