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Entries in Medical Spa MD (3)

Thursday
Mar312011

Nonclinical Careers: Owning Your Own Niche

"If you can, be first. If you can't be first, create a new category in which you can be first."  - Al Ries & Jack Trout, The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

There's something innately attractive about uniqueness.

To be unique you need to dominate a niche. I don't care what niche it is, but you need to dominate it.  If you can't dominate the niche where you are, you need to create a new one.

How can you tell if you're considered to be unique? Pretty simply. There's a single two word phrase that people use to describe someone who's dominating a niche. You'll hear it used all of the time as a recommendation: "The best".

It doesn't matter what you're the best at, only that you're the best at it.

Now all uniqueness is not created equal. If you're 'the best orthopedic surgeon in the country', you're going to be sitting pretty. If you're 'the best orthopedic surgeon in Evanston, Wyoming', it's less of a talking point.

Perhaps you're in cosmetic medicine like a lot of the docs that I know. It's probable that there are  dozens of plastic surgeons, dermatologists, and medical spas that are in your target area and trying to get to your target clients.  How are you going to set yourself above the noise as the single choice? How are you going to get those patient referrals?

How are you going to position yourself as 'unique' in order to compete?

You're going to find something that you can be the best at.

You may be in family practice or internal medicine. Fine. You're clinical practice is general in nature, but that doesn't mean that there's no uniqueness to be had. You always start where you are.

Sure you have patients that already love you. So what. So does everyone else.

Like everyone in cosmetic medicine, already know that you’re ‘target’ is generally going to be women. You’re right of course, more than 95% of your clients will be female, but what else do you KNOW about the women that want YOU to be their cosmetic medical provider. If you’re like the average medspa, even those that have been doing this for years, not that much. You’ll also be able to deduce pretty easily that women looking for Botox. or fillers, or cosmetic surgery are generally over 30 and less than 55 or so. Right again. That’s a ‘second qualifier’. In fact, those two items put you on par with 99% of what cosmetic clinics know about their Botox and filler patients… but that’s not the end.

If this sounds like you, then you’ve joined the 99% of other providers who think they should target EVERYONE instead of a small, focused niche. In the best case, these clinics limit their success, in the worst, they set themselves up to fail miserably.

You need to learn how to target your perfect client with laser-like focus. With the right niche targeting, you’ll be able to tailor and optimize not only your services, but also your medspas pricing. And when you learn to target your services SPECIFICALLY to this person – making it truly personalized – they will pay virtually anything, and they’ll thank you for it.

Of course targeting this way isn’t easy. It takes a little work so it’s generally ignored by the lazy.

Let’s go through a quick example to set the stage. Imagine that you’re hired by a medical spa or laser clinic and you’re told, “Help us get more patients.”

The first question you ask should probably be, “Who are you trying to reach?”

If the response is, “Well, everybody. We just want a lot of them.” Turn in your notice. You’re doomed.

What’s wrong with this approach?

Think about it this; when was the last time you went out of your way to purchase a product that was just right for you, but it was also “just right” for your retired father and your 18-year-old neighbors kid? If you found such a product would you buy it? Would you pay a premium price for it? Of course not.

You’re looking for something that speaks directly to you. That serves YOUR needs – not your needs and everyone else. That’s why a woman will spend $600 on a Kate Spade handbag instead of the Target knock-off, men buy ‘men’s razors’ when cheaper women’s razors work just fine, and why your perfect target patient will pay you a premium and beg you to treat them.

Take note of this point because it’s important: If you’re targeting to EVERYBODY then you’re selling to NOBODY.

It may sound counter-intuitive but it’s true: The more you niche yourself, the more money you can make.

An excellent example of this is Johnson & Johnson Baby Shampoo. It’s been around forever and you probably already know the ‘No more tears’ slogan. Know who their market is? It’s not babies. Babies don’t by shampoo. In fact, it’s used by adults far more than it’s use on babies. Why, because it’s ‘niched’. It says right on the label who it’s for… even though they know that more adults use it.

You’re not offering exercise videos… you’re P90x who’s blowing the doors of of sales by targeting the hardest workout for the hardest bodies.

You’re not selling cooking lessons…  you’re selling cooking lessons for new brides.

