Activity History. Historical engagement tracking for sent outreach.
Operator Guide
What this page is for: Review what happened after outreach was sent.
What belongs here: Use this page for historical tracking and engagement inspection only.
Where to go next: Go to Lead Review for operator decisions or Lead Database for broader inspection.
This page is historical and operational. It combines sent tracking, scheduled unsent leads, failed deliveries, unsubscribe state, and inbound reply classifications.
Counts and filters on this page combine lead state, outreach events, scheduled unsent rows, and inbound reply classifications.
Hi Ideal Siding Halifax team,
While reviewing your Halifax location page, I noticed the 5.0-star rating and 34 reviews aren't visible above the fold near the "Get a Free Quote" CTA — social proof is effectively hidden from the most critical part of the page.
The only trust signal present is a generic "2500+ Projects Nationwide" stat, which does not reinforce local credibility where it matters most.
The first change I'd test: surface the star rating and review count directly beside the CTA.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi A&H Bookkeeping and Tax Services Ltd — while reviewing your site, I noticed your 28 five-star reviews aren't displayed anywhere on the page, which weakens the first impression for someone evaluating a bookkeeping and tax practice.
That social proof would do a lot more work if it appeared near the hero instead of staying off-page.
A simple first test: pull one or two of those reviews into the hero alongside your star rating.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Dr. Manz Ruben A,
While reviewing your bio page at argylenaturalhealth.org, I noticed the page shows no patient reviews despite 11 existing reviews and a 3.8 rating available — that absence creates friction right before the Book An Appointment CTA, where trust matters most.
The first change I'd test is pulling those reviews onto the page as 2–3 short patient quotes near the CTA.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Tru-Fit Denture Clinic, while reviewing your site I noticed the only visible CTA button is a Facebook "Follow" link — which sends visitors away rather than toward booking.
Your phone number is also buried in a sidebar widget with no framing around it, which makes the next step less clear for someone actively searching for dentures or implants.
The first change I'd test: replace that "Follow" button with a high-contrast "Book a Consultation" button above the fold, and wrap the phone number with a short line like "Call Today — Same Week Appointments Available."
If useful, I can send the first CTA change I'd test.
Hi ADO Endodontic Clinic — while reviewing your site I noticed the hero section's only CTA is "READ MORE," repeated four times across the page with no "Book Appointment" or "Call Now" option visible.
For a clinic where visitors often arrive with urgent dental pain, that creates friction at the highest-intent moment.
Your 4.7-star rating and phone number aren't surfaced in the hero either, which weakens the first impression before anyone scrolls.
The first change I'd test: swap the hero "READ MORE" for a high-contrast "Book an Appointment" button alongside your phone number and star rating.
If useful, I can send the first CTA change I'd test.
Hi Dr. Randy Berger Oral Surgery,
While reviewing your site, I noticed no credentials, surgeon bio, or professional affiliations appear above the fold — and with only 39 reviews visible, the trust foundation feels thin for a high-consideration procedure like oral surgery.
For patients arriving from your GMB listing already in decision mode, that absence creates friction before they even reach your contact page.
The first change I'd test: adding a short trust bar above the fold with your years of experience and a visible star rating tied to your 39 reviews.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Regina Endodontics - Dr. Alysen Phee — I noticed the hero section is not orienting visitors as clearly as it could.
The clearest issue is that the above-the-fold section is not doing enough: the visible headline is 'mission', so the page is asking people to decide before it gives them a reason.
If the offer and next step are unclear above the fold, the page has to work harder to explain itself.
A clearer hero with one obvious next step would do more of the work right away.
If helpful, I can send the first above-the-fold change I'd test.
Hi West Landing Dental Centre team,
While reviewing your site, I noticed the appointment form carries a disclaimer stating requests must be confirmed by a receptionist, which creates friction right at the point of commitment — and there are no visible reviews or testimonials nearby to offset that hesitation.
Your 4.8 Google rating is strong social proof that simply isn't showing up on the page yet.
The first change I'd test: place that star rating directly above the form alongside one short patient quote.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
While reviewing your site, Rochdale Dental Clinic, I noticed the hero section states "Accepting New Patients" but the only CTA beneath it is a generic "Learn More" button — which creates friction for anyone ready to book.
The phone number sits in the header without a paired button, so the next step stays unclear at exactly the moment intent is highest.
A quick first test: replace "Learn More" with a "Book an Appointment" button directly under that headline, linking to your booking form or a click-to-call action.
