G2 Communications Inc.-Medical Practice Marketing

We help physicians recruit, retrain & refer

  • WHO we are
  • WHAT we do
    • Healthcare Case Studies
    • Healthcare Clients
  • WHY choose us
  • WHERE we are
  • HOW to learn more
  • Blog

Jul 19 2017

Medical Oncologist Offers These Marketing Tips

“If you want to grow your practice and you’re new to marketing, try to keep an open mind,” says , Medical Oncologist and board chair of Epic Care.  As managing partner of one of the largest cancer care centers in the San Francisco East Bay, Dr. Patel has followed his own advice.  The larger the practice, he says, the more important marketing becomes.

G2 Communications spoke to Dr. Patel to get his perspective on practice marketing.

“When it comes to practice marketing, most physicians hold on to the age-old philosophy, ‘if I’m a good doctor good things will happen,’ says Dr. Patel.  “Because doctors don’t study business they think marketing their practice is like selling their soul.

“For a large practice like ours, it’s very important that we convey to the community who we are, what our mission is and how we distinguish ourselves,” says Dr. Patel.

“And over 90% of our patients come from referring physicians.  Our doctors are the face of our practice and they have to make those connections.”

“Mostly we do old fashioned, in the trenches marketing,” says Dr. Patel.  “We take our practice to the community with events of survivorship.  These Celebration of Life events are a great way to get our name out there and build relationships.  They have become our signature marketing program.”

For referring physicians Epic Care physicians gives talks at hospital grand rounds. The practice hosts small forums for referring physicians where the partners bring in leaders in the field and put up attendees at nice resorts.  In 2018, Epic Care will begin hosting annual CME events.

For medical practices that want to grow and are ready to take the marketing plunge Dr. Patel has a list:  having a web presence is key.  So websites are a must and so is social media.  He also encourages practices to host and publicize community events, give talks, and hire a marketing liaison to call on referring physicians.

For more information about physician marketing visit www.g2comm.com or call us at 650 856-1607.

Written by Shelly · Categorized: Healthcare marketing, Marketing, Medical marketing, Medical Practice Marketing, Practice marketing · Tagged: doctors, event marketing, events marketing, marketing, physicians, practice marketing, social media

Feb 19 2014

Unshakable Marketing Principles for the Digital Age: Q&A With Marketing Consultant Kathryn Gorges

Kathryn Gorges (pronounced gorgeous!) knows how to spell out the core principles of marketing for companies overwhelmed by the present demands of content strategy: “The most important thing is who you’re targeting and how you’re solving the customer’s problem. You can’t create content for the masses; you need to speak directly to your target segments.”

Gorges is a marketing consultant and Social Marketing Diva with over 17 years experience. She works with brands to increase visibility and nurture customer relationships through web content, social media, email, and event marketing.

I spoke with Gorges to glean insights into how marketers and PR professionals can generate quality customer conversations and relationships in the digital age.

In the midst of constant changes in digital marketing, what are the core, unshakable marketing principles?

KG:  We’re still in the middle of a transition where we have these bright shiny objects and we’re not sure how to use them. People are throwing thousands of dollars away on marketing automation and blogging and images, and not knowing what they’re doing.

The truth is, at the heart of everything is still the story. People doing marketing strategy the right way are the ones that lead with the story of how the product or service is really making a difference for people. Out of that, all content is created. The story is the core, the touchstone.

Companies need to figure out, what is the central narrative? People are developing all kinds of content and wasting money because the content doesn’t match up to that central story.  It’s the story and behind that is the customer.

There’s a problem of focus these days. The focus is on lead generation and brand awareness and putting all that into these tools. But where you make money is with repeat business. Otherwise it’s a transaction. If you don’t have real customers and repeat customers then you’re not building relationships with those customers.

It’s not about one-way messaging. What is the reality like when someone calls your company for service?  If you know your job is to give them an excellent experience but the customer gets put on hold for 20 minutes then it doesn’t matter what your message is. Companies can’t rely on the artifice of messaging and phone scripts.”

What value does social media provide in all this?  Lead gen? something else?

KG: Customers talk to other customers. They can do a search and find out what others are saying about you. It’s all out there. Millennials have come through the recession and are really skeptical about vendors’ promises and one-way marketing. They want real relationships. They are going to build that relationship on top of the trust that gets passed on by knowing how other customers feel about your product or service, especially from people they know. That’s first, then the relationship with the company follows.

That means the real experience people are having is more important than the messaging. Customers won’t form a relationship with a brand because of the brand’s messaging. They want to know, ‘does this make a difference for me?’

Today there are so many places to find out about a product or service before customers even talk to a company. They want other people’s experiences first. Once they’ve seen that then they are ready to see what the company says about itself.”

Why does content strategy matter?

A content strategist figures out how to create a bigger view (and greater visibility) on the web.  This person develops a cohesive strategy that in every way carries forward the narrative, with different pieces of content for different platforms.  Companies need a content strategy where derivatives of the content are published on the companies’ social platforms as well as 3rd party media platforms.

Derivative content includes: press releases, infographics, blog entries, bylined articles/op eds, social channel entries, etc.  You can get your content in front of people directly but it delivers real value when you have a direct relationship with the customer.  Now you have this whole other mechanism of getting content out there.

Knowing how to develop and produce the most compelling content; knowing what resonates is now vital to marketing success.  Marketing people haven’t had to produce this content before.  There wasn’t this big content machine.

So there is an ever demanding content generation machine and your potential customers are consuming that content.  But there’s also Google – companies need to get decent search results to have social authority.  There’s this crushing need for generating content and putting it out on company websites.  But the company needs to be a subject matter expert, not a media company.

Don’t lose sight of the 2-way relationship with the customer.  That isn’t going away any time soon.

Images:

Kathryn Gorges: Kathryn Gorges

 

 

Written by Laura R. · Categorized: Marketing, Other, Public Relations, Social Media, Uncategorized · Tagged: content, content strategy, customer, customers, marketing, PR, Public Relations, social marketing, social media

sgordon@g2comm.com
(480) 685-3252 (office)
(650) 248-6975 (mobile)

Copyright © 2021 — G2 Communications Inc.-Medical Practice Marketing • All rights reserved •