As a generalist, you have to make sure that you are one of the best in the industry, have unique service offerings, and you are considered accomplished in a few other fields. 

If you do it persistently enough, you will OWN that niche. People will not be able to imagine that niche without you.

The secret to commanding premium rates is in identifying a very specific niche that buyers demand, and focusing on that niche while excluding everything else.

There's no really good short cut around this. If you don't already have any unique skill set, you're going to have to develop one. You can't hoodwink everyone into buyers by just saying that you're better. Decide on a single special attribute or 'specialty' and make it your own. Actually BE better at it in some way.

Oh, by the way, you can only pick one niche.

Have the confidence to find your niche, define who you are, then declare it again and again and again and again.  If you target your martket smartly, over time you will own that niche.

Friday
Feb252011

Pricing, Cognitive Dissonance, & How To Charge More

Your profits are in your prices. Where are the psychological triggers you can use to raise your prices and charge more?

You'd like to be able to charge a premium for your services and rake in the big bucks, right? Then why are so many physicians and clinics utilizing the slow death spiral of constantly trying to undercut the competition and using discounting coupon services like Groupon. Why are some physicians able to charge 50% more for Botox and others are trying to give it away and scrambling for any new patient. Where's the disconnect?

Guess what. It's psychological.

Look, there are only two things that determine ANY price.  Put these lines on a graph.

  1. How much you're willing to sell something for.
  2. How much someone's willing to pay for it.

willingness to sell & willingness to buyThat's it. Just those two things, and the second of those is based on psychological triggers more than anything else. (Of course, those two lines cross at some point or you're pricing yourself out of the market and in big trouble.)

As a physician running a cosmetic medical practice or medical spa, when you’re essentially selling time, how do decide where you can set — and then raise — your rates?

Guess what? People actually want to pay a lot.

I learned this as a young painter in New York. My paintings sold between $25,000 and $60,000. Why? It's pretty simple. I wouldn't sell them for less and I could easily get buyers who would pay that amount. I could find lots of buyers that would purchase my work as fast as I could produce it. I had both the skills and business savvy to understand that the quality and uniqueness of my work created the demand and drove up my prices. I didn't just set my prices high. I started by creating a unique niche that I completely dominated; beautiful, realistic women in oil with old world craft. I would never have been able to charge $60,000 for paintings that no one wants and anyone could produce.

Even more, I set myself up as able to demand those prices. Believe me, no one want's to pay $50,000 for a painting. They only pay that amount for a story, and the story is around something that's unique and scarce.

People want to pay a lot for cosmetic treatments.

If you don't know it already, you're in the vanity business. People will pay outrageous prices for vanity. Think of the prices that high end vanity commands; $600 for a felt purse by Kate Spade, $1,150 pumps from Christian Louboutin, the $84,000 Audi A8, the Omega Seamaster watch, any Apple product... The cost is actually integral to the enjoyment.

People want to pay a lot for your cosmetic treatments IF you position yourself correctly AND your treatments are both unique and scarce.

No one wants to pay more for the same coach seat on an airline, but there's obvious satisfaction when someone describes the purchase of an expensive luxury item, even if the price is never mentioned.

If you cater to the lowest common denominator, you'll have to price your services that way too. Specialize in a lucrative niche and your services become not only unique, but scarce as well. Uniqueness and scarcity work hand-in-hand to drive up demand and allow you to raise your rates.

So uniqueness and scarcity are primary ingredients to any offering that want's to charge a premium. We'll deal with both uniqueness and scarcity in other posts. What I want to talk about here is the psychology of pricing and how it relates to your own pricing and your customer loyalty.

Once you have something that's both unique and scarce, you can move on to increasing your prices.

Where's your current pricing?

I’ve met many, many physicians who under price their services.The primary reason that's give is that they have to have low prices to remain competitive in an every more productized marketplace, where every corner has a medical spa trying anything to attract new clients.

