Archive for the ‘Plastic Surgeries’ Category

How Your Staff Can Close More Aesthetic Procedures

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009
Catherine Maley, MBA asked:


Aesthetic Sales 101: How Your Staff Can Close More Aesthetic Procedures

The aesthetic industry is buzzing with new and current procedures that are affordable, safe and quick. Just what the aesthetic patient is looking for. These procedures lead to new consumer target markets so looking good is no longer for just the elite. There’s something for everyone at every socioeconomic level. This increased demand for enhancement from the consumer ignites the supply side. That means more practitioners than ever are now offering cosmetic enhancement.

The aesthetic consumer today has many options. They know they have several choices on where to turn to for a great result. Your marketing efforts have a lot to do with who they choose. However, marketing efforts only get your telephone to ring and get the prospective patients through your door. Once you have the patient’s attention, it is your sales savvy that keeps them in your practice.

It is imperative you and your staff have the sales skills to close appointments, close procedures and ask for referrals. You start with a certain mind set. You have to be comfortable with the word “sales” or at least “promotion”. While you are practicing medicine, in reality, you are very much in sales in this industry so you need to be comfortable with that. Your staff needs to be comfortable with that. Selling or promoting is simply setting the tone and using well thought out strategies that help the patient decide to choose you.

What Does the Cosmetic Patient Want?

Nothing is more important in aesthetic medicine than patient relations. In my book, Your Aesthetic Practice/What Your Patients Are Saying, it was apparent when patients are spending their own money on elective procedures, the experience needs to be a good one every single time or they will go elsewhere where they are treated special and they’ll bring their friends with them. The aesthetic patient wants:

• to feel special

• to be heard
• to be understood

• to be treated nicely and respectfully

• to feel important

• to feel comfortable

• to feel significant

If your staff would simply treat the visiting patient as they would a good friend visiting their home that would go a long way in patient relations. The patient would look forward to visiting and calling your office since they feel a connection with your staff, and hopefully you. Be sure your patients are feeling these positive emotions while in contact with you.



Image is Important


Your patients will look to your staff for guidance, reassurance and answers. You want your staff to look professional and presentable. Too much or too little makeup, hair, nails, revealing clothing does not open up communications among women so be careful what image your staff is portraying.

Also be sure your staff looks the part. Staff members should experience your services so they can not only look their best; they can relay their first hand experience to your patients. There is no better testimonial than your walking/talking staff members standing right in front of a potential patient who is interested in the same procedure. Sharing anecdotal information with patients, again, helps with the bonding experience and gives your staff confidence to promote you and your services to your patients without pushing. They are simply relaying their own experience and that is what sells.

Script Your Staff for Success



Don’t leave anything to chance.  If you don’t train your staff to use the exact words they need to say to your patients, they will say whatever comes to mind and that’s not always the most effective approach.  Staff Scripting for Success gives your staff the step-by-step process so they are able to bond with the aesthetic patient and close the procedure.

Bond with the Aesthetic Patient

The first step in sales is to have the patient comfortable enough with you to open up and talk with you about their personal concerns. They need to be open to you so they will hear you and respond to what you’re saying. Develop a bond with your patient by greeting them with a smile and using their name throughout the conversation. Be happy to see them and use eye contact. Ask questions and show interest in them as a person as well as a patient. You are looking for commonalities with that patient so they can relate to you. Perhaps you live in the same area or go to the same health club. People like people that are like them so look for those similarities.

Learn the art of listening. The more you listen to the patient, the more they will tell you and feel bonded to you since they are sharing with you. And, the patient is more likely to hear what you have to say if they have been heard first. Listening is harder said than done but well worth the effort. The patient who is given the opportunity to talk will most likely tell you exactly what her concerns are as well as her objections. You don’t have to pull it out of them. Simply listen.

Closing Techniques

Your patients may also need some gentle nudging from you and your staff. Some of them may feel selfish spending their (family’s) money on such vanity issues or they may not feel worthy of such indulgence. Let them know it’s OK for them to invest in themselves. That the better they feel about themselves, the better life will be for them and everyone around them. Addressing their emotional needs is often the difference between a “let me think about it” to “let’s do it”. Here are subtle and professional closing techniques that help the patient move forward:

Assumptive Close

If you have bonded with the patient and listened to them, the close should be a natural next step. Make it even smoother by using the “Assumptive Close”. The question is not WILL they book, but WHEN?

Assume she will book so move forward with filling out the quote or scheduling the appointment. Some key phrases include:

“So, let’s check the schedule to see when we can get you back in here”

As you begin filling out the paperwork ask, “Karen, may I get your daytime telephone number please?”

