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Resources For The Community
Marketing Tips,
Book Reviews and Other Information to Help You Build your Practice
Create More Word of Mouth Business
By Jennifer Lewy,
Marketing Writer and Coach
How do most
clients find you? If you’re like many small businesses providing
professional services, it’s by word of mouth. When clients get a
referral to your practice, they’re ready to work with you because
you’re someone they “know.” And you have more success working with
them, because they have a pretty good idea about what they’re looking
for.
With strong
word-of-mouth business, you’ll reduce the amount of energy and money
you spend on advertising, networking, and other “direct outreach”
strategies (but never give these up entirely).
But don’t assume
that referrals to your practice simply happen…you could be missing the
boat on a major opportunity. Consider these easy tips for actively
building word of mouth business.
1. Provide
excellent service. This is the bottom line: provide excellent service,
and clients will be more inclined to send referrals your way. Do you
regularly respond to inquiries within 24 hours? Do you have a
pleasant, professional place to see clients? Are you comfortable
presenting your services and fees? If you don’t offer prompt,
professional service that delights your clients, focus on this area
first.
2. Sum up your
services in a few words. Don’t let clients and colleagues guess about
how to describe your services. This increases the chances that you’ll
be misrepresented in front of others. So come up with a few words to
describe exactly what you do. What clients do you work with and how do
you address their problems? Don’t worry about catchy tag lines here.
Just make sure you have a short description that stresses the
solutions you provide to others.
3. Give referrals.
When you refer clients to other professionals, it’s very likely that
they’ll refer clients to you. So generously provide referrals to other
professionals who also provide excellent service. Don’t forget to
follow up to make sure they know you’ve referred a client.
Build a wide
contact network so you can easily and often make referrals to others.
Keep a detailed list or database of your professional contacts. This
could include other local businesses, colleagues, competitors,
organizations and professional groups.
4. Ask for
referrals. Happy clients will sing about your services. But don’t
assume this will happen – give clients regular reminders to spread the
word. Keep a stack of business cards in your treatment rooms and front
office area, and hand a few to clients at the end of each session. Ask
them if they could give your cards to friends who might benefit from
your services. Or print up a pile of referral discount coupons to have
on hand (more on this below). If you have a website or eZine, make it
easy for visitors to forward information about your services to
others.
5. Reward and
acknowledge referrals. Give a “thank you discount” to clients who send
more business your way. Make sure clients know about this discount by
printing it on your appointment cards, brochure, website and other
marketing materials.
6. Reach out to
new referring partners. Check out your phone book, networking group or
local trade organizations for professionals that might be good
referral partners. Contact them with an invitation (“We may be able to
help each other get more clients…”). Find out as much as possible
about their business. Ask what type of clients they are looking for,
and explain what type of clients you are looking for. You might even
exchange marketing literature that is easy to display or make
available to clients (i.e., tear-off cards, brochures, fact sheets).
Thank your new referral partners for every referral.
Need help getting
a handle on your referral strategy? Contact Jennifer Lewy at
617.922.0098 or
jen@zenmarketing.net for a free consultation to discuss your
marketing situation. For more free tips on attracting new clients,
streamlining your workload and building a business you love, visit
www.ZenMarketing.net.
Book Review
Respectfully
reviewed by Harvey Zarren, M.D., F.A.C.C.
The
Integrative Medicine Alliance makes no endorsement of any business,
organization, practitioner, therapy, or product described within this
newsletter, nor is the information contained herein intended to be a
substitute for medical advice. The following essays are solely the
opinions of our members.
The China Study
Authors: T. Colin
Campbell, PhD With Thomas M. Campbell II
BENBELLA BOOKS,
Dallas, Texas ISBN 1-932100-38-5 January 2005.
In his book,
The China Study, T. Colin Campbell, PhD clearly
demonstrates the links between nutrition and the common diseases such
as cardiovascular disease, cancer, multiple sclerosis, diabetes
mellitus, Alzheimer's disease, cataracts and macular degeneration.
Whether you are a health professional or a layperson, I recommend that
if you read only one book on nutrition and health, be sure it’s this
one!
Dr. Campbell is
Professor Emeritus of Nutritional Biochemistry at Cornell University
and has received more than seventy grant-years of peer-reviewed
research funding and has authored more than 300 research papers. He
wrote The China Study because he believes that what people eat
largely determines their health and because he seeks to put order to
the enormous amount of nutritional misinformation existing today.
Unlike other
nutrition books created to sell a particular nutrition program or a
menu of food items or supplements, I found The China Study ,
fairly reported, using Dr. Campbell’s own and others' research. The
author uses his experience in the field of nutrition to explain the
workings of government, commercial interest, academic organizations
and individuals who have both contributed to and created the confusion
around nutritional knowledge and the vitamin and supplement
industries.
Finally, Dr,
Campbell explains why a plant-based diet of fruits, vegetables, whole
grains and variety makes eminent sense for health, longevity and an
improved healthcare burden on our society. He couples knowledge with
his inherent faith in the wisdom of individuals to make good choices
if presented with clearly stated facts.
I recommend that
you read this book! It clarifies the confusion that pits industry,
government and healthcare prejudice against common sense and the
experience of medical professionals like me who have watched simple,
healthy plant-based nutrition create miraculous change in very ill
individuals.
If you read
nothing else during 2005, read The China Study by T. Colin
Campbell; available in hardcover from BENBELLA BOOKS, through
www.amazon.com and other
retailers. It is a book of hope. Believe that you can make a very
real difference in your quality of life and health through nutrition.
It might save your life!

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