About this episode
In this episode, Barbara discusses:
Why video creates deeper patient trust than traditional advertising, and why trust is the real currency in medicine.
How simple, authentic smartphone videos outperform expensive, polished productions in attracting the right patients.
How familiarity bias makes patients feel like they already know you before the first appointment.
Key Takeaways:
“Stop chasing perfection and start showing up. Patients don’t need a cinematic ad—they need a real doctor speaking clearly and calmly on camera.” -Dr. Barbara Hales
TRANSCRIPT
Introduction: The Power of Video for Doctors
Dr. Barbara Hales 0:02
Welcome to another episode of marketing tips for doctors. I’m your host, Dr. Barbara Hales. Today, we are going to talk about why doctors should speak on camera. Let me start with a question: if you needed surgery tomorrow and had to choose between two surgeons, one had a beautiful website and glossy ads; the other had a simple website but dozens of short videos where you could see them explaining things calmly, intelligently, and clearly. Which doctor would you trust? Most people choose the second one, not because the ads were bad, but because video creates trust, and trust is the real currency in medicine. Today, we’re going to talk about something many physicians avoid speaking on camera, and here’s the truth: you do not need a studio, you do not need expensive equipment. You do not need to become an influencer. What you need is something far more powerful. You need to let patients see who you are, because when patients feel like they already know you, they walk into the office trusting you, and that changes everything. Today, I’ll show you why video builds trust faster than ads, why authenticity beats production quality, why doctors who speak on camera attract better patients, and how to start doing this, even if you hate being on camera, and along the way, I’ll share a few stories, because this shift is happening everywhere in medicine right now. Here’s the uncomfortable truth: Patients don’t trust the m