The Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing for Dentists in 2024

Americans spent $152 billion on dentistry in 2022, and millions of people search for a new dentist each year. But how can your practice win more of that new business - and turn them into loyal patients?

The answer is through better digital marketing. As the number of dental practices grows and patients increasingly rely on the internet to find a practitioner, every practice needs to ensure they are well positioned to reach these online patients.

But most dentists aren’t marketers – and they shouldn’t have to be. Instead, dental practices need to find the right marketing experts to deliver patients so they can focus on treating them.

In this article, we explore both the opportunities and challenges of marketing for dentists, giving you a clear guide to find the right strategy to improve your bottom line - as well as the right marketing partner to implement it for you.

1: The Basics of Dentistry Marketing

Why Digital Marketing is Crucial to Run a Successful Dentistry Practice in 2024

Solving the ‘empty chair’ problem

Few dentists boast a full schedule at all times. This creates the “empty chair” problem, where your practice operates for several hours each week when there are no paying patients – but you still need to pay your staff, your rent, and many more fixed costs.

Unfortunately, no practice is immune to this challenge. The average dental practice loses 17% of their patient base each year from people moving, changing insurance, etc. Your patient base needs to be constantly added to just to sustain the levels it’s at today.

Patient referrals are an integral part of organically sustaining your patient base, but they don’t create consistent patient flow. Spending marketing dollars is critical to creating a more reliable stream of new patients, to ensure you never have an empty chair again.

Winning market share and staying relevant

Competition for patients is rising quickly in the US. A recent study suggests that the ratio of dentists to the general US population will grow in the coming fifteen years, leading to a surplus of practitioners. Meaning that competition for patients is only going to increase with time! This will be exacerbated by what some economists call “winner takes all” markets. For most of modern history, people chose their dental practice based purely on proximity. But with the rise of the internet, patients are now equipped to research and compare the reputation and service offerings of multiple practices.

In fact, 43.3% of US citizens choose the dentist with the best online reviews - making it by far the most common method of choosing a practice - while 18.4% choose the practice with the best search rankings.

Furthermore, as DSOs expand, they have dedicated marketing teams who are actively trying to target the same groups of patients as you.

As a result, practices that are highly active and visible across digital platforms win a disproportionate volume of patients - and earn a dominant market share. Building a positive digital presence is therefore essential to win business - and can help you attract patients who historically would never have known about your practice. But how can dentists balance time spent building that presence against time spent treating patients?

Changing customer expectations: convenience and transparency

The internet has empowered consumers to learn more about companies they deal with. Dentists therefore need to undertake a similar mindset shift, providing clear information – and making it easy to access. This also puts a premium on fast communication: one study finds that customers expect to hear back from a practice within 5 minutes of contacting them.

Easy-to-use systems like Opencare make it easier for dentists to quickly respond to patients using email, text, or a phone call. Having a strong digital presence also empowers patients to find valuable information without phoning your practice, as they can simply visit your Opencare Profile or website. This creates a smoother experience - and therefore keeps patients happy.

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The Key Forms of Dental Marketing

There are numerous ways for dental practices to market themselves. Historically, this has fallen into three basic categories:

Traditional advertising and direct marketing

From featuring their practice on posters to offer leaflets, dentists have often relied on patients to “discover” their practice for themselves. This is a relatively straightforward method, but it relies heavily on proximity. The only patients likely to visit your practice because they saw a sign in your window live close by - limiting the reach of this approach. And patients are increasingly less trusting of these forms of media because they feel “old fashioned”.

Word of Mouth

Dentists often grow their practice through a combination of community outreach and “word of mouth”. They may become a well-known presence in their area, and multiple generations of the same family visit the same practice. This is a foundational component of building a durable and loyal patient base.

However, there is an inherent limit to this method. Word of mouth is an unreliable and unpredictable channel, and it takes years to develop. It is also inherently limited in reach. Dentists must supplement this channel with digital market to stay relevant and competitive.

Practice website + SEO

Ten years ago, most dentists saw a website as a “nice to have.” Today, a website is table stakes. Many prospective patients simply will not trust a practice that does not have a website, and you will be “invisible” to any patient that uses the internet to find a new dentist.

A high-quality website showcases your services and makes it easy for a prospective patient to learn about your practice. This should feature key contact information, insurance coverage, a breakdown of your services and costs, and offer the ability for a patient to book their appointment directly through the website.

One crucial factor here is visibility: a good dentistry website should not only function well and be easy to use – it also needs to be easy to find. That is where search engine optimization comes in. This is a complex practice of developing content for your website and improving various technical factors so that the website ranks high on popular search engines like Google.

Search engine optimization can be time intensive, requiring technical and writing skills to be successful. This leads many dentists to turn to marketing companies to generate traffic, but there is no guarantee that traffic will translate into an increase in patients.

Social media

A recent study found that 41% of patients had used their dentist’s social media to find information. However, over 30% of dentistry practices still do not have any social media presence - and those that do vary widely in the amount they use their account. Having an inactive social media account can actually be harmful: if people find you were active but have not posted in several months, they may question whether you are still in business.

This presents a big opportunity for most dental practices to connect with patients and reach prospective new patients. By posting patient success stories and providing useful information, your dental practices can grow its following and increase their digital visibility. So that when a person is looking for a new dentist, your practice is top of mind.

Google Ads

Given the number of dental patients who use search engines to find a practice, Google Ads has become a central digital marketing tool for dentists. By bidding on relevant keywords, businesses can buy advertising space on the result page – and only pay for ads which people actually click on. (This is known as “Pay Per Click” advertising.)

Because this sounds relatively straightforward, many dental practices manage their own Google Ads. But this generally leads to poor outcomes: you end up spending a significant amount of money on clicks that don’t turn into paying patients, and without expertise and experience, it’s easy to end up wasting a lot of time and resources without measurable gains to your bottom line.

Third-party patient acquisition

While most of the marketing methods we’ve discussed are undertaken by your dental practice, there are also “outsourced” methods which involve paying a third-party to market your practice for you.

The first of these is known as lead gen marketing. This is a model where your practice pays a third-party marketing platform or agency for each lead it generates. The third-party undertakes a range of marketing activities - most of which are described above - and generates leads for your practice.

This can be a highly efficient way of building your patient base. But there is a drawback: with the standard lead gen marketing model, your practice pays for each lead - regardless of whether the patient actually books an appointment or shows up. As a result, you will frequently find yourself paying a third-party for generating…an empty chair.

In recent years, alternative model called patient acquisition marketing has emerged. It works similarly to lead gen marketing, except you only pay the third-party when a patient actually shows up and is successfully treated. This model, pioneered by Opencare, provides a more reliable - and therefore ultimately cost-effective - solution to your marketing problems.

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Three Forms of Marketing Partnership

Most dentists are not effective marketers. They don’t have the time or the expertise. But the shift to a digital-first approach puts this fact into sharp relief. As marketing gets more sophisticated, utilizing numerous platforms and large volumes of data, dentists are unlikely to succeed if they try to manage it all themselves. Fortunately, there are multiple ways to get support.

These come in three basic categories:

1. Marketing consultants

A marketing consultant will assess your existing marketing and tell you how to improve it. These insights can be very valuable, especially for dental practices that are unsure how to adapt to digital – which is why this method is popular. But there is a clear downside which many dentists overlook: who exactly is going to implement those insights?

While sophisticated marketing strategy is essential in today’s competitive marketplace, it is worth nothing if it remains a series of slides. Consultants are likely to paint a beautiful picture of what could be achieved with their plan. And they are free to do that – because they are not the ones responsible for making it a reality.

Consultants are great advisors, but you are still on the hook to manage the day-to-day.

2. Marketing agencies

There is a huge industry of firms that can help dental practices with their marketing, both strategy and implementation. They bring with them teams of experts in various areas of marketing, including Paid Digital Marketing and SEO, and are often able to execute complex strategies at scale. But the problem with most agencies is not what they do – it's how they are rewarded for it.

Marketing agencies have different business models, but they are typically incentivised to focus on factors like brand building or traffic generation – neither of which have a direct connection to your bottom line. As a result, you often end up with quality campaigns but relatively low ROI.

Agencies take a huge load off your plate. But they often don’t deliver results that correspond to the astounding price they charge.

3. Patient acquisition companies

Patient acquisition companies, like Opencare, tie their business model exclusively to the number of paying patients they generate. This means they only get paid when you get paid, making for a much more direct ROI calculation – and a more aligned incentive structure.

These companies take the risk out of getting patients in the door, both by producing a consistent stream of patients and using a business model that is tied to performance.

All three of these partnerships can produce great results for dental practices and can be combined in an additive way. But most dentists will benefit most from working backwards through the list. Start with patient acquisition – especially if you are unsure how to navigate the digital marketing ecosystem – to focus on generating paying patients. Experiment with marketing agencies or consultants later if you feel they are necessary to help your brand grow.

2: Conversion and Retention Strategies

5 Key Ways to Convert More Dental Patients

1. Improve communication

Patients that receive a response from a business within an hour are 7x more likely to convert. Why? Patients want to book an appointment now. They will very quickly start looking elsewhere if you don’t respond quickly, and given how easy it is to find a dental practice online – you don’t have long to waste!

Another key here is to use multiple forms of communication – from SMS to email. Each patient will have their own preferred medium, and it’s important your practice caters to all of them to ensure they receive the message in a fast, convenient way.

The bottom line? Dental practices that are highly responsive and flexible in their communication produce a better patient experience and fill more appointments.

2. Build your online reputation

The majority of US adults recognize that dental health is important. But 36% of them have a fear of dental treatment, and 3% are so afraid they refuse to ever see a dentist. This puts a huge premium on trust in dental practices: people want to feel safe when they book an appointment, and brands that are trusted will win more patients.

As we’ve discussed, patients today primarily search for dentists online. Your digital presence therefore plays a huge role in signalling trustworthiness and quality – and therefore how high your conversions are. Reach out to patients after every appointment and ask them to review your practice. Optimize your website and create quality content to improve your search engine rankings. And grow your audience on social media by consistently posting informative and engaging content.

3. Make booking easier

Consumers have become accustomed to fast, convenient service from other industries and dental practices need to meet those expectations. Even if a dental patient lands on your website, any number of friction points could make them think twice. In fact, studies show that for every extra second a web page takes to load, conversions drop by 20%.

While it’s important to improve functionality of your website to increase load speed, there are other important user experience (UX) factors to consider. First, Reduce the number of steps required to book an appointment. Streamline your forms to include only essential information. Then give patients a calendar with open timeslots when they book. Having control over when their appointment will be reduces uncertainty and makes it easier to commit.

4. Set clear expectations

Patients want to know exactly what they are going to get from a booking. You need to make explicit and clear what each appointment will involve to reduce friction and set the right expectations. This should include not just the procedures involved, but how long each will take. This is especially important for the first appointment; develop a structured intake process that outlines what procedures they should expect can help a patient feel at ease.

5. Join the right booking network

A growing number of patients rely on networks like Opencare to find their next dentist. It takes time and effort to research a suitable practice independently, and these networks provide a trusted centralized platform that guarantees the quality and reliability of the practices they promote.

Practices that sign-up therefore reach a large audience they otherwise would have missed out on – and are more likely to convert them into patients. But this poses the question: once you’ve converted a patient, how do you ensure they become a reliable, long-term revenue source?

3 Ways to Increase Patient Retention

1. Book a follow-up before they leave

Many patients are resistant to booking a dental appointment. If you simply leave them to book their next appointment when it’s due, plenty will either forget or procrastinate – and ultimately never come back to your practice.

A simple solution is to book the next appointment before they leave your practice. Scheduling a follow-up helps both parties: the patient doesn’t have to think about when they will next visit a dentist, and your practice has appointments booked in advance.

2. Send automatic reminders

Retention is not just about booking appointments; it’s about making sure the patient actually attends their appointment. Reminders are a key tool here, but most practices don’t have the time to manual send hundreds of emails or text messages to incoming patients.

That’s why automation software is so powerful. You can simply program your system to send a series of friendly messages reminding your patient of an upcoming visit at a specified interval. These messages can be carefully personalized and include clear information about the appointment to ensure the patient doesn’t forget.

3. Upsell Cosmetics

Cosmetic and aesthetic dentistry has grown in popularity in the last few years, meaning dentists are no longer simply a health service - they are also selling a lifestyle. While demand for traditional checkups and routine operations is likely to remain static, practices that can grow demand for cosmetic services will grow far faster.

While this should never be an aggressive sell, showing patients cosmetic options is likely to dramatically boost not just retention but overall revenue.

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3: Best Practices for Patient Acquisition Marketing

Online Reviews

Do: Request reviews from every patient.

Turn this into a habit, and you will grow your online reputation rapidly. Make it as easy as possible for a visitor to post a review, either by including a QR code to the review site or sending them a follow-up email with a friendly reminder to leave a review.

Don’t: Ignore negative reviews.

The occasional negative review is inevitable, and will not harm your reputation too badly. The key is to leave an honest, friendly reply that signals to anybody reading the review that the reviewer’s experience is a) an anomaly and b) being taken seriously by your brand.

Search Engine Optimization

Do: Prioritize local SEO.

You cannot realistically serve patients from a different state, so focus on including plenty of local keywords and information in your website to ensure it ranks for local searches.

Do not: Keyword stuff.

For many years, a surefire way to rank on Google was to force as many keywords into your website copy as possible. But today, the search algorithm actively avoids websites that do this, and instead rewards high-quality, clear information.

Paid Media

Do: Implement paid search ads.

Use Google Ads to bid on keywords related to your specialism and location. This will mean your website appears at the top of search rankings for searches relevant to your practice - and you will only pay if someone clicks on your page. However, this still does not guarantee they will make an appointment – or show up to it!

Don’t: Use vague or generic keywords.

Using keywords like “Invisalign” or “local dentist” might seem obvious, but they are likely to be expensive. And you do not want to spend $20 for someone who’s just starting to think about Invisalign – you want someone actively looking for a provider.

These keywords are therefore unlikely to lead to a patient acquisition; they are more likely to generate awareness from people who are just starting their research. Dentists see better results when their marketing is localized and highly specific to a niche, as this narrows your net and increases the likelihood someone will actually make an appointment.

Lead Nurture

Do: Maintain regular communication.

Whether it is through a consistent stream of emails or social media content, the best patient acquisition strategy involves lots of communication with your leads. You need to build trust and stay top of mind, so that they become paying patients.

Do not: Spam your leads.

The flipside of regular communication is spam. Avoid spam by focusing on providing value, rather than pushing people to book an appointment. Booking to see a dentist can be daunting, and people only do it when they are ready - so sending six “BOOK NOW” emails every day is only likely to put prospective patients off.

Conclusion: Partner with a Patient Acquisition Marketing Expert

Most dentists understand the value of marketing but are not skilled practitioners. Patient Acquisition Marketing involves a lot of work - and a lot of channel-specific expertise to produce meaningful results.

That’s why so many practices choose to partner with a dentistry marketing partner that can run an effective Patient Acquisition marketing program for them. At Opencare, we have pioneered this model in the dentistry industry, producing 228% yearly returns on investment for our partners - along with more than 10 new patients each month for many leading practices.

Want to learn how we could help you win more patients and grow your market share?

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