For a Dubai clinic, a patient who calls has already decided to call. They have not yet decided to book. The 60 seconds between hello and the first concrete answer is where the booking is won or lost.
Most front desks treat the first 60 seconds as administration. They greet, take a name, ask what the patient wants, quote a price, and end the call hoping the patient calls back. They almost never do.
What patients are actually asking in the first 60 seconds
They are not asking about price, even when they say they are. They are asking three things at once:
- Are you the right clinic for what I need?
- Can you see me soon?
- Am I going to feel comfortable here?
If your front desk only answers the price question, the patient has not got what they came for. They hang up to think, and they think with a competitor who answered all three.
The 60-second script we use for Dubai clinics
Greeting (5 seconds). Clinic name, then your name, then a question that signals you can help. "Hello, this is Sarah from Dubai Aesthetic Clinic. How can I help you today?"
Confirm the service (10 seconds). Repeat what the patient is asking about in their words. "You are asking about hydrafacial, is that right?" Patients want to feel heard before they feel sold.
Show you can help (15 seconds). One concrete sentence that tells them you do this every day. "We do around 30 hydrafacial treatments a week, our doctor is here today, treatments take about 45 minutes."
Quote a range, not a number (10 seconds). "It starts at AED 599 for the basic, AED 999 for the deluxe. Most patients pick the deluxe." Range is honest. Single price is a trap.
Offer two slots (15 seconds). "I have an opening today at 4pm or tomorrow at 11am. Which works better?" This is the close. If you skip it, you have given the patient permission to leave.
Hold the slot (5 seconds). "Let me hold the 4pm for you for one hour while you confirm. Can I take your name and WhatsApp?" A held slot is a soft booking.
The opening lines that kill the call
"What is your budget?" Sounds professional. Tells the patient you are about to charge them what they will pay. Bad start.
"Let me transfer you to..." Patients in Dubai have learned that a transfer means a 5-minute hold and then a different person who asks the same questions. Most do not wait.
"Can I get your details first?" Reasonable, except the patient has not yet decided they want to be in your database. Ask after you have given them a reason to stay on the call.
How to test if your front desk script is working
Listen to 10 recent calls. Count two things:
- How many calls produced a concrete next step (appointment, held slot, follow-up at a defined time)?
- How many calls ended with "ok, thanks, I will think about it"?
If the second number is more than 30 percent, the script is leaking bookings. The fix is rarely a longer call. It is a tighter first minute.
The point
Google Ads in Dubai gets the patient to dial. The first 60 seconds of the call decides whether they walk in. Most clinics spend thousands of dirhams a month buying that dial and zero dirhams training the receptionist who answers it. That is the wrong place to save money.
Written by Youssef Hajri, Founder of Access One. Access One is the first Healthcare Google Partner in the UAE. We run Google Ads for clinics, home healthcare and salons in Dubai. Get in touch.