When the patient answers your questions or doesn’t object to you checking the schedule for an appointment, she is moving forward.

Choice Close



Another natural way to complete a consultation is to ask a question that gives a choice rather than yes or no. With this approach, they are not asking them IF they should do it. They are actually moving beyond that and asking themselves a different question. Examples include:

“Karen, I have an opening this Thursday at 10:00 am or would you prefer Friday at 3:00 pm?”

“Sue, would you like to see Deborah our nurse today or wait for the doctor to see you on Wednesday?

In the patient’s mind, they have skipped over the first question of whether they should even proceed and have gone on to figure out HOW to proceed.



Address Emotions of the Aesthetic Patients


Emotions play a huge part in aesthetic medicine. The aesthetic patient is coming to you because there is something about their looks they are dissatisfied with. They believe improving it will also improve their feelings about themselves and their lives. They believe your services will bring them happiness.

If you attach emotions to their decision, it becomes easier for the patient to make the decision to move forward. If you address and reiterate the “discomfort” they are in now and how much better they will feel when they take care of it, that will bring them even closer to moving forward. Ask the patient how this “issue” has affected their life. Ask them how they think “fixing” it will help them. The more the patient can feel the problem and see the solution’s benefits, the more booked procedures you will experience.

Handling Objections

Objections are a good thing. It means the patient is actually considering buying your services so relish them. Objections are also a clue to you the patient has not yet been given enough information or they are teetering. Be prepared. Follow planned-out steps that address their objections. When they ask you questions about procedures:

- Listen to the entire question or comment first so you thoroughly understand what they are saying. Let them talk.

- Acknowledge them by saying, “Sara, I understand what you’re saying”

- Have answers prepared ahead of time

- Relay anecdotal information about your own experiences as well as other patients (without naming names); i.e., “well Sara, I can tell you that I’ve had it done and love my result” and “it’s one of our most popular procedures”

- Answer their concerns with proof such as before/after photos or have them speak

to other patients who have had the same procedures performed. Have them read testimonials from other happy patients. If the objection is about money, offer them easy financing. Find out what their concerns are and what they would need to do or know to get them answered.

They are often just looking for reassurance and a little push from you to say it’s ok – you can do it.

Sell the Difference – Your Aesthetic Physician

Your staff needs to be able to answer the question, “Why you and your office over all the others?” Due to the competitive nature of aesthetic medicine, aesthetic consumers have many choices. You want to reiterate to them why you are a good choice. You and your staff should come up with a list of what makes you different than the others in your area. Examples include:

- Stanford-trained

- You offer evening and weekend appointments

- Unique practice offering comprehensive services – both skin care, makeup, surgical and non-surgical

- Doctor has performed more than 2,000 injectable procedures

- Doctor has been in practice for 15 years

- Certified as the Botox training to other practitioners

Be creative. List any unusual training or areas of interest that may be unique and of interest to the patient who is trying to decide on a practioner.

Add-On Sale for Increased Average Order Size

The perfect time to add on to a sale is when your patient is standing in front of you with her credit card in her hand. She is already in the buying mode. Offer her gift certificates via a pretty display at your check-out counter. Tell her about a special you have running this month. Especially if it’s a package of multiple treatments she can buy for a discount rather than buy just one. Introduce her to your new skin care line or tell her about a new product you now offer.

Keep Them Coming Back

Never let the patient leave your office without the next step firmly planned. Ideally, you want them to schedule their next appointment now. You even want them to schedule all of their remaining appointments now so they feel a commitment to you. They may be hesitant to schedule so far in advance; however, assure them you will call to remind them about their appointments – just like the dentist does.

Ask for Referrals

We all know the best aesthetic patient is the referred patient. They are not as price conscious and are much more likely to stay loyal to you. You want to nurture those referrals and know who your advocates are in your practice. Every practice has a group of cheerleaders that sing your praises to everyone they know so wouldn’t you want to know who they are?

When the patient is satisfied with their result, tell them you want other patients just like them. Inform them of your referral program and give them referral cards to give to their friends, family and colleagues. Give them their before/after photos so they show them to others and talk about you. Now track these referrals and then thank them. Show them you appreciate their support. Send them a thank you note, call them personally to thank them and invite them in periodically for a complimentary treatment. They will keep the referrals coming when you acknowledge their support and show appreciation.

Follow Up

Always follow up after a consultation with a thank you note and then a telephone call.

If the prospective patient does not schedule, ask her when you should follow up and then do it. Send a thank you letter that day so she receives it the following day and then call her. Also call her to invite her to your upcoming event or seminar. Put her on your practice newsletter list. Keep in touch so when she is finally ready, she calls you versus the others.



