| Why
One-Minute Messages Are Key
By
Peter G. Fernandez, DC
Years
ago, I learned a very valuable practice-building lesson
from a patient. She worked as a receptionist for a
world-renowned orthopedic surgeon. After six months
of working for this surgeon, she said to him, “Dr.
Jones, I’ve noticed you say the same thing to
every patient. You are just like a Chatty Cathy doll;
someone pulls the string in your back and out comes
a ‘canned’ set of words.” He smiled
and said, “You noticed!” and explained
that after realizing that his practice had deadlocked,
he was determined to find the culprit.
“I
reviewed everything from promotions, to service, to
interior décor, and finally found the reason
- me!” the surgeon told my patient. “I
realized that when I explained to my patients what
I wanted them to do, I would over-talk and use up
valuable time with excessive, ineffective verbiage.”
The
surgeon wrote down everything he explained to his
patients the most, and then reduced each to a clear
explanation that patients could easily understand
and accept.
“I
memorized each one and found that not only was my
talk time cut in half, but also my patients did not
have to ask as many questions as before,” he
said. “This created more available time in my
schedule, which acted as a vacuum and was soon filled
with more patients.”
This
lesson could be instrumental in helping you build
your practice. For example, one experienced DC who
has built one of the largest, most respected personal
injury practices in the country says: “If you
want a PI practice, you have to tell your patients
about it. Tell them how you are specially trained
in the diagnosis and treatment of whiplash injuries,
and that you testify in court on behalf of your injured
patients. Your patients will start referring personal
injury patients to you. If you don’t tell your
patients you practice PI, you won’t get their
personal injury referrals. It’s that simple.”
The
One-Minute Message
Based on this idea of talking to patients about the
services you provide, you need to analyze your practice.
What is it that you want to tell your patients? Write
out your own one-minute messages in clear, easy-to-understand
phrases. When you have finished writing your one-minute
messages, have someone without health-care knowledge
review them for you. Memorize them until you’re
able to convey them to patients in one minute or less.
Here
are some examples of one-minute messages that will
enable you to see more patients in less time, generate
more referrals, and help you create a thriving practice:
·
Explain chiropractic. “Chiropractic is the science
of diagnosing and correcting nerve pressure. Once
nerve pressure is corrected, your body can return
to functioning normally.”
·
Convert a prospective patient’s questions into
an appointment. “Yes, Mr. Smith, I’ve
had a lot of success
taking care of disc problems, but in your particular
case, I would need to do an examination on you to
determine if you have the type of disc problem I can
help. I know what my schedule looks like. I could
see you this afternoon, or tomorrow. Which would you
prefer?”
·
Explain what an adjustment does. “I am putting
this bone back in place, freeing up the nerves that
are being pinched. When the nerves are free, the nerves
will heal and the feeling in your hand will return!”
·
Keep patients on schedule. You might say, “Mrs.
Smith, to get you well, I must keep your vertebrae
in place at all times so that your injured nerves
heal. When you miss a visit, your vertebrae slip out
of place, pinching and irritating your nerves again,
interrupting your healing process.”
·
Stimulate referrals. Make “thank you”
telephone calls to patients who refer to your office.
Also, let patients know that you have a referral practice.
·
Discuss patients’ congenital problems. For example,
for patients with scoliosis, let them know that their
children inherit their internal structures, such as
their spine. “You have a curvature of your spine
and the odds are your children have inherited the
same distortion. I’d like to examine your children
to see if they have inherited your spinal curvature.
If they have, I might be able to fix their problem
before it gets bad.”
·
Tell patients about your specialty. Tell your patients
about the special technique you use, or the conditions
you specialize in treating. Some DCs like to think
they take care of all chiropractic-responsive conditions,
but if they would make an honest evaluation of their
practice, they would find the majority of their patients
come in for three or four health conditions. The fact
is, we automatically attract patients with health
problems that we are the most successful at treating,
and simply don’t attract those patients with
conditions that we think we are good at taking care
of, but aren’t.
·
Turn almost every conversation to your specialty.
When you are adjusting patients, tell them their subluxation
or health problem is “just like” a subluxation
or injury that you have treated other patients with
in your specialty area of care. For example, if your
specialty is sports injuries and you are adjusting
the cervical spine, tell your patient, “This
vertebrae is out of place, just like the vertebrae
that get knocked out of place when people play football.
I take care of a lot of athletic injuries. As a matter
of fact, it’s my specialty.
I
fix a lot of people with spinal vertebrae out of place
just like yours.”
Dr.
Fernandez is a 1961 Logan College graduate and past
president of the Florida Chiropractic Association.
Dr. Fernandez has focused on building successful practices
and consulting with chiropractors for 30 years. He
can be reached at Fernandez Discipline, 10733 57th
Ave. N, Seminole, FL 33772; 800-882-4476, drpete@drfernandez.com;
or visit his website at www.drfernandez.com
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