This can be true — especially around mass consumer treatments like Botox and laser hair removal — but whatever the reason, charging too little for your services is self-sabotage for two primary reasons:

  1. When you don’t charge enough you end up resenting your clinic. You do too much work for too little money. It’s not worth it. (Try to tell me this isn't the primary reason that so many physicians would like to leave clinical medicine.)
  2. A low price tells patients that you’re not worth it. It may be all smoke and mirrors in the beginning, but if you want to be perceived as the best, you’d better price your services accordingly. Low prices are THE primary indicator of low quality.

I've seen any number of small clinics where the marketing and pricing plans, if there was one, wasn't well articulated or just rattling around in the physicians head. As a result, these clinics, in an effort to build their own business, underbid services on low quality clients. As a result, they ended up with lots and lots of low fee procedures and special offers. Instead of focusing on high quality premium treatments, these staffs are pushed to get things done as fast as possible to keep the treatments profitable despite the low fees. This poor quality of training, service and oversight leads to mistakes. Clients nitpick and try to get additional discounts or haggle about pricing. Accounts receivable grows. Lawsuits happen. It's no surprise when clients start leaving for the next low bidder to open up shop.

Remember, people value things by price. Just one of the reasons why I’m sitting in Starbucks right now drinking a $4 coffee.  (And no, I don’t think $1 coffee is their best move.)

One of the primary components in positioning yourself is how you price your services.

Price Influences Your Perception Of Quality

As price goes up, so does your perception of quality AND pleasure (satisfaction).

I don't know this for sure but I would bet that 'premium' medical providers are sued less frequently and have higher satisfaction rates than lower priced physicians. It could well be that being the low cost provider puts you at greater risk for lawsuits for a number of reasons. (If you have any relevant information to this, please leave it in the comments.)

A well known study out of the California Institute of Technology and Stanford University details how price influences peoples perception of quality in wines.

Antonio Rangel, an associate professor of economics at Caltech, and his colleagues found that changes in the stated price of a sampled wine influenced not only how good volunteers thought it tasted, but the activity of a brain region that is involved in our experience of pleasure. In other words, "prices, by themselves, affect activity in an area of the brain that is thought to encode the experienced pleasantness of an experience," Rangel says.

Rangel and his colleagues had 20 volunteers taste five wine samples which, they were told, were identified by their different retail prices: $5, $10, $35, $45, and $90 per bottle. While the subjects tasted and evaluated the wines, their brains were scanned using functional magnetic resonance imaging, or fMRI.

The subjects consistently reported that they liked the taste of the $90 bottle better than the $5 one, and the $45 bottle better than the $35 one. Scans of their brains supported their subjective reports; a region of the brain called the medial orbitofrontal cortex, or mOFC, showed higher activity when the subjects drank the wines they said were more pleasurable.

But the experiment was rigged. While the subjects had been told that they would taste five different wines, they had actually sampled only three. Wines 1 and 2 were used twice, but labeled with two different prices. One wine 2 was presented as a $90 bottle (its actual retail price) and also as a cheaper $10 wine. When the subjects were told the wine cost $90 a bottle, they loved it; at $10, not so much.

In a follow-up experiment, the subjects again tasted all five wines but without any prices; this time, they rated the cheapest wine as their most preferred.

Previous marketing studies have shown that it's possible to change people's perception of how good an experience is by changing their beliefs about the experience. For example,  moviegoers report liking a movie more when they hear how good it is beforehand. Studies show that the neural encoding of the quality of an experience is actually modulated by variables such as price, which people believe is correlated with experienced pleasantness.

The results make sense. Your brain encodes pleasure because it is useful for learning which activities to repeat and which ones to avoid, and good decision making requires good measures of the quality of an experience. But your brain is also a noisy environment, and "thus, as a way of improving its measurements, it makes sense to add up other sources of information about the experience. In particular, if you are very sure cognitively that an experience is good (perhaps because of previous experiences), it makes sense to incorporate that into your current measurements of pleasure." Most people believe, quite correctly, that price and the quality of a wine are correlated, so it is therefore natural for the brain to factor price into an evaluation of a wine's taste.

How 'Cognitive Dissonance' Affects Pricing

Cognitive dissonance is that uncomfortable feeling you get when you're holding conflicting ideas simultaneously. The theory of cognitive dissonance proposes that people have a strong motivational drive to reduce dissonance since it causes internal conflict. They do this by changing their attitudes, beliefs, and actions. Dissonance is also reduced by justifying, blaming, and denying. It is one of the most influential and extensively studied theories in social psychology.

