
Dr. Barry Katzman
GBgood bang for your buck What I like best is you know exactly what you are paying for and exactly how many patients their service is getting you. There is no guess work. You know to the patient exactly how they are doing for you

Dr. Rahul Patel
GBGreat service - has helped me boost my practice! I was a bit skeptical about signing up to LocalPodiatry as there are tons of online marketing/advertising companies out there which you pay for and don't ever see a benefit. LocalPodiatry has definitely boosted my bottom line (even if not by a dramatic amount) and their customer service has been more than helpful to ensure that I stay satisfied by crediting me for any calls not related to my service. Thanks LocalPodiatry!

Reviewer
GBTotal crooks. Rude. Obnoxious. Avoid at all cost. Where do I even begin with these crooks? In short: they were trying to get our practice to sign up for their bogus services. The rude, pushy sales person ended up screaming at me and hanging up the phone. This was followed up by his manager calling me to excuse his behavior... just to waste 15 more min. of my time and end up yelling at me himself. Seriously? I would never ever sign up with a company whose salespeople conduct themselves so unprofessionally. Treating potential clients this way is unacceptable. I strongly advise you to stay away from this company yourself. And here's why: For starters, the salesperson called us with the words: "I am XYZ and I work with Dr. A & Dr. B. I'd like to refer patients to your practice." Thinking that he's someone affiliated with a referring physician's office we already work with, I connected him with our doctor. Well, Dr. A. and Dr. B. turned out to be local doctors in the same specialty who've signed up with LocalPodiatry.com. What a sleazy way to misrepresent yourself! Once our doctor figured out that XYZ is just another sales person and not someone affiliated with a local colleague of his, he had no interest in speaking with him. He told XYZ to e-mail me some information and that I'll follow up with him. I received an e-mail and sent 3 very simple questions back. By noon on the following day, I had 3 missed calls, 2 voicemails and an e-mail - none of which answered my questions. He insisted that we talk over the phone. (I assume that's because he'd rather not put anything in writing.) Eventually, we got on the phone for what turned out to be 20 rather unpleasant minutes. During our call, XYZ proceeded to trash-talk several other advertising companies, including Doctor.com - which he claimed is a partner of LocalPodiatry. (Slightly off topic: It just so happens that I have a contact at Doctor.com whom I called afterward. He hadn't even heard of LocalPodiatry, let alone the 2 companies working together. When he investigated this further, it turned out that LocalPodiatry is in initial negotiations with Doctor.com - whereas XYZ claimed that they are already partnered. It was even included at the top of LocalPodiatry's sales pitch e-mail. More dishonest practices.) LocalPodiatry charges $50 per phone call from a *prospective* patient, regardless of whether the caller schedules an appointment, shows up, etc. In other words, you can have someone with United Healthcare insurance call your office. If you happen to not accept this insurance - too bad, you are out 50 bucks. There can be many different reasons for people to call your office - you'd be liable for paying $50/each whether they end up being seen by you or not. What a joke! While they claim to have a "quality control department", I read a LOT of reviews, saying how doctors have been charged for all sorts of calls that they shouldn't have been charged for. To name a few - calls from existing patients, calls from people asking for directions or asking about the location, even calls from people saying that they are running late for appointments. That basically means that if 20 people call you through LocalPodiatry, you'd be billed $1,000 regardless. Here's what happened when I pointed this out and suggested that they offer potential customers a true trial period ($50 covering their monthly fee that gets you 2 weeks or the initial 10 calls free-of-charge, so that you can see how their system works.) I was called "unreasonable." I was yelled at. I was told that "no company works for free." - To that, I pointed out that we offer completely free checkups to patients, in order to show them how we work and win their long-term patronage. I was told how that's useless. I was also told how Google Ads and Yelp are useless and people hate them. Eventually, much like XYZ, his manager ended up getting frustrated, raising his voice and telling me off. One of the last things he screamed at me was: "WE ARE NOT GOING TO GIVE YOU FREE PATIENTS." Ok? I never asked for that. I merely made a suggestion for them to include a trial period - something that many companies offer nowadays. If you believe in your system so much, put your money where your mouth is. Anyway. 40 min. of my day wasted. Do yourself a favor and don't make the same mistake - wasting your time with these crooks. P.S.: Dear XYZ, you can flag my review all you want. It's here to stay.

Dr. Alan Meyerberg
GBThe fairest most logical method of advertising I have found satisfaction has been guarenteed for the past many years- no if's and's or But's. You only pay for what you get. If every business worked like this one there would be a lot of happy customers.

Dr. Geller
GBHuge boost to my practice! I was skeptical at first, but after one month we had 16 new patients we would not have otherwise gotten. Ever since that first month we have been filling our credit limit and are considering increasing the limit since this has provided so many more patients than we were able to capture ourselves using social media, webpage, print advertising, and word of mouth. I highly recommend localpodiatry.com