7 replies
I'm thinking about starting a pay per call system with dentist. How much should I be charging. I'm going to be routing the # directly to the dental office so I wont know anything about the patient or the services they want. What would be a fair price for both parties?
#call #dentist #pay
  • Profile picture of the author uniquecontentclub
    Have you spoke with any dentists about this service? They may be able to give you a better idea what they have previously paid, willing to pay, etc.
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  • Profile picture of the author 9999
    I have been wondering, how do you track phone calls and email inquiries?

    Is this basically on the honor system? or how do you know that this potential client turned into a client?
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    • Profile picture of the author baconman
      Originally Posted by 9999 View Post

      I have been wondering, how do you track phone calls and email inquiries?

      Is this basically on the honor system? or how do you know that this potential client turned into a client?
      I defnitely wouldn't do an honor system. Business owners will eventually take advantage of that. I currently have call recording and tracking and can monitor the calls when they come in.
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  • Profile picture of the author ADukes81
    I do pay per call for a dentist and it was my first lead generation plan and it hasn't been easy. I use Kall8 to track phone calls. I send a daily report to her and the receptionist lets me knows what calls are legit and what are not. Dentists get a TON of marketing calls (Yelp/Yodle/YP/etc.)

    I would advise to have a solid plan. I have learned what NOT to do. We started last June and things are starting to work out now.

    I just signed up an attorney for pay per call, but hope my plan works out better than the dentist.

    Would be more than happy to talk about it more if you want to PM me.
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    • Profile picture of the author dakar
      Originally Posted by ADukes81 View Post

      I do pay per call for a dentist and it was my first lead generation plan and it hasn't been easy. I use Kall8 to track phone calls. I send a daily report to her and the receptionist lets me knows what calls are legit and what are not. Dentists get a TON of marketing calls (Yelp/Yodle/YP/etc.)

      I would advise to have a solid plan. I have learned what NOT to do. We started last June and things are starting to work out now.

      I just signed up an attorney for pay per call, but hope my plan works out better than the dentist.

      Would be more than happy to talk about it more if you want to PM me.


      Hey . I'm working on a friends dental pratice that she just opened. Would you care to share any tips?

      We're doing Adwords PPC right now. And very little SEO, buit that's what I'll be working on next.

      I'm also thinking of signing up for a virtual number so that I can keep track and listen to the phone calls. Right now, the dental office tells me the stats, by asking the patients "how did you hear about us". If they say google, then I know it was the PPC.

      I don't have a landing page. I just send them to the site's main page.

      Thanks!
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  • Profile picture of the author Steve Holmes
    Sell leads for 10 - 15% per sale with dentists.

    VERY profitable. Just make sure they have a good reputation, speak to them on your phone and if you get on - go for it.
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  • Profile picture of the author vndnbrgj
    You can use CallFire.... for a tracking number.
    Just the number is $1/month plus some pennies a min.
    They have a whisper option. Which means, when a future customer calls your dentist, before the receptionist speaks to the customer, the receptionist can hear something like "Incoming customer from BaconMan"
    Then the receptionist knows it's your lead.

    They also have a recording option. Where you can record the calls. Depending on where you are, check the legalities of recording a call. In most cases, just one party has to know the call is being recorded, and that one party will be your dentist.

    Then, you can listen to the calls. Your job is to get the calls, their job is to sell the customer on their office. (But pre-selling the customer doesn't hurt either )
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