Conclusion


Your practice should act as a well-oiled machine. Once you have spent the time, money and effort marketing your practice and attracting new patients to you, it’s imperative you and your staff see it through with solid skills in selling techniques and patient relations.

Happy Selling!



Inside the Mind of the Aesthetic Patient

Saturday, April 18th, 2009
Catherine Maley, MBA asked:


 

Aesthetic Book Survey Results

 

For you to enjoy your greatest amount of patient satisfaction, it’s imperative you know what your patients want. It would also be helpful to know what they think about you and your staff and how best to set expectations so your patients are happy with their results.

 

To help you discover the inner workings of the aesthetic patient’s mind, I personally interviewed many aesthetic patients who had had minimally-invasive as well as surgical procedures to enhance their appearance. My results are compiled in my book, Your Aesthetic Practice/What Your Patients Are Saying http://www.cosmeticimagemarketing.com/book.php. I wanted to learn, first-hand what they were looking for when searching for an office and physician to perform cosmetic enhancements. The majority of those interviewed were female with the medium age being 44 years old and they were scattered throughout the US.





My objective was to determine trends and commonalities in the aesthetic patient so here are some of my findings:

- The main reason both genders were considering cosmetic procedures was to improve their looks so they felt better about themselves. So, in essence, they were buying hope. Hope that you would make them look better so they would feel better;

- 90% of the time, the confidence in the physician’s ability and positive staff interaction were more important than price;

- 86% of them referred at least two other people to that practice (hair stylists were the biggest referral sources);

- 40% researched their procedure on the Internet ahead of time so they felt well-informed;

- 75% went on multiple consultations before deciding (the majority of those who went on one consultation did so after a glowing recommendation from their friend, family member or colleague;

- 80% watched Extreme Makeover, Doc 90210 and live surgeries and treatments on the Discover Channel so they felt they knew what to expect. They also were more willing to openly discuss aesthetic enhancement since it was being openly promoted on TV;

- Long waiting times were a reoccurring complaint but forgivable if the patient got a good result; and

- The better the staff, the less time the physician had to spend with the patient during the consultation.

Aesthetic Patient Survey Conclusions

While the above responses were interesting, it was apparent I needed to probe further to see if I could come up with some generalities that could define what made up a good practice. But, this is what I learned instead. The aesthetic patients’ preferences varied greatly. These aesthetic patients are consumers who think very differently. And, their perceptions were so varied such as:

a. While some thought an aesthetically gorgeous office indicated pride and success; others thought it was over the top, intimidating and made them feel uncomfortable;

b. While some thought the doctors did not spend enough time with them and felt rushed; other patients thought too much time with them made them wonder why the doctor wasn’t busier; and

c. While some thought the physician was so thorough explaining the various procedures available, others felt oversold and confused with so many options.

I probed further and asked, bottom line, why they chose that particular physician over the others. The consistent answer over and over was that the patient felt a “connection” with that physician. Their “gut” feeling or intuition was telling them this was the right physician for them. They had developed rapport and trusted that that particular physician understood them and would give them the best possible result.

What is Aesthetic Patient Rapport?

If rapport is so vital, it’s important to understand it. It’s difficult to define and you either have it with your patient or you don’t. Rapport is that bond you build with your prospective patient. It’s the single most important personality skill an aesthetic physician needs to be successful. You build rapport through words, tone and gestures as well as commonalities since:

7% of what is communicated is through your words

38% through your tone of voice

55% through your body language – ****** expressions and gestures

How Can an Aesthetic Physician Create Rapport?
The aesthetic patient wants to feel special - period. When a patient is spending their own money and time on elective cosmetic enhancement, they want to be treated respectfully, professionally and kindly by every person they encounter in the practice. They also want to be heard and understood. There is an old saying that says before you can be understood, you must work to understand and that is truly the case here.

We build rapport by creating or discovering things in common with the patient. That can be as simple as talking with the patient about who referred them to your practice or learning more about their profession and their family. The point is to show interest in the prospective patient as a person first; patient second. You can easily get this information from the patient information form sitting right in front of you. Just glance at it before entering the exam room.

Another way to build rapport is to mirror them. That means mimicking your patient’s breathing patterns, posture, tonality and gestures in a discreet way. People feel comfortable with people they believe are like them and mirroring will make that happen. So, if the patient talks fast, you talk fast. If the patient talks loud, you talk loud; if the patient is meek and quiet, you slow things down. Use the same terms and phrases the patient uses and be sure to avoid any jargon that the patient won’t understand.