If useful, I can send the first CTA change I'd test.
Lakewood Dental Regina Dr. Mackenzie Buchan-Watson and Dr. Ray Foraie
drbuchanwatson@gmail.com
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2026-06-27 18:01:02
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Hi Lakewood Dental Regina Dr. Mackenzie Buchan-Watson and Dr. Ray Foraie — while reviewing your site, I noticed the contact form has no reviews or testimonials near it, even though you have a 4.3-star rating across 22 Google reviews that never appear on the page.
That gap weakens the trust signal at exactly the moment someone is deciding whether to book.
A quick first test: pull 3 review quotes directly above the form alongside your star rating.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Queen City Dental,
While reviewing your site, I noticed your 4.5-star Google rating and 42 reviews are not visible anywhere on the page — and with a clinic closure notice as the most prominent message, the hero section does not reinforce trust early enough for new patients considering booking.
A quick first test: add your star rating with a direct Google review link directly beneath the hero headline to surface that social proof where it matters most.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Gold Square Dental,
While reviewing your site, I noticed the hero section leads with a clinic hallway photo but shows no star ratings, review count, or team photos above the fold — despite having a 5.0 rating across 31 reviews. That gap weakens the first impression before visitors ever scroll.
The first change I'd test: placing your star rating and review count directly beneath the headline, alongside a photo and name of your lead dentist.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
While reviewing Cityview Periodontal and Oral Surgery Centre's homepage, I noticed your 4.9-star rating across 424 Google reviews isn't visible anywhere on the page — only unverifiable phrases like "experienced team" appear, which does not reinforce trust early enough near the New Patient Form CTA.
The first change I'd test is adding a simple star-badge widget beneath the headline linking directly to your Google reviews, plus one short patient quote beside the CTA button.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Aurora Sky Dental,
While reviewing your site, I noticed the primary CTA reads "Contact Us" — with no appointment-booking language or mention of new patient availability, it makes the next step less clear for someone arriving ready to book.
The headline currently anchors to location details rather than a patient benefit, so the CTA has no value hook supporting it.
A quick first test: replace "Contact Us" with "Book Your First Appointment — New Patients Welcome."
If useful, I can send the first CTA change I'd test.
Hi Regina Orthodontic Group — while reviewing your site, I noticed your 4.9-star rating across 2,170 reviews appears nowhere above the fold or near your "Schedule Consultation" CTA popup.
That's a significant trust signal missing at the exact moment visitors are deciding whether to book.
The first change I'd test: place the star rating and review count directly beneath your hero headline, then add one short patient quote beside the CTA popup.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Garden Ridge Dental Centre,
While reviewing your site, I noticed the hero section is a full-bleed stock photo with no headline, subheadline, or value proposition overlaid — and on mobile, there's a completely blank white area above the fold before any text appears, which weakens the first impression significantly.
A simple first test: add a benefit-driven headline directly over the hero image, something like "Accepting New Patients in Regina — Book Today," paired with a visible CTA button, fully rendered without scrolling on mobile.
If helpful, I can send the first above-the-fold change I'd test.
Hi YQR Dental Studio — while reviewing your homepage, I noticed your 4.8-star Google rating (51 reviews) isn't visible anywhere on the page, not even near the hero or "Book Now" CTA.
For a high-stakes decision like choosing a dentist, that absence weakens the first impression before a new visitor reaches any other content.
The first change I'd test: add a simple Google Reviews strip with star icons and your rating directly beneath the hero headline.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Revive Dental Clinic — I noticed the strongest trust signals are not visible early on the page.
The clearest issue is that trust signals are not visible enough: the site has 147 reviews with a 5.0 rating but review visibility is false, which leaves first-time visitors with too little proof at the point of decision.
For a trust-heavy decision, that missing proof weakens the first impression.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Aura Dental, while reviewing your site I noticed your 4.8-star rating and 161 Google reviews aren't displayed anywhere on the page — that social proof is completely absent from the patient's decision moment.
With only a generic "Welcome to Aura Dental" headline visible, the hero section does not reinforce trust early enough for someone choosing a new dentist.
The first change I'd test is adding a simple review strip directly below the hero: "4.8 ★ from 161 Google Reviews," plus 2–3 short patient quotes near the Book Now button.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Pasqua South Dental,
While reviewing your site, I noticed your hero section has no visible social proof — your 4.6 rating across 90 Google reviews doesn't appear anywhere above the fold, which weakens the first impression for anyone unfamiliar with the clinic.
