Win back clients who dropped off mid-program
Draft a warm, no-pressure check-in for clients who stopped coming, so more of them finish the job they started.
What you’ll do
- Describe the kind of client who tends to drop off.
- Ask for a warm, no-pressure check-in that invites them to book.
- Review the tone and send it to the right clients.
Common questions
Should I mention the client's injury or condition in the message?
Keep it general and warm rather than clinical. The lesson shows you how to write a genuine check-in that doesn't reference health details in a way that could feel intrusive or uncomfortable.
What if the client dropped off because of a bad experience at the clinic?
A warm, low-pressure message is still appropriate — it opens the door without assuming. If they reply with a concern, that's a conversation for your team to handle directly. The lesson keeps the tone caring, not assuming everything is fine.
Do I need to tell the AI who the client is or what their treatment was?
No. Describe the situation in general terms — 'a client who was mid-way through a back rehab program and stopped attending' — without names or identifying details. The draft will still be personal enough to personalise lightly before you send.
Is there a risk this looks spammy or unprofessional?
Not when the message is warm, brief and genuinely caring in tone — which is exactly what the lesson produces. You review and adjust it for your clinic's voice before anyone receives it.
Can I reuse one message for multiple lapsed clients?
Yes — the lesson shows how to draft a single base message you can adjust slightly per client before sending. You review each version before it goes out.