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Demographics and Demand for TCM

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I've two opposite experiences with advertising. A) It didn't work. Period.

B) It worked so well that I had to cancel the ad.

 

SITUATION A - I was soliciting patients for my private practice. Using

print - small box ads in the Tucson Weekly and inserts in the Chamber of

Commerce monthly newsletter, speaking engagements, 100 kiosk postings per

month (by a service), booths at a citywide health fair advertised on the

radio, and a yellow pages ad all added up to less than 20 new patients over

a 5 year period. The 10 yellow pages respondents I fervently wished I had

never laid eyes on.

 

SITUATION B - I was offering treatment in a not-for-profit clinic with

charges on a sliding scale. I bought 13 weeks of a classifed listing in

the Tucson Weekly. The clinic had 20 patient contact hours per week to

fill. At the end of our first 10 weeks of operation the clinic was booked

8 weeks in advance and there was a waiting list. I canceled the ad so that

the long wait didn't create a negative image of the clinic.

 

From my perspective, the problem isn't a matter of promotional techniques.

It's creating access to TCM for mainstream America. There's a huge human

demand but very limited dollar demand for our services.

 

Joe.

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Joe,

 

Out of curiosity, what was the sliding scale like (i.e. what was the range)?

 

Joseph Balensi wrote:

 

> SITUATION B - I was offering treatment in a not-for-profit clinic with

> charges on a sliding scale. I bought 13 weeks of a classifed listing in

> the Tucson Weekly. The clinic had 20 patient contact hours per week to

> fill. At the end of our first 10 weeks of operation the clinic was

> booked

> 8 weeks in advance and there was a waiting list. I canceled the ad so

> that

> the long wait didn't create a negative image of the clinic.

>

> >From my perspective, the problem isn't a matter of promotional

> techniques.

> It's creating access to TCM for mainstream America. There's a huge human

> demand but very limited dollar demand for our services.

>

>

 

 

 

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Joseph Balensi wrote:

<snip>

> SITUATION A - I was soliciting patients for my private practice

<snip>

> all added up to less than 20 new patients over a 5 year period.

<snip>

> SITUATION B - I was offering treatment in a not-for-profit clinic

> with charges on a sliding scale

<snip>

> the clinic was booked 8 weeks in advance and there was a waiting

> list. I canceled the ad so that the long wait didn't create a

> negative image of the clinic.

>

>> From my perspective, the problem isn't a matter of promotional

>> techniques.

> It's creating access to TCM for mainstream America. There's a huge

> human demand but very limited dollar demand for our services.

Hi Dr. Joe!

 

Certainly is a riddle. I offered very low rates and got very little, you

offered sliding scale and got swamped. I know, you created the

impression that " the rich " were supporting the clinic. <s>

 

Regards,

 

Pete

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