I'm not trying to force a psychology degree on you but  it is useful to have understanding some basic underpinnings of behavior and how they affect pricing, such as why critics don't like your favorite wine, and how wineries get away with charging $500 for a bottle.

Have you ever noticed fans almost never complain about lousy music concerts or albums, yet critics frequently give them poor reviews? What's going on? Are critics just inherently nasty?

Maybe, but the fact is that there's a psychological principal at work that's also in effect every single time you exchange something of value (money) for a product or service.

Here's an example of cognitive dissonance at work.

In a landmark study by Leon Festinger and James Carlsmith, seventy-one male students in the introductory psychology course at Stanford University were asked to spend two hours doing a very boring task, sticking wooden pegs in holes.

Participants were divided into three groups. Some were paid $20 (a lot of money back in 1959). Some were paid $1. And some were told they were volunteers and paid nothing. All were told what their payment (or non-payment) would be before they began.

After two hours of what was surely hellish tedium, participants were asked to rate the 'enjoyment' of the task.

So what do you think? Which of the groups ($20, $1, nothing) thought that sticking pegs in holes for two hours was the most fun?

Here's the answer: The group that was paid $1 found the task most pleasurable. The group paid $20 found it the most boring.

Why? Cognitive dissonance at work.

Here's the way that cognitive dissonance is at work in the real world:

  1. If you are induced to do or say something which is contrary to your personal opinion, there is a tendency for you to change your opinion to bring it into correspondence with what you have done or said.
  2. The greater the pressure used to elicit the overt behavior (beyond the minimum needed to elicit it) the weaker the tendency to change the opinion.

Let's discuss the first point. In the peg study the task was, objectively, tedious and boring, but people who were paid $20 could easily explain to themselves why they did it: they wanted $20. They rated the task as the most boring. People who were volunteers and got nothing could tell themselves they did it to advance science. They found it less boring than the $20 group, but still somewhat boring.

But here's where cognitive dissonance comes in. The people who were paid only $1 couldn't reconcile with themselves why they spent two hours putting round pegs in round holes. Their brain held two dissonant thoughts: "This task is dull" and "I'm wasting my time for a $1." The second statement was 'fixed' and couldn't be changed, so the brain unconsciously modified its belief about the first to decrease the conflict. People decided they were having fun; otherwise they would be fools for doing it at all.

But don't forget the second point; The greater the pressure used to elicit the overt behavior (beyond the minimum needed to elicit it) the weaker the tendency to change the opinion.

This is why the 'soft sell' can be so effective. Using less 'pressure' to elicit the behavior actually results in the strongest tendency for a person to modify their opinion.

Let's apply this lesson to how pricing affects the enjoyment of a product or service.

When you pay for anything; food, Botox, liposuction, or wine — your brain knows the price, and you're pretty sure that you're not stupid. So, if you pay $200 to see a live band and they're all singing off-key, your brain can change its evaluation of the performance to "charmingly gritty and spontaneous" or "incredible live performance". Your subconscious is pushing you to find the experience pleasurable.

But the critic sitting in back didn't pay for his tickets. He's just there to do a job, and his brain knows that. If the concert is bad and he says so, that doesn't make him a fool for going, he's just more objective.

Think about it: How often have glossed over a obvious shortcoming in order to avoid tainting your enjoyment of something you've paid a lot for? I know I do it all the time.

Here's what W. Blake Gray says about cognitive dissonance and wine.

I get a lot of free wine, and I pay for wine frequently also. Even though I'm aware of cognitive dissonance, I still think I'm more likely to give the benefit of the doubt to a so-so wine I order by the glass in a restaurant over a wine I taste in a professional setting. I'm paying for it, I'm no fool, it can't be that bad.