If done correctly, the patient will feel as if they have found their soul mate, someone who understands and who can relate to them. That’s when you have developed rapport and the patient knows you are the right physician for them.

Educating Your Aesthetic Patient and Setting Expectations

Again, when I asked the patients in my survey how they knew their expectations were being met, their concerns were being addressed and recommendations were explained, I got different answers. Why?

Because there are three different learning styles – visual, auditory and kinesthetic. Visual people want to see the results; Auditory people want to hear about the results; and, Kinesthetic people want to touch and feel the results. All of us have elements of all three modes but usually one mode dominates our decision and learning processes and how we perceive things. So, you want to present your message in a way that gets through to the patient in the way they understand the best.

The easiest way for that to happen is to include all three modes of learning during each patient consultation. You want to present something visual, something auditory and something kinesthetic. Show them things, let them hear things and attach feelings and emotions to them. Some suggestions would be during the consultation with the patient, use your hand, your mirror and a Q-tip to show patients ****** skin lifting procedural results.

Show them before and after photo albums of patients who were striving for similar results; especially those who share the same age, gender and ethnicity. By the way, computer imaging was overwhelmingly desired for illustrating results specific to the patient. And, videos of procedures and taped patient testimonials on a small VCR or on your computer in your consult room were well received, especially when explaining complex procedures.

A majority of the prospective patients were interested in speaking with your former patients who were satisfied with their own result. And, for kinesthetic (touch) be sure your patient information packets are handed out to the prospective patients so they can rifle through pages that include any press you’ve received, articles you’ve written, your credentials, your practice brochure – anything they can touch and feel.

The Perfect Aesthetic Patient Consultation

My Quote: “Just as you try to tailor your treatment to fit the unique features of your patients, tailoring your consultation to your patient’s unique personality will increase your closing ratio.”

While there is no perfect consultation that works 100% of the time, there are certain elements needed to carry out a successful consultation more often than not. The following elements are from the patients’ perspective and based on their own experiences of what made up a good consultation:

1) Knock on the door gently, greet the patient by name, introduce yourself while looking him/her in the eye and shaking hands;

2) Spend 30-60 seconds learning more about the patient as a person. Comment on their occupation or perhaps the person who referred them and you can get that information from your patient information form;

3) Hand them a mirror while asking an open-ended question such as “What can I do for you today?” and “What brings you in to see me?”

4) Listen – while they tell you - nod, look them in the eye and take notes so they know you are listening and understanding;

5) Now, ask more open ended questions to determine if the patient’s expectations are reasonable, the results can be reached safely and they are rational about the process;

6) Determine where they are in the process. A great question to ask is “What is most important to you when picking an aesthetic physician?” or “What are you looking for in a cosmetic physician?”. You can also ask, “Have you talked with anyone else and, if so, what can I tell you that you don’t already know?”

7) Be sure they have completely and thoroughly relayed their concerns to you before you respond to them. It can be very tempting to interrupt with your recommendations but you’ll get their attention much faster if you first give them your undivided attention;

8) Always show respect for the patient. Even though you are the expert and know more, arrogance does not sell. If you come across as demeaning or condescending, you’ll drive the prospective patient away.

9) While explaining how you would address their concerns, use words a layperson understands, be concise and keep it simple. A confused patient will decide to do nothing so don’t offer too many choices;

10) Repeat back briefly to the patient the main points you heard such as intended outcomes and the patient’s concerns. Ask them if you have left anything out;

11) Now, qualify and differentiate yourself. The prospective patient needs to know you are the best physician in comparison to the competition. Perhaps you gave a talk on this recently or wrote an article on this. The point is to show your expertise;

12) Look them in the eye to let them know you are confident, skilled and experienced. You have performed many of these surgeries or treatments with excellent results and you will do the same for this patient;

13) Reassure them that you can meet their expectations. Let them know you understand their concerns and fears so they trust you and your recommendations;

14) Remember there is no room for bad-mouthing your colleagues. It puts you in a bad light and makes you look worse than your competition;

15) Prepare and rehears a closing statement that sounds natural. Tell the patient you look forward to working with him/her to help them look their best and you hope to see them again soon.

Conclusion

By treating every single prospective aesthetic patient as a person first, patient second, you are well on your way to a good patient consultation. Developing rapport, gaining trust and reassuring your patients that you are the right physician for them will assure you growth and success. It will also increase your closing ratios as well as your word-of-mouth referrals.

To learn more about the mind of the aesthetic patient, you can obtain a copy of Catherine Maley’s book, “Your Aesthetic Practice/What Your Patients are Saying” at www.CosmeticImageMarketing.com or (877) 339-8833.