A on sale or special offer is when you slash your consult, exam and/or x-ray price for a new patient. Some folks judge using low-cost offers is the bane of chiropractic.
Nevertheless I've yet to hear any fine reasons for thinking this. But I've heard many untruths about bargain basement priced offers that would lead people to think they are awful. Let's inspect at each one:
Deception #1: Offers Harm the Practice
What hurts the practice is when chiropractors are going broke and closing their doors to bankruptcy. And nothing closes the doors quicker than not bringing in any new patients. I can appreciate where this lie is emerging from suppose each person in the phone book is committing the similar "free x-ray" offer to the public.
Deception #2: Offers Are Illegitimate in the U.S.
I'm not an attorney, hence check with yours regarding your state rules. In the United States, there had developed a long held notion that professionals should not promote at all. A few lawyers challenged this in the Bates v. State Bar of Arizona Supreme Court case, which declared that advertising was a form of business-related speech protected by the First Amendment.
Falsehood #3: Offers Makes You look Sordid
A meticulously written offer in your advertisement is not "sordid." What makes an offer inspect immoral is the use of hype in your ad (which can make it banned in some instances.) To declare that you're giving a limited-time, reduced price on a special "herniated disc" assessment is not untrustworthy.
Lie #4: My Community is Extremely Wealthy to Respond to Low-cost Offers
This lie is worthy of note. I practiced in a high income community ($90k+ average income) and when I ran ads I'd have people drive up in Jaguars and practically entreat to be scheduled for the special we were launching that week in the newspaper. A friend of mine operates in an even higher income place, and he once declared he had quite a few billionaire's spouses coming in replying to his special offers.
Myth #5: It Will Bring in reduce Quality Patients
This deception can become real thing suppose you don't word your offer fittingly, or you publicize in the wrong places. Usually a minor price adjustment can fix this. One doctor told me that he was getting tons of decompression patients with an offer of a free exam and x-ray.
Falsehood #6: Your Offer Price Must End in 7
Did you know there was magic in the number 7? Twenty or hence years ago, the genius marketer Ted Nicholas released some direct mail tests. He tested prices ending in 7 verses prices ending in 9. The 7?s outperformed the 9?s. Since then, this technique has spread through most professions.
Myth #7: Must Be Able To Pay with a Single Bill
This isn't as prevalent as the myths above, however in some mentoring circles it's somewhat popular. The thought is that when a person sees your offer, they consider it's not really that much money suppose they only have to pull one bill out.
Author Resource:
Dr. Michael Beck invites chiropractors to discover freedom, profits and success in their practice. Receive his special free MP3 audios where he reveals "The Keys to Effective Chiropractic Marketing ".