There are several implications here:

  1. Why do fans of an expensive wine like it more than the critics? Simple: they're paying for it
  2. The more money the wine costs, the more powerful the effect of cognitive dissonance. You can freely diss Two Buck Chuck, but that overripe $60 Syrah? It must have some good points. Many Napa Valley vintners understand the implication of this: Charge more, and while the wine might be difficult to sell, people who do buy it will like it more. Hows that for increasing your customer satisfaction?
  3. Why does Robert Parker give higher scores to wines than other critics? To his credit, he is well-known for paying for a lot more wines than any other critic. He chooses what to pay for, he doesn't taste blind, and I submit that even for a man whose palate is as consistent as anyone in the business, cognitive dissonance is at work.
  4. Why does wine taste better in the tasting room? There are other factors at work as well, but consider this potential dissonance: "I drove out of my way to get here and chose this winery over its neighbors. Plus I paid a $10 tasting fee." Cognitive dissonance is a good motivator for every tasting room to charge a modest fee. (Sorry, consumers.)
  5. Why don't professional critics rush to embrace funky, expressive wines, especially those in niche categories? We don't have to; we don't have the cognitive dissonance of "I paid $12.99 for this no-added-sulfite 'organic wine' and it smells like feet." Mmm, feet.
  6. How do the Bordeaux first growths get away with those outrageous release prices -- over $500 a bottle for some? In Hong Kong, people are thinking in Cantonese, "I paid $900 for this wine. And I am no fool. This is so worth it." Cognitive dissonance knows no language barrier.

Cognitive Dissonance & Irrational Customer Loyalty

Of course pricing isn't the only factor we're discussing. Let's talk some cognitive dissonance and how it leads to irrational customer loyalty, just what we're looking for.

In a study looking at why cognitive dissonance with dentists and their patients, Duke University behavioral economist Dan Ariely revealed the probability of two dentists separately finding the same cavity in an X-ray as being about 50%. And often, what dentists think is a cavity, turns out to be nothing. All the more odd, then, that as patients, we’re incredibly loyal to our dentists - more faithful, in fact, than to other medical practitioners.

Why? It's cognitive dissonance here as well. In order to rationalize all of the unpleasant poking, scraping and drilling that dentists subject us to, we convince ourselves that our particular dentist knows best:

"Dentistry is basically the unpleasant experience. They poke in your mouth. It's uncomfortable. It's painful. It's unpleasant. You have to keep your mouth open. And I think all of this pain actually causes cognitive dissonance - and cause higher loyalty to your dentist. Because who wants to go through this pain and say, 'I'm not sure if I did it for the right reason? I'm not sure this is the right guy.'"

(Kinda reminds me of Stockholm Syndrome in which people who are kidnapped actually begin to identify with their captors.)

But cognitive dissonance accounts for more than our loyalty to dentists. It also generating increased revenue for dentists and adding to their profits.

And it increases over time.

Imagine that at some point in your dental treatment, you have a choice between two treatments that have exactly the same possible outcome, but one of them is more expensive to you and better financially for the dentist. Which one would you choose, and how would the duration of the relationship with your dentist be affecting that?

It turns out that the more time people have been seeing the same dentist, the more likely the decision is going to go in favor of the dentist. People are going to go for the treatment that is more expensive but has the same outcome. More out of pocket for them, more money for the doctor. So in this case, loyalty actually creates more benefit for the dentists with no better potential outcome for the patient.

Now, while it may sound like I'm advocating standing on a patients toes while injecting Botox... not so.

There may be some effect of cognitive dissonance at work when you're performing a Melasma or other treatment where there's some pain and downtime, but what we really want to focus on here is how pricing your treatments higher, can actually increase both your patient satisfaction and revenue at the same time.

Does A Premium Price Drive Actual As Well As Perceived Value?

I would say yes in many instances.

Take a look at these medical spa training manuals and you'll see that they're more than a big hardcover at Barnes & Noble, much more. But we deliver on those prices since the quality of the content is so far above what you can get elsewhere. This isn't generic information, it's specialized, and it's valuable.

The medical spa staff training manuals are priced where they need to be to make the creation and distribution profitable enough that it's worth creating AND creates an incentive for buyers to actually use the information. Some of the most successful medical spas and cosmetic clinics around are using these training manuals. Do you think that someone who's at all serious about their business thinks anything at all about dropping $300 on a product that can optimize their operations and train their staff? Are you kidding?

Sure, I could give all that stuff away. Perhaps there are those that think that I should. This isn't for them. We give away 99% of everything for free already, but real products that give you the most benefit aren't valued if they're free.

