Best Practices for Engaging Patients on Social Channels

Reputation Staff Writer

Introduction

Healthcare can learn a lot from other industries — such as retail, hospitality and even automotive — about how to use social media and online reviews to attract business.

In fact, social channels are now one of the primary ways patients find providers. Consider these findings from a 2016 survey of more than 1,400 patients.¹

This data suggests a strong online reputation on review sites and social channels is essential for continued success as a healthcare system, hospital or medical practice.

“80 percent of consumers report using online reviews as a first step to seeking a provider.”
~SoftwareAdvice

The Growing Role of Social Media

Until recently, specialized healthcare reviews sites, such as WebMD and Healthgrades, were the focus. But now, social networks such as Facebook and Google are becoming more important, based on the volume of reviews they generate. Most people leave reviews for doctors and hospitals on these sites, like they do for hotels, restaurants and other businesses.

Facebook Reviews allows patients to provide online feedback and ratings about hospitals and clinics. Those ratings are easy to spot on a Facebook profile page — they’re at the top, below the banner photo and usually next to the box showing the number of “likes” they’ve received.

Facebook uses star ratings and reviews in its algorithm to determine where a post ends up in the news feed, if at all. So your organization’s visibility in this channel depends on the reviews it receives.2

Google looks at an organization’s entire social presence, including recent reviews and interactions from social networking sites (Facebook, Twitter) to determine rankings in SERPs. A hospital or clinic’s presence on a SERP is critical in helping patients find your locations and doctors.3

“More than 2 million active small businesses pay for advertising on Facebook.”
~ Facebook Business

Engaging in the Social Conversation the Right Way

Whether you like it or not, patients will talk about your providers online. And the conversations they’re having will shape your reputation. Engaging in these social conversations is essential for influencing how people perceive your organization and the quality of care it provides.

Respond Promptly — and Appropriately — to Comments and Reviews

One of the most important things a healthcare organization can do is respond to social posts and reviews — whether positive or negative. Using social media to address customer queries and complaints goes a long way toward building brand loyalty and trust. Sixty percent of patients feel it’s “very” or “moderately important” for doctors to respond to online reviews.4

When a patient complains about a provider on a social page, don’t ignore it. A well-crafted response addressing the reviewers concerns, while ensuring you maintain patient privacy, can turn it around in your favor — 95 percent of unhappy people will return to a business if an issue is resolved quickly and efficiently.5

How Your Organization Responds is Key

Here are some basic guidelines:

“78 percent of people who complain to a brand via Twitter expect a response within an hour.”
~Lithium

Promote and Enhance Your Organization’s Reputation

In addition to responding to comments and complaints on social media and review sites, active engagement is needed to influence and optimize your organization’s online reputation. An active social presence will help build trust and awareness, drive traffic to providers’ websites and, ultimately, result in more walk-ins, appointments and admissions.

Online Reputation Management (ORM) platforms can help providers engage the right way, by enabling the following proven strategies:

Request Feedback to Build Positive Review Volume

Getting a negative review or comment on Facebook or another social media site isn’t the end of the world — and, as it turns out, it’s pretty rare. Only 6 percent of patients leave “very negative” or “somewhat negative” feedback — which means the other 94 percent leave positive feedback.7 The implication? It behooves you to ask for feedback of any kind.

Best practice is to empower patients by making it easy for them to voice opinions about your services. Find an ORM tool that enables your organization and providers to send emails with links or buttons to popular review sites. Tablets at the front desk of an office or clinic enable patients to post reviews immediately following a visit.

Finally, leverage Online Reputation Management software to reach out to patients through social media, email and text. The more reviews, the better. A single negative comment is going to have much less of an impact alongside 10 positive ones.


1 SoftwareAdvice
2 Facebook Business
3 SearchEngine Journal
4 SoftwareAdvice
5 PeopleClaim
6 Lithium
7  SoftwareAdvice

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