We just launched! Get the cheapest price for your ads before they increase forever.Start now We just launched! Get the cheapest price for your ads before they increase forever.Start now
Podcads

Used by ecommerce brands, agencies, and creators.

Email List Building Dental Practices Ads on Twitter/X

Grow your email list with podcast-style lead gen ads. For dental practice brands advertising on Twitter/X, this means email list building creative that matches 16:9 and 1:1, 15–60s specs, speaks to independent dental offices, and addresses dental anxiety keeps millions of potential patients from booking appointments.

Dental Practices + Twitter/X + Email List Building — a specific playbook.

Platform specs: 16:9 and 1:1, 15–60s for Promoted Video.

Timeline: Ongoing, paired with lead magnet testing.

Products like new patient appointments and cosmetic consultations.

Patient lifetime value: $3,000–12,000

Dental Practices avg value

Ongoing, paired with lead magnet testing

Campaign timeline

16:9 and 1:1

Twitter/X format

Why dental practice email list building works on Twitter/X

Twitter/X is real-time conversation and trending topics. For dental practice brands running email list building campaigns, that means your podcast-style ads reach independent dental offices in the environment where they are most receptive — scrolling through Promoted Video content.

Most people avoid the dentist out of anxiety, not apathy. Podcast-style ads let dental practices address that fear directly in a warm, conversational tone — describing the gentle experience and modern technology that makes visits painless. On Twitter/X specifically, this conversational format outperforms polished ads because the algorithm rewards watch time and engagement — exactly what podcast-style creative earns.

Dental Practices + Twitter/X + Email List Building is a specific combination that requires specific creative. Generic ads fail here because local competition from corporate dental chains squeezes independent practices.

Dental Practices creative angles for Twitter/X email list building

Acknowledge the dental anxiety everyone feels, describe what the modern visit actually looks like (spoiler: it is not scary), and make booking feel like self-care rather than a chore. Adapt this to the email list building context on Twitter/X: lead with the urgency that email list building creates, deliver the dental practice story in 16:9 and 1:1, 15–60s format, and close with a CTA that matches Twitter/X's conversion flow.

Problem-first: "Dental anxiety keeps millions of potential patients from booking appointments" — then introduce new patient appointments as the answer.

Recommendation: "I have been using cosmetic consultations for email list building and here is what changed."

Objection-handling: address patient concerns head-on.

Launch playbook

Start Ongoing, paired with lead magnet testing. Brief 3–5 dental practice angles targeting independent dental offices on Twitter/X. Generate podcast-style ads with Podcads — each exported in 16:9 and 1:1, 15–60s format for Promoted Video and Timeline Ads and Amplify placements.

1

Brief angles

3–5 dental practice hooks for email list building on Twitter/X.

2

Generate

Podcads creates 16:9 and 1:1, 15–60s podcast-style ads in minutes.

3

Launch

Upload to Twitter/X Promoted Video. Target independent dental offices.

4

Iterate

Read data in 48–72 hours. Scale winners, kill losers.

Common questions

Clear answers to help you decide if podcast-style ads are worth testing.

What Twitter/X format for dental practice email list building?

Promoted Video in 16:9 and 1:1, 15–60s. Podcads generates this automatically.

How many angles should dental practice brands test?

3–5 per email list building cycle. Each testing a different hook targeting independent dental offices.

When to start?

Ongoing, paired with lead magnet testing. For dental practice products, factor in back-to-school dental checkups + new year smile goals + wedding prep season.

Ready to create ads that convert?

Generate podcast-style ads from one brief. More hooks, more cuts, more tests — without the studio overhead.