Great Events Can Fill Your Building

Are you afraid of events or do you embrace them? How innovative are your events? Are they attracting qualified prospects to your community? The sole purpose of events is to have new prospects walk in your door and say, “Wow! This is where I want to live.” This chapter goes into detail on ideas and how to put on a great event.

What is your definition of an event? For example, the community picnic is a wonderful celebration for all residents and their families. It is not an appropriate event to invite prospects because they don’t want to see the sea of wheelchairs and walkers from the assisted living and skilled nursing residents. Please do not call this a marketing event. The community picnic is an event for existing residents and should be handled by resident services/activity directors. Marketing directors can help, but they need to stay focused on new sales or there won’t be any.

So how many marketing events should you be having? My recommendations:

  • Large events should be held three to four times a year.
  • Small events should be one to two times a month, depending on occupancy needs and your ability to attract new faces.

Let’s break each of them down from start to finish for ideas and planning to produce effective events.

A large event draws one hundred to three hundred attendees. Who do you invite? First on your guest list is your wait list. There are people percolating on your wait list who just need a subtle push to call the moving van and order change of address cards. If your event is done properly, it should result in three to five move-ins in the next quarter. Secondly, one-third of your guests must be new faces. These will come from two sources: advertising and resident referrals. I recommend a quarter page ad in your local newspaper. Please see recommendations for a newspaper ad in Media Buying, Advertising, Public Relations, and Community Building with a Skinny Piggy Bank. The third group to invite is friends of the residents. Many communities get 50 percent or more of their new leads from resident referrals.

Tip: The best way to get resident referrals is to let residents know that they have an opportunity to attend this fabulous event if they bring a guest who is interested in moving to your community. Hello? Knock, knock? Many of your residents’ friends probably qualify age-wise and financially to move to your community. Start informing the residents two months ahead of the event.

Tip: Make the event something exciting enough that residents will be able to enthusiastically endorse it and want their friends to attend. Do not have the CEO or a botanist describing the cross section of a leaf to be the main speaker. You may as well have an event to watch your newly painted walls dry. No offense to CEOs, but you are not a big enough draw. A resident’s Disney family vacation slide shows are for the residents to see, not your prospects. That theme will make your guest feel grumpy, dopey, and sleepy. Now if you wanted to invite the real Mickey Mouse and give away a trip for two to Disneyland…but that might be too expensive and that would be goofy.

To summarize your event attendance goals:

  • Approximately one-third new faces
  • One-third wait list members
  • One-sixth will be second looks (their second time in your community)
  • Less than one-sixth will be residents (who have invited a new face guest)

Planning should start a minimum of three months before the event date. Begin planning with the end result in mind. An event starts with an idea…

This was an excerpt from “Senior Housing Marketing – How to Increase Your Occupancy and Stay Full.” The book has step by step instructions on how to have an excellent event.  http://www.amazon.com/Senior-Housing-

Diane Twohy Masson is the author of “Senior Housing Marketing – How to Increase Your Occupancy and Stay Full,” available for sale at Amazon.com.  If your curiosity is piqued to inquire on Diane’s availability to speak at a senior housing conference (CCRC, independent living, assisted living, skilled nursing or memory care) – please call: 206-853-6655 or email diane@marketing2seniors.net.  Diane is currently consulting in Southern California for Freedom Management Company, the proud debt-free owners of Freedom Village in Lake Forest and The Village in Hemet, California.  For more information: Twitter: @market2seniors Web: www.marketing2seniors.net Blog:http://marketing2seniors.net/blog/

10 Negative Impressions Through the Eyes of a Consumer in Senior Living

Please enjoy this published article I wrote for seniorhousingforum.net for my friend Steve Moran.  – http://seniorhousingforum.net/

Here are my top 10 positive and negative first impressions after touring 15 senior living communities in 3 days. (Part 2)

By Diane Twohy Masson

My top 10 positive first impressions of touring 15 senior living communities were talked about in Part 1.  My goal was to put myself in the shoes of the adult boomer child looking for the right retirement community for an aging senior parent.  What would be his or her overall impression after viewing 3 to 5 senior living communities in a couple of days?  Now, in part 2, let’s talk about how some senior living communities chose to put their proverbial foot in their mouth and some of the reasons why they did not make a good first impression for this adult boomer child.

What were my top 10 negative first impressions of 15 senior living communities?

1)     Driving up and seeing a weed filled garden, the lawn too long or the building in any type of disrepair.  (If they can’t weed the garden on a regular basis, maybe they won’t be able to take good care of my mom on a consistent basis.)

2)     A sea of people in walkers and wheel chairs staring at me as I walked in the building or looked in the dining room.  If they were having a stimulating dining room conversation with their fellow residents or staff, they would not even have looked up at me (instead they were bored and ALL looked at me).