It's not about information. It's about motivation. Paying a premium for them actually gives you more value... and pleasure.

Clarity

Look, you know more about your own situation than I do. I'm not trying to convince you to raise your prices if you can't support it, but hopefully you've got something to think about. There's a lot of obvious, anecdotal and researched evidence that shows that higher prices will make you more money and make your patients happier... but pricing is the second step. Creating a service menu and reputation that is unique and scarce is step one.

Pricing is one of the things that all physicians and medical spas struggle with. It is one of the handful of items that actually dictate how much money your clinic will make and where your profits are.

One last point: You've been reading this post for something like 3 minutes now. Isn't this the most interesting blog you've ever read? Please tell your physician friends. They're no fools either.

References

Marketing actions can modulate neural representations of experienced pleasantness published January 14 2008 in the early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Cognitive Cinsequences Of Forced Compliance Leon Festinger & James M. Carlsmith First published in Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology

William H. Cummings, M. Venkatesan (1975), Cognative Dissonance and Consumer Behavior: A Review Of The Evidence in Advances in Consumer Research Volume 02, eds. Mary Jane Schlinger: Association for Consumer Research, Pages: 21-32.

The Gray Market Report, Why Expensive Wines Taste Better: Psychology 101 W. Blake Gray

Cognative dissonance on Wikipedia

Friday
Dec032010

Print MD - Medical Marketing As A Side Business

Building a side business that utilizes your domain expertise and scales.

Print MD.net is a side business that I've built  to address a very specific need for medical spas and cosmetic practices: how to handle direct mail and marketing with professional design that doesn't break the bank.

Print MD.net is designed to do just that. It's a site where a plastic surgeon or cosmetic practice can get everything they need, from postcards, business cards, appointment cards and posters, all professionaly created and integrated into 'campaigns'.

View the current campaigns

The emphasis on a virtical niche that I have a lot of domain expertise in means that we can offer business cards, posters, referral and appointment cards that all match, ensure the highest quality design and printing, and give a price break. Nice.

Oh, and you can enter your own copy, address and even upload your logo to customize your marketing materials just the way you want. Click here for a demo.

The business end of this is a focus on using technology that scales. A cosmetic practice can now access custom design and professional copywriting for 20% of what it would cost them to produce it and they have the additional benefit of small, on-demand orders. So what if another clinic in another state has the same postcard...

This business model is possible because a typical design agency or print shop has to offer everything, has some hefty overhead costs and is constrained by geography, an online product isn't limited by those constraints. Better yet, there's no additional cost for additional sales.

Of course, developing this kind of side business does come with some risk. All of the effort and much of the cost is invested on the front end so if you build something that no one wants, you're SOL.

In this case, I've combined my own domain expertise in cosmetic medicine with my resources around design, copywriting, and marketing. Since I own a cosmetic medical community (Medical Spa MD), an advertising agency (Wild Blue) and some familiarity with markeing and sales, I'm pretty comfortable that this business will be part of a collective win.

With PrintMD.net, I've designed the operations so that I am able to direct the business without working 'in' the business. All of the fulfillment, customer service, payment transactions and the rest are completely outsourced and it won't matter if the business takes a while to begin to turn a profit.

Since I'll be learing just a much from what doesn't sell as what does, I'll be able to quickly itterate and change direction. If there's a new product that I think may do well, I'll have a platfrom that I can test it with and make a determination to keep, dump or modify it quickly. Since I've developed this business on the side, it's effect is cumulative and I have enough control that I can tweak it constantly.

Of course this isn't the first business that I've started and it certainly won't be the last. The cumulative effect is that I've developed a process that allows me to create value that doesn't require a constant exchange of time for money. Instead, I invest at the beginning. It's only by detemining how the market is reacting to our business that you can make informed decisions. When you start a business of any kind, you'll hear lots of praise about what a great idea it is. It's only when people part with cash for your product or services that you'll know you're on to something.

Businesses always come with costs, even if it's only opportunity cost. So, if you're going to fail, fail fast.

If you're a physician that's looking to build revenue and income from businesses, services and products outside of your clinical practice, we'll be here to help.

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