The Only Online Marketing Blog for Dentists You'll Need
The Only Online Marketing Blog for Dentists You'll Need
Do you want your practice to be more successful? To be seen as 'The' best in your area? Sure you do. But you'll never get there if people don't know how to find you. Sound familiar? We can help you be found.
Blog By:
TysonDowns
TysonDowns

A Scorecard for Choosing the Right Dental Marketing Agency For Your Practice

A Scorecard for Choosing the Right Dental Marketing Agency For Your Practice

6/20/2026 2:53:24 PM   |   Comments: 0   |   Views: 144

Choosing between dental marketing companies is harder than it looks, and most of the difficulty comes from the fact that every agency says some version of the same thing.

They know dental SEO. They run Google Ads. They build websites. They understand patient growth.

That's fine to say. But it doesn't tell you anything useful when you're trying to pick someone to actually help your practice acquire the right patients at a cost that makes sense.

Here's what I see most practices do instead: they compare agencies on surface-level signals. Screenshots. Package names. A few case studies. Ad promises. None of that tells you whether an agency can help turn visibility into booked patients.

That's the gap a scorecard fills.

Not every practice needs the same kind of agency. A startup needs a different marketing plan than a mature multi-location group. A cosmetic-focused practice has different needs than a PPO-heavy family office. An implant practice can't judge marketing performance the same way a hygiene-driven general office does.

So the right question isn't "who are the best dental marketing companies?" It's "which firm is best equipped to help this specific practice win the right patients in this specific market?"

Here's the scorecard I'd use.

A Scorecard for Choosing the Right Dental Marketing Agency For Your Practice


1. Dental SEO capability

Dental SEO should be a lot more than writing blog posts and updating title tags, but that's what most agencies default to.

 strong dental SEO provider should understand local search, service page structure, Google Business Profile optimization, review signals, internal linking, technical SEO, and how patients search differently depending on treatment, urgency, insurance, and trust.

Ask them to explain: how they improve visibility for core services, how they handle local SEO for one location versus multiple, how they structure service pages for implants, Invisalign, emergency dentistry, veneers, dentures, and sedation, how they avoid keyword overlap, and how they measure qualified organic growth rather than raw traffic.

If their dental SEO strategy is mostly "we'll write blogs every month," that's a problem. Blog post can help, but they're usually not what's holding back practice in the search results. 


2. Paid search and dental advertising capability

 dental PPC agency should be able to talk about the economics of patient acquisition, not just clicks and form fills.

That means understanding cost per lead, cost per booked appointment, treatment value, patient quality, front desk follow-up, and missed calls. These things are connected. An agency that can't connect them probably isn't running your campaigns with the right lens.

Push them on specifics: Which services should we advertise first? What's the expected difference between emergency, implant, cosmetic, and general dentistry campaigns? How do we track calls, forms, and booked appointments? How do we reduce wasted spend? How often do we review lead quality?

A practice can generate more leads and still lose money if those leads are low quality, untracked, or poorly matched to what the practice actually does well. Agencies that only talk about impressions, clicks, and lead volume are measuring the wrong things.


3. Website and conversion strength

Your website isn't a brochure. For most practices, it's the primary place patients decide whether to call, book, or keep searching.

A dental marketing firm should evaluate it from both a search and a conversion standpoint: page speed, mobile usability, service page clarity, call-to-action placement, trust signals, doctor and team credibility, insurance and financing clarity, appointment request flow, and call and form tracking.

If the  dental website company you are considering treats your new website as a design project only, that's a red flag. A good-looking dental website that doesn't rank or convert isn't doing its job. Looks are the least important part.


4. Local authority and reputation systems

Search engines and patients are both looking for the same thing: evidence that a practice is relevant, trusted, and active in its market.

That evidence comes from Google Business Profile accuracy, review quality and recency, directory consistency, local content, and third-party mentions. Ask how the firm handles review generation, review responses, directory cleanup, name and address consistency, GBP updates, and local landing pages.

A practice can have outstanding clinical care and still struggle to get found if its online footprint is thin or inconsistent. Search engines and AI tools are less likely to recommend what they can't clearly verify.


5. Lead tracking and patient acquisition reporting

This is where more  dental marketing relationships break down than anywhere else.