The hero currently shows an empty chair with generic copy, so there's nothing to differentiate you early. Adding that star rating directly beneath your headline would be the first thing I'd test.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Broadway Dental Clinic — while reviewing your homepage, I noticed the primary hero CTA reads 'LEARN MORE' rather than prompting an appointment directly.
Given your copy already calls out emergency appointments and new patients, that button creates friction by sending visitors to an informational page instead of a booking path.
The first change I'd test: replace 'LEARN MORE' with a high-contrast 'Book an Appointment' button linked to your scheduling form, plus a secondary 'Call Now' button with your number inline.
If useful, I can send the first CTA change I'd test.
Hi Landmark Dental Office — I noticed the hero section is not orienting visitors as clearly as it could.
The clearest issue is that the above-the-fold section is not doing enough: the hero section contains no cta button above the fold, so the page is asking people to decide before it gives them a reason.
If the offer and next step are unclear above the fold, the page has to work harder to explain itself.
A clearer hero with one obvious next step would do more of the work right away.
If helpful, I can send the first above-the-fold change I'd test.
Hi Uptown Orthodontics - Saskatoon, while reviewing your site I noticed your 4.9-star rating from 242 Google Reviews isn't visible above the fold — and neither are any orthodontist credentials in the hero section.
For a healthcare provider asking patients to commit to multi-month treatment, that absence creates friction right at the first impression.
The first change I'd test: adding a simple star rating line ("4.9 ★ | 242 Google Reviews") directly into the hero alongside a brief credentials note.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Rumley Periodontics — while reviewing your homepage, I noticed the hero section contains zero CTA buttons, and the headline reads only "WE ARE," which leaves the page without any clear next step.
For a specialist practice, that creates real friction at the most critical moment. The first change I'd test is adding a high-contrast "Request an Appointment" button directly beneath the headline, paired with a "Referring Dentists" link alongside it.
If useful, I can send the first CTA change I'd test.
Hi Kensington Dental Centre — while reviewing your homepage, I noticed your 4.9-star Google rating and 55 reviews aren't displayed anywhere on the page, not near the headline, not beside the Schedule Now CTA, nowhere.
For a dental practice, that's a meaningful gap — the welcome section leads with "We are excited to serve Saskatoon" but offers no social proof to reinforce that opening.
The first change I'd test is placing the star rating and review count directly beneath the headline, paired with two or three short patient quotes.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Saskatoon Smiles Dental Studio — I noticed the strongest trust signals are not visible early on the page.
The clearest issue is that trust signals are not visible enough: despite having 150 reviews and a 4.7 star rating on google, no review count, star rating, or social proof is displayed anywhere in the above-the-fold section, which leaves first-time visitors with too little proof at the point of decision.
For a trust-heavy decision, that missing proof weakens the first impression.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi All Smiles Dental Group — while reviewing your site, I noticed your 43 Google reviews and 4.0 rating aren't visible anywhere on the page, including the hero section.
For a dental clinic, that absence creates friction early, especially for first-time visitors landing from search.
The hero currently leads with "Great Dental Services — For every member of the family!" which doesn't reinforce credibility on its own.
A quick first test: pull your star rating and review count directly into the hero, right beneath the headline.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
While reviewing your site, Cityscape Dental Group, I noticed the homepage asks visitors to build a long-term relationship with the clinic — but there are no star ratings, testimonial quotes, or review badges visible anywhere to support that ask.
Your 5.0 rating across 26 reviews exists, but none of it surfaces on the page, which weakens the first impression right where trust matters most.
The first change I would test: pull two or three short patient quotes alongside your star rating and place them near the "New Patients Welcome" section.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Blairmore Dental Centre - Saskatoon Dentist, while reviewing your homepage I noticed your 4.6-star rating across 113 Google reviews isn't displayed anywhere on the page — only generic copy about "friendly and quality care" appears, with no third-party validation to reinforce it.
That gap weakens the first impression for anyone arriving cold.
The first change I'd test is pulling your star rating and two or three patient quotes directly into the homepage body, above the fold.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Idyll Dental team,
While reviewing your site, I noticed your 4.7-star rating across 160 Google reviews isn't displayed anywhere on the page — the only visible credibility signal is an exterior building photo, which doesn't reinforce trust early enough for a high-consideration decision like choosing a dentist.
