A Dental Marketer’s Checklist

When the engine goes out on a single-engine plane, one of the first items on the checklist for such an occurrence is FLY THE AIRPLANE.  You see, pilots began to realize way back in the ’30s and ’40s that more test pilots were dying than in the past due in large part to the growing complexity of new aircraft.  They were a bit uncomfortable with the growing death rate among their peers.  So, they developed checklists to help them combat the growing complexity – to remind them of the simple things which can often go overlooked and yield big problems when relying solely on memory, experience, bravado, and improvisation.  Now pilots have checklists for everything – pre-flight, landing, for when you’ve lost an engine, etc.  These checklists help them remember the simple, yet vital tasks and ensure communication so they can focus on safely flying the airplane.  I read about this in an awesome book, The Checklist Manifesto by Dr. Atul Gawande.  You can check it out here on my reading list.  And thanks to the folks at the Levin Group for telling me about this book.

There’s no doubt that marketing in the dental industry is more complex than it used to be.  A dental marketing checklist may have once looked like:  Direct mail – check; trade shows – check; Ads – check; sporadic email blasts – check.

Now we have so many options and competition to contend with.  Dare I even mention social media?  Our marketing world has become complex enough to warrant some simple marketing checklists.  As with the flight example, split your checklists up into pre-, during, post, and possibly even some special “emergency” cases.  Here is my very first attempt at a dental marketer’s pre-campaign checklist for a new marketing campaign:

  • Protect your core strategies – If something is working well, don’t mess with it
  • DO SOMETHING – This is my version of FLY THE AIRPLANE.  Don’t get so caught up in trying to make it so perfect that you become distracted from actually executing.
  • Determine measurable objectives of the new campaign
  • Determine appropriate communication techniques
  • Ensure communication tactics are integrated with clear, consistent messaging
  • Obtain buy-in from sales
  • Achieve consensus with sales on how all those leads will be handled
  • Measure
  • Alter/augment based on the measurements – This last step might be the 1st in a checklist for the “during” phase of the marketing campaign.

Obviously I’ve left some items out, such as “Obtain buy-in from management” and “Adhere to budget”.  Checklists cannot be all-encompassing.  A good checklist is a vehicle for communication within a team and helps remind people of the necessary tasks while leaving room for improvisation when needed and appropriate.  A good checklist is also short enough to convey the key points without distracting the user.

Pilots, construction teams, and surgeons use checklists to help them deal with the ever-increasing complexity of their challenges and professions.  Why should marketers be any different?  Our little dental industry is evolving and becoming more complex too.  What do you think of using checklists in dental marketing?  Have you developed any checklists for your own use?  I look forward to your feedback.

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Escape your comfort zone

Mark Twain has often been attributed with the following or similar quote: 

“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.”

And I believe it was Kanye West in Stronger who said, “N-n-now that that don’t kill me…Can only make me stronger”

Both quotes are about the concept of comfort zone and not becoming trapped in or defined by it.  As we begin to draw the final curtain on 2011, take the upcoming holidays as an opportunity to take stock of your comfort zone.  What are you doing to expand or escape it?

Are you a dentist on the fence about a new technology, material, or treatment modality?  Sitting on the fence can be a comfortable place to be.  You can tell the pesky rep, “Oh, yes, I’m still thinking about it.”  You can tell yourself, “Oh, yes, I’m still thinking about it.”  What is there to keep thinking about?  Does it improve patient care?  Is it neutral or positive to practice production?  Will it enhance your enjoyment of practicing dentistry?  If you can answer “Yes” (or better yet, “Oh, yes”), to these questions, then stop thinking and get off the fence.  If you are unsure, then stop thinking and do something to learn more so you can be sure.  Learning is the key to escaping your comfort zone.  Take a course, join a study club, do something. 

Or perhaps you’re a marketer looking at next year’s plan and realizing it looks startlingly like this year’s?  It can be easy to fall into the pattern of doing things because “that’s what we usually do”.  Take a risk.  Look at your metrics from last year and roll the dice with something that has lots of room for improvement.  I’m not advocating jeopardizing your core strategies.  Rather, first look at what could really be working better and expand your comfort zone there.  You may learn something that you can translate to improvement in performance of your core activities.  Again, learning is the escape vehicle – the get away car from your comfort zone.

Personally I continue to wrestle with my own comfort zone and how to escape it.  I feel I’m about to break through some comfort bonds, and I hope to write more about that journey of escape later.  Until then, I look forward to hearing your thoughts and experiences about what you are doing to escape your own comfort zone.

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ADA Part 2

It has been a couple of weeks since the American Dental Association in Las Vegas.  Attendance seemed to be down from prior years, and that is quite unfortunate.  However, given the Sunday – Wednesday footprint it’s no surprise.  Enough of the negative, on to the positive.  For those who were in attendance at ADA there was a virtual all you can eat buffet of dental products and services to enjoy.

Virtual is a good word to describe it too.  Digital Impression and CAD/CAM technology seemed nearly ubiquitous on the trade show floor.  It seems these related technologies are really picking up steam, and no one wants to be left behind.  As dental implant placement continues to gain traction among general dentists, these technologies will become even more accepted due to the advantages and benefits they offer both patient and practitioner in these procedures.

While dentists are revving up their restorative engines with high-tech products, another prevailing theme at ADA was prevention.  Dentists and teams are focusing more now on oral health care and complete wellness.  This was most notable to me in the emphasis on oral cancer screening.  This product category is growing, and that was clear at ADA.  Dental teams are providing comprehensive oral care to their patients, and technologies to aid in oral cancer screening are gaining prominence on their radars.

For me, ADA 2011 in Las Vegas was a great show.  Lots of technology upon which to think and dream.  And of course, lots of fun with old and new friends.  I already can’t wait for next year.

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