06/12/2026
Your front desk's voicemail greeting is probably costing you patients you don't know you're losing.
Here's the typical pattern. A new patient calls during a busy moment. Phone rings out. They hear:
"You've reached [Practice Name]. Our office hours are Monday through Friday, 8 to 5. Please leave a message and we'll get back to you."
A significant chunk of those callers never leave a message. They hang up and call the next clinic on Google.
Of the ones who do leave a message, the front desk listens to it, calls back, gets the patient's voicemail, and leaves a generic "Hi, I'm returning your call about physical therapy. Give us a call back when you can." That patient often never calls back either.
Both messages have the same problem. They give the patient nothing specific to act on.
Here's what changes the math.
Your inbound voicemail greeting:
"Hi, you've reached the team at [Practice Name]. If you're calling about an appointment, leave us your name, your phone number, and a sentence about what's going on. We'll personally call you back within an hour during business hours. Most of our new patients can be seen within the same week."
Your outbound callback script when you reach their voicemail:
"Hi [Name], this is [Front Desk] from [Practice Name]. I'm returning your call about [the specific thing they mentioned in their message]. I have an evaluation slot available this Thursday at 10 AM and one at 2 PM on Friday. Text me back at this number or call us, and I'll hold whichever works for you. Either way, I'll try you back tomorrow morning if I don't hear from you."
Both scripts do the same thing the generic ones don't. They name a specific next step, commit to a timeline, and include a text option (which most patients prefer to a return call).
For a practice taking 5 to 8 missed calls a week, dialing in this combination typically adds 3 to 5 new patients a month, or roughly $4,500 to $7,500 in monthly revenue. Patients you were already getting on the phone. You just weren't closing the loop.
We wrote this script and four others into a free PDF for adult outpatient PT private practice owners. The other four cover the "how much will this cost" call, the "I'll think about it" stall, the mid-care drop-off, and the patient who's shopping three clinics.
Link in the comments.