3)     Bad smells – from walking in a dining room and knowing someone needed his or her depends changed to smelling that old building smell.

4)     No activities happening and the residents looking bored.

5)     Having a resident say the food is bad (this literally happened).

6)     Being shown an apartment that was not rent ready with equipment lying around or was being used as a storage room.  This was surprisingly very common!

7)     Not being offered a cold refreshment when it was 90 degrees outside.  This happened at half the communities.

8)     The majority of marketers sat me down and started grilling me on my mom’s medical needs.  It was all about medical questions and they didn’t focus on her as a person or my concerns as an adult child.

9)     Seeing a resident eating alone in the dining room.

10) Experiencing a receptionist on the telephone, hold up her finger to me to wait, say something rude to a resident, hang up, roll her eyes and then ask me what I wanted…

Most of these negative first impressions can be easily corrected with good management and coaching the senior living marketer.  Even the best communities out there can’t predict what some of your residents would say to a tour.  But if your residents don’t look happy – what can your team do to redirect the seniors into an engaging activity?  Look around your retirement community with the fresh eyes of an adult boomer child.   What do you see?  Can you say that all of the first impressions of your new future residents are great?

+++++++++

Diane Twohy Masson is the author of “Senior Housing Marketing – How to Increase Your Occupancy and Stay Full,” available for sale at Amazon.com.  If your curiosity is piqued to inquire on Diane’s availability to coach your senior living marketing team (CCRC, independent living, assisted living, skilled nursing or memory care) or have her put on a sales retreat for your organization – please call: 206-853-6655 or emaildiane@marketing2seniors.net.  For more information: Twitter: @market2seniors Web:www.marketing2seniors.net Blog: http://marketing2seniors.net/blog/

Do Residents Give Better Tours Than Senior Living Sales People?

After touring 11 retirement communities in the last several days, I say yes – to residents being the best!  The senior living sales people who gave me tours – only focused on the real estate.  It was all about showing apartments, casitas and duplexes.  They only asked enough questions about my mom to determine if she could live independently in one of those choices.

The resident tour guide was fabulous!  She wanted to know about mom as a person.  Her questions were geared toward learning about what my mom enjoys now and then proceeded to explain how my mom could experience an even better life and social connections at the retirement community.  The resident brought the lifestyle to life first, by describing all the fun activities in every single community space that I was shown.  For example, when she showed me the swimming pool, she proceeded to describe how the residents enjoy water volleyball and how she personally enjoys it twice a week.    I was blown away.  The life she described was so exciting that I wanted to move in immediately.

After the resident painted the dream of the lifestyle, she then showed me her own beautiful home.  It was one of the best tours that I have ever been on.  She apologized that there was no brochure to give me.  The sales people don’t let her give them out.  She made sure she captured my contact information too.  Now here is the icing on the cake, she called me back two hours after I left to tell me something she forgot.  She shared again, that she would truly love to meet my mom in person.  This resident got an A+ in my view.  Too bad the senior living sales people did not trust her to give out brochures or talk price – maybe they would be full…

Diane Twohy Masson is the author of “Senior Housing Marketing – How to Increase Your Occupancy and Stay Full,” available for sale at Amazon.com.  If your curiosity is piqued to inquire on Diane’s availability to coach your senior living marketing team (CCRC, independent living, assisted living, skilled nursing or memory care) or have her put on a sales retreat for your organization – please call: 206-853-6655 or email diane@marketing2seniors.net.  For more information: Twitter: @market2seniors Web: www.marketing2seniors.net Blog: http://marketing2seniors.net/blog/

Who Answers the Phone at your Senior Living Community on Saturday?

Here are my results after calling 12 retirement communities in the Mid-West on a Saturday morning at 10:00 AM Central time:  The scores were one A+, two B’s, five C’s, one D and three F’s…

I asked everyone the same question, “I am looking for a place for my mom – she lives in your town – how many places are there to choose from and how do you rate?”  This was apparently a tough question for many…ratings were graded higher if they answered the telephone, could be clearly understood, answered the questions and asked for my name and telephone number before the conversation ended.

Only four people asked for my phone number, so those unique individuals were awarded a C+ or above for their heroic efforts.  Two assisted living communities went straight into voice mail, so they received automatic F’s.  The A+ person was an executive director (E.D.) working on a Saturday.  The E.D. was outstanding answering all my questions and asked for my name and phone number.

Three communities had workers that mumbled when they answered the telephone (I literally had no idea what they said and had to clarify if I had called the correct number – which of course I had).   One of the “mumblers” sounded like a 4 year old answering the phone.  I had to clarify three times that they were indeed an assisted living community and then they said no one was available to answer my questions.  They never asked for my phone number and I eventually hung up giving them a F- as a score.

