Discussing Health Issues to Market Yourself
Saturday, February 2nd, 2008Do you think it’s worth running a natural health ‘open evening’ to discuss health issues and as an aside promote my practice? I’m a massage therapist, reflexologist and Reiki practitioner.
Hannah, that is a great idea and it is very much worthwhile.
Here are some things to think of:
- Plan it on an ongoing and consistent basis
Running evenings like that as a once-off might not bring the results you are looking for. Over time, people get to value them and tell their friends. - Give your participants value
They need to leave, blown away by what they have learned and how that has positively impacted on their lives. (Could just be emotional support to deal with a specific long-term problem, does not have to be a quick fix). - Target your market well
Choose topics that you can help with and let the people you want to treat know. As an example if you work with older people, hold the evenings in retirement villages. - Invite your friends
A bigger group is always more exciting for the participants. The networking they do can be a benefit as well. Also, having the support of people who love you helps. - Invite other complementary health practitioners
Guest speakers can deepen the conversation. - Use it for PR
Remember the post about creating newsworthy actions.
Something else to consider is whether to charge for these evenings or keep them free. Free might bring more people, but they might not value it as much.
I ran events like that for health practitioners, talking about different marketing topics. I charged $5. Looking back that was too little, because it did not translate into direct sales and gave a lot of what they wanted already.
With a harder sales approach (e.g. offering a discount if they purchase something that evening) it might work. I don’t use that because I do not think that it builds positive long-term relationships.
So if you do not expect quick sales, but want to build your network long-term, it is a great way of achieving it.