A simple first test: add a star rating widget with your review count directly below the headline, plus two or three short patient quotes pulled from existing reviews.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Tiny Teeth Pediatric Dentistry — I noticed while reviewing your site that 249 Google reviews and a 4.7 rating are nowhere visible above the fold, which weakens the first impression for parents evaluating a children's dentist. That's a strong trust asset sitting completely hidden. The first change I'd test is adding a simple trust bar just below the hero — "4.7 ★ · 249 Google Reviews" with a link — so credibility is present before anyone scrolls. Happy to send two or three specific placements if that's useful?
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
While reviewing your site, Willowgrove Dental, I noticed the homepage has no visible reviews or ratings above the fold — despite having 22 reviews and a 4.1 star rating available.
That absence weakens the first impression at exactly the point where new patients are deciding whether to book.
The first change I would test: place a simple star rating widget with your 4.1 / 22 reviews directly below the headline.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
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Hi Midtown Dental Clinic - Saskatoon Dentists, while reviewing your site I noticed your 4.3-star rating and 90 reviews aren't displayed anywhere on the page — that social proof is completely hidden from anyone visiting for the first time.
For a dental clinic, that absence weakens the first impression right where it matters most.
The first change I'd test is adding a short review strip with your star rating and two or three patient quotes directly below the hero section.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi 51 Dental (Five One Dental Prof. Corp.) Saskatoon — while reviewing your site I noticed your 4.8-star rating and 23 patient reviews are not visible anywhere on the page.
For a dental practice, that missing social proof weakens the first impression before a visitor ever reaches your services or booking form.
A simple first test: add a review widget directly after the hero section surfacing your star rating and two or three short patient quotes.
That one change alone could reinforce trust at the moment it matters most on the page.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi YXE Dental 8th Street — while reviewing your site I noticed the hero headline "Putting your smile first!" has no supporting proof beneath it.
Your 4.6-star rating across 136 Google reviews isn't displayed anywhere on the page, which leaves that headline unsubstantiated and weakens the first impression for anyone visiting for the first time.
The first change I'd test is surfacing that star rating directly under the headline, paired with one or two short patient quotes.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Canada Building Dental Group Saskatoon — while reviewing your site, I noticed your 208 five-star Google reviews aren't displayed anywhere on the page, even though your hero headline is the first thing GMB visitors see.
That absence weakens the first impression right where trust matters most.
A quick first test: replace "About Our Dental Clinic in Saskatoon" with something like "Saskatoon's Top-Rated Dental Clinic — 208 Five-Star Reviews" to anchor credibility before the CTA.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Broadway Dental Group — while reviewing your homepage I noticed your 232 five-star Google reviews aren't referenced anywhere on the site, which leaves the headline "Dedicated to Providing You with Quality Dental Care" as an unsubstantiated claim with nothing to reinforce it.
The first change I'd test is adding a simple trust bar directly below that headline showing "5.0 ★ — 232 Google Reviews" with a link out to them.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Silverwood Dental, while reviewing your site I noticed the hero section shows only a cropped image of hands with no visible headline or tagline confirmed above the fold.
That empty hero structure means the value proposition isn't anchored at first glance, which weakens the first impression before visitors reach anything else.
The first change I'd test is placing a short headline directly in the hero alongside your existing Schedule Appointment CTA.
Your 4.7-star rating from 102 reviews also isn't visible in that section, which leaves a strong asset buried below where it could do the most work.
If helpful, I can send the first above-the-fold change I'd test.
Hi Kenderdine Dental Centre — I noticed the hero section is not orienting visitors as clearly as it could.
The clearest issue is that the above-the-fold section is not doing enough: the entire hero section contains zero visual cta button, so the page is asking people to decide before it gives them a reason.
If the offer and next step are unclear above the fold, the page has to work harder to explain itself.
A clearer hero with one obvious next step would do more of the work right away.
If helpful, I can send the first above-the-fold change I'd test.
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Hi Boulevard Dental Centre — I noticed one homepage detail that makes the next step less clear.
The clearest issue is that the next step is not clear enough: the only detected cta is 'contact', which makes the next step less clear than it should be.
When the next step is vague, it makes the page harder to act on.
If useful, I can send the first CTA change I'd test.
Hi Lakewood Dental Clinic Saskatoon — while reviewing your homepage, I noticed the only visible CTA is a generic "CONTACT" label with no appointment-specific language, which makes the next step less clear for visitors arriving ready to book.
