At a recent dental office managers meeting, we had just finished sharing several “success stories” about how we managed to cut several of our top clients’ monthly new patient numbers in half. Then the room went dead silent. You could hear a pin drop. The audience was waiting for the punch line when we explained ourselves to allay their fears and reassure the doctors in attendance that we were not a couple of lunatics bent on laying waste to flourishing practices.
SHIFT NO. 1
Stop viewing marketing as the silver bullet that cures all practice ills. In our new book, The 25 Surefire Ways to Destroy Your Dental Practice, this one is chapter 15. We cannot begin to tell you how often we encounter established practices with a solid patient base that are seeing 20, 30, or even 50 or more new patients a month but are struggling to meet their growth and expansion goals. Why? For several reasons, first of which is that of all ways to grow a practice, external marketing is the most expensive and least effective.
SHIFT NO. 2
The best way to build your practice is from the inside out. Unless you are new to practice, have recently relocated, or all your patients currently in recare have healthy mouths free of disease and decay, with no desire to improve the appearance of their teeth (and have already referred all their family and friends for care), then you have no need to