The B- score asked for my phone number three times and inquired when I would be in town to visit.  But when I asked them how they rated for a third time, they talked about the activities or their medical services (without answering the rating question).

A C- answered the phone with an award winning description.   Then they said their boss would be in on Monday to answer more of my questions and never asked for my phone number.

One of the “mumblers” transferred me to the sweetest gal who gave the most sincere and heartfelt description of the community.  The nice gal kept going and started giving too much information that I never asked about like the price, rooms were available and the nurse would need to do an assessment first.  Overall the community was given a C- because of the heartfelt description.

As you can see, there was a wide variety of scores but overall, the majority of these staff were not trained on how to answer the phone correctly and to ALWAYS request someone’s name and phone number.  This same challenge can happen when the Monday thru Friday receptionist takes a break during the week.  Could this be why your occupancy is down?  There is a simple solution – training!

You may want to check out who is answering the phone at your community on a Saturday…

Diane Twohy Masson is the author of “Senior Housing Marketing – How to Increase Your Occupancy and Stay Full,” available for sale at Amazon.com.  If your curiosity is peaked to inquire on Diane’s availability to coach your senior living marketing team (CCRC, independent living, assisted living, skilled nursing or memory care) or have her put on a sales retreat for your organization – please call: 206-853-6655 or email diane@marketing2seniors.net.  For more information: Twitter: @market2seniors Web: www.marketing2seniors.net Blog: http://marketing2seniors.net/blog/

Why are Seniors Waiting Longer to Move into Retirement Communities?

When the decision to move to a senior living community is finally made – the seniors tend to be older and frailer.  Many providers blame the economy and accept a lower occupancy as a sign of the times.  The days of having someone move in off the wait list have disappeared.  So it is time to strategize…

Let’s enter the mind of a senior.  Many have experienced painful losses in their stock portfolios in recent years.  Depending on the area of the country they live, their home is worth much less than the inflated value they recognized as truth in 2007.  Many seniors feel they have lost several hundred thousand dollars and can’t afford to move into a Continuing Care Retirement Community (CCRC) with an entrance fee.  Some silent generation seniors are penny pinching again and think it’s less expensive to live in his or her paid off home.   Other seniors are just so attached to their home of 40 or 50 years that they can’t imagine living somewhere else.

Yet as they age, day-to-day living can become more of an effort.  Many of the responsibilities of their home have to be hired out – such as gardening, yard work, window and gutter cleaning, possibly housekeeping and painting.  Many seniors had a do-it-your-self mindset and become frustrated at the quality of workmanship that hired help provides.  Cooking a healthy meal for one or two is just too much work and who wants to wash all those dishes?   Maybe the laundry room is located down the basement stairs, they live in a split-level home or stairs have become a struggle.

Now they have arrived at your CCRC or independent living door because a resident friend encouraged them to come and see it or an exciting event intrigued them enough to leave their home.  This prospective resident is not going to be sold with one visit.  First they have to picture themselves living in your community.   The first impressions are everything, so the food, the tour, the model apartment and enjoying some of the lifestyle are all vital.  This person may need to come to three events such as: a musical event, a cultural event and an educational event.  If possible, they need to experience the events in different parts of your community.   Hearing testimonials from vibrant residents or having opportunities to interact with lively residents can be very helpful.

Your on-going monthly phone call to this prospective resident should be full of encouragement and discovery to learn what they really enjoy most in life.  Maybe they swam at the local pool every morning for 40 years, but now the winter darkness is stopping them from driving.  Or maybe they enjoyed his or her subscription to the symphony, but now they can’t drive in the dark and their best friend died.  Wouldn’t it be nice if they did not have to “drive” to go to a pool, a gym, see live musical entertainment, enjoy an educational program or share a glass of wine with a friend?

What moves this type of person to give up their home?  It’s to have a vividly painted lifestyle that is 10 times better than their current situation.  At that point the perceived loss in their home value is no longer a factor.  They realize that their home has become a ball and chain and they want the freedom and conveniences that your retirement community can offer them.  It can take several months or even a year for seniors to make this decision.  A health setback or scare always speeds the process up.  Who will they think of first when they are lying in hospital recovering from a hip surgery?  Why the community that called them every month and invited them to events of course…

Selling Lifestyle is Key in CCRC and Independent living Senior Sales.  Is this helpful?

Diane Twohy Masson is the author of “Senior Housing Marketing – How to Increase Your Occupancy and Stay Full,” available for sale at Amazon.com.  If your curiosity is peaked to inquire on Diane’s availability to coach your senior living marketing team (CCRC, independent living, assisted living, skilled nursing or memory care) or have her put on a sales retreat for your organization – please call: 206-853-6655 or email diane@marketing2seniors.net.  For more information: Twitter: @market2seniors Web: www.marketing2seniors.net Blog: http://marketing2seniors.net/blog/