The agency reports leads. The practice cares about new patients. Those aren't the same thing, and agencies that acknowledge the difference and focus on the new patients will in mos,t cases provide better results.

Useful reporting connects marketing activity to real business outcomes: organic visibility by service and location, call volume, form submissions, booked appointment estimates, lead source, cost per lead, missed calls, and lead quality trends over time.

If the report is mostly traffic, rankings, and ad clicks, it's incomplete. Those numbers can be relevant, but they don't prove the marketing is working.

At Titan Web Agency we use a lead dashboard that our clients  can login and view all incoming leads (forms/calls/texts), the source of those leads, and the nature of the inquiry - including an AI summary, call analysis, call recording, a plethora of reporting options and more. You can see a brief walkthrough of this lead dashboard below.


6. Dental-specific judgment

Dental marketing has details general marketing firms miss all the time.

There are compliance issues, clinical claim limits, insurance details, patient anxiety factors, and major differences in treatment value. Promoting emergency dentistry is completely different from promoting full-arch implants. Ranking for "dentist near me" is different from building authority for cosmetic cases. Getting more hygiene patients is a different goal than building a high-value treatment pipeline.

An agency that understands this will ask about your ideal patient mix, production goals, payer mix, highest-value services, close rate, front desk follow-up habits, and market competition before recommending anything.

If they offer you the same plan they offer every practice, that's your answer.


7. Proof of process

Case studies  are useful but they're not enough. What you really want to see is how an agency thinks.

A marketing agency should be able to walk you through how it diagnoses problems, prioritizes work, tracks results, and adjusts when the data changes. Ask: 

                
  • What would you look at first if our new patient numbers were flat? 
  •     
  • How do you decide whether SEO or paid ads should be the priority? 
  •     
  • How do you know whether a page needs rewriting, rebuilding, or leaving alone? 
  •     
  • How do you communicate when something isn't working?

Specific answers are a good sign. If everything circles back to "more content," "more ads," or "more traffic," that's not a process, it's a pitch.


8. Fit with your practice model

The best dental marketing firm for one practice can be completely wrong for another.

A startup needs speed: local visibility, Google Ads, landing pages that convert. An established practice usually needs SEO cleanup, stronger service pages, reputation growth, and better reporting. A specialty or implant-focused practice needs stronger patient education and more precise lead qualification.

Before you choose anyone, get clear on what kind of growth you actually want. "More new patients" is too vague.

Better questions: Do we need more emergency patients? More implant consults? More cosmetic cases? Better local rankings? Less dependence on paid ads? Better conversion before we spend more on traffic? Better tracking before we make any more marketing decisions at all?

The clearer the goal, the easier it is to find the right fit.


How to use this scorecard

Score each category 1 to 5:

1 = Vague answers, no clear process. 3 = Handles the basics, uneven across the rest. 5 = Specific answers, connects tactics to patient acquisition, shows how results will be measured.

The eight categories: dental SEO, paid ads, website conversion, local authority and reputation, lead tracking and reporting, dental-specific judgment, proof of process, and fit with your practice model.

The score matters less than the conversation it creates. If an agency can't explain how SEO, paid ads, website conversion, reputation, and lead tracking work together, slow down. If they can explain the trade-offs, ask good questions, and show how they'll make decisions for your specific practice, that's a much better sign.


The question that actually matters

The best dental marketing companies aren't the ones with the loudest claims. They're the ones who can connect marketing activity to booked patients.

No single channel carries it all. And no agency that pretends otherwise is telling you the truth.

Before you hire anyone, don't just ask what they do. Ask how they decide what matters first.

That answer will tell you more than anything else. At  Titan Web Agency, it's the first question we ask too. 

Grab a printable version of this checklist on our website here.

 

You must be logged in to view comments.
Total Blog Activity
157
Total Bloggers
4,069
Total Blog Posts
2,085
Total Podcasts
1,685
Total Videos
Sponsors
The Hygienetown Team, Farran Media Support
Phone: +1-480-445-9710
Email: support@hygienetown.com
©2026 Hygienetown, a division of Farran Media • All Rights Reserved
9633 S. 48th Street Suite 200 • Phoenix, AZ 85044 • Phone:+1-480-598-0001 • Fax:+1-480-598-3450