Does this sound familiar? You're spending money on ads, generating leads who eagerly share their contact information—and then they completely ghost you. Worse yet, when your team follows up, they get the dreaded "STOP" text. It's frustrating, expensive, and entirely fixable.
The disconnect happens because most practices fundamentally misunderstand the psychology of digital leads. That person who opted in for your $49 special was experiencing a moment of curiosity or desperation—not making a commitment. By the next day, their pain may have subsided, and your automated follow-up sequence feels like just another sales pitch in their inbox.
I break down the exact reasons your leads aren't responding, starting with the most common mistakes: texting too soon, using obvious templates, sounding sales-focused instead of service-oriented, lacking urgency in your messaging, and giving up after minimal follow-up attempts. The marketing landscape has evolved beyond the "text within 5 minutes" rule that worked a few years ago. Today's potential patients need a more thoughtful, human-centered approach.
The solution requires reframing your entire conversion process. Instead of measuring success solely by booked appointments, focus first on starting meaningful conversations. I walk through how to create personalized automation sequences that feel like helpful assistance rather than pushy sales tactics. You'll learn specific messaging techniques, proper follow-up cadence across multiple channels, and how to train your team to handle these leads with the right mindset.
I also dive into improving your landing pages with authentic video content, properly presenting your value proposition, and creating micro-commitments that build momentum toward booking. Whether you're struggling with Facebook leads or Google ads, these strategies will transform your office into a lead conversion machine.
Ready to stop getting ghosted? Email me at info@enricod.com for my top 10 text templates that are proven to get leads responding again. Your potential patients want help—they just need to trust you enough to take the next step.