Every Day, You’re Marketing. The Question Is What.
Every day in your dental practice, you’re selling something. It’s not just dentistry. It’s you. It’s your team. It’s the feeling a patient gets from the moment they walk in the door to the moment they leave.
The best part? It doesn’t cost a thing. The worst part? You might not realize how much is already being communicated.
Patients Are Reading the Room Before You Say a Word
The first thing a patient notices might be the shoes your admin team is wearing. Or the tone used when someone calls to ask about insurance. Or the posture of the person standing behind the front desk. Slouched says one thing. Standing tall says another. Both speak long before any words do.
Dentistry is personal. Patients are inches away from you. They notice your hands, your nails, your breath. They pick up on your confidence—and they can also sense when it tips into arrogance. Eye contact builds trust. The absence of it erodes it.
Put simply: You don’t need to say anything to say a lot.
The Little Things Add Up to a Big Impression
Speaking of talking, your patients are always listening! How you talk to your assistant. How you talk when you think no one’s around. Whether you gossip in the hallway or keep things professional. People hear all of it.
And here’s the thing about gossip: if they hear you talk about someone else that way, they’ll wonder what you say about them.
By the end of an appointment, patients aren’t just leaving with dental work. They’re leaving with an impression. Of you. Of your team. Of your practice. And that impression determines whether they come back, refer a friend, or quietly move on.
You Get to Choose What You’re Selling
You can’t control how people think and feel, but you can control what you’re putting out there— the variables that help people form their perception of you and your practice. It doesn’t require a marketing budget; it just requires intention. Are you and your team selling professionalism, warmth, and care? Or are you selling something less—without even knowing it?
That last part is the tricky bit. The signals you’re sending are often the ones you can’t see yourself. What aren’t you seeing? An ACT Dental Pro Coach can show you—and help you improve.