Paired with a purely introductory headline, there's no directional prompt above the fold to guide action.
The first change I'd test is replacing "CONTACT" with "Book Your Appointment Today" and adding a click-to-call button above the fold.
If useful, I can send the first CTA change I'd test.
Hi Glamorgan Dental SW Calgary — while reviewing your homepage, I noticed your 4.9-star rating and 411 Google reviews don't appear anywhere in the hero section.
That's a strong credibility signal going unused at the exact moment visitors are deciding whether to book, which weakens the first impression the page makes.
The first change I'd test is adding a simple trust bar directly below your headline — something like "4.9 ★ | 411 Google Reviews" with one short patient quote alongside it.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Glenbrook Dental — while reviewing your site, I noticed your 471 five-star Google reviews are not visible anywhere above the fold or near your booking CTA.
The headline "Trusted Care for Every Smile" is a strong claim, but without a star rating or a short patient quote nearby, it does not reinforce trust at the moment someone is deciding whether to book.
The first change I would test is adding a simple "5.0 ★ · 471 Google Reviews" line directly beneath your hero headline.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hunterhorn Dental - Dr. Edison Chan & Dr. Bonnie Wong
drchan@hunterhorndental.ca
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2026-06-27 17:59:19
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Hi Hunterhorn Dental - Dr. Edison Chan & Dr. Bonnie Wong,
While reviewing your homepage, I noticed your 4.7-star rating from 45 Google reviews isn't visible anywhere on the page — only a generic mission statement and cartoon graphic appear above the fold, which does not reinforce trust early enough for a high-consideration decision like choosing a dentist.
The first change I'd test: place a simple star rating widget directly below your headline.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Sarcee Dental, while reviewing your site I noticed the only CTA present is a generic "Contact" label, which gives no indication of what happens next for someone ready to book.
Replacing it with something like "Book Your Appointment Today" would make the next step immediately clear and reduce friction at that decision point.
I'd also test surfacing your 4.9★ / 1,144 reviews directly alongside that CTA to reinforce the action.
If useful, I can send the first CTA change I'd test.
Hi Dental at the Met - Calgary Beltline, while reviewing your homepage I noticed the hero section headline isn't visible above the fold — the viewport is dominated by a testimonial carousel showing only a large quotation mark graphic with no actual review text rendered, which weakens the first impression before any scrolling happens.
That empty-looking blue block occupies the majority of visible screen space while delivering zero persuasive content.
The first change I'd test is repositioning the hero section so it loads above that carousel.
If helpful, I can send the first above-the-fold change I'd test.
Hi Nosehill Dental Centre — while reviewing your homepage, I noticed your 400+ Google reviews at 4.6 stars aren't referenced anywhere on the page, which weakens the first impression for new patients arriving cold. The section directly below the hero pivots to YouTube videos under "all people are awesome" rather than reinforcing credibility at that critical moment. A simple trust bar below your hero CTA displaying that review count with star icons would be the first thing I'd test. Worth a quick look — want me to send two or three specific changes to start with?
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Centennial Smiles,
While reviewing your site, I noticed your 4.9-star rating from 433 patients doesn't appear anywhere in the hero section — that credibility sits entirely off-page where new visitors won't see it.
For GMB traffic landing on your homepage, that gap weakens the first impression at exactly the moment trust matters most.
The first change I'd test: a simple trust line beneath your hero headline — "4.9 ★ Rated by 433 Patients" — paired with one short pull-quote.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi Dimension Dentistry — while reviewing your site, I noticed your 4.8-star rating across 431 Google reviews isn't visible anywhere on the page.
That's a strong credibility asset that isn't reinforcing trust where it matters most — near the Make Appointment CTA.
The only signals currently on the page are a vague 'Health, Wellness & Safety' section with no specifics, which doesn't substantiate patient satisfaction.
The first change I'd test is adding a Google review widget with your star rating directly above the booking CTA.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.
Hi TruSmile Dental Calgary — while reviewing your site, I noticed your 4.9-star rating across 1,358 Google reviews doesn't appear anywhere above the fold.
Visitors arriving from your GMB listing see that strong social proof, then land on a prize-draw popup with no review count or star rating visible — which weakens that first impression before the booking CTA is ever reached.
The first change I'd test: add a simple review count strip directly below the hero headline surfacing the 4.9★ / 1,358 reviews.
If helpful, I can send the 2 or 3 trust elements I'd surface first.