Online reputation management

The growing importance of social media for dentists

Posted on September 22, 2015 by admin in Publications, Research / Literature Report with No Comments on The growing importance of social media for dentists

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The social media networks such as Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus, and LinkedIn present an extraordinary marketing opportunity for dentists who are looking to promote their independent practices. Potential patients are increasingly embracing social networks as an integral part of their everyday lives. The interesting part is that the phenomenon is no longer restricted to the young. Even the over-50 population is joining social networking in staggering numbers.

Compelling numbers

Dental practitioners cannot afford to ignore the fact that Facebook alone has more than one billion active users worldwide. A.C. Nielsen reports that more than 80% of all American adults use an online social network. Facebook gets the lion’s share, with Americans spending more time on Facebook than on any other website.

Almost 23% of the time an average user spends online is on social networking. These numbers are compelling a growing number of small businesses and professionals, including dentists, to consider leveraging the immense power of social media to their marketing advantage.

Advantage for dentists

Independent dental practitioners have a clear advantage, like most other small businesses, in shifting their marketing strategies toward social media. Zoomerang, a leading online survey firm, conducted a study of 1,180 small and medium businesses (SMBs) and 500 customers to understand what is driving SMBs and independently practicing professionals to leverage the marketing power of social media. It revealed three key reasons:

➢ High visibility to a large number of people
➢ Personalized connectivity with potential clients
➢ Personal image enhancement and self-promotion

Dentists who have not yet woken up to the power of social media must realize that it is not just a tool for building relationships, but it is also a good tool for their business.

Crowdspring, a leading crowd sourcing marketplace, reveals these findings:

➢ More than half of all SMBs and professionals report gaining new clients through social networks, most notably through Facebook.
➢ 64% of Twitter users and 51% of Facebook users are more likely to purchase the products or services from the businesses they follow on social media.
➢ Results can be achieved without spending much on social media. About 60% of small businesses spend less than $100, and 74% do not have an employee to run their social media marketing campaigns.

SEO and social media

A great dentistry website deserves to have a high-targeted visibility in organic search. Leading search engines such as Google are increasingly attaching importance to websites that are integrated with active social networking. Search engines are using social media activities as one of the most reliable forms of evidence to determine the worthiness of a website from the point of view of online readers.

For instance, when someone shares useful content from your dentistry website on Facebook or Twitter, it’s a cue to help a search engine determine the value and relevancy of your website. Every link or mention of your website on social networks is viewed by search engines as a vote or an endorsement of your content by the general readers on the Internet. So your page rankings improve as more people “vote” for your website on social networks.

Dentists can enhance their social media networking by providing unique, relevant, and highly useful nuggets of information to their readers regularly. Interesting blog posts, compelling news items, patient testimonials, and even case studies, ebooks, and useful weblinks, as well as interesting and educational images and videos can be posted on a dentist’s social media account to achieve higher “votes” from the readers.

Online reputation management

On one hand, active social media networking can help a dental practice dominate the search engine page results (SERPs). And on the other hand, it can help a dentist maintain a good online reputation. The Internet is essentially a free medium that makes it extremely difficult to control or manage an individual’s online image or reputation.

For instance, third party reviewers on the Internet can make or break a professional’s reputation, and there is not much the professional can do about it. However, with a greater degree of personalized control over social media networks such as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Google Plus, LinkedIn, and Flickr, it becomes possible for a professional such as a dentist to manage his or her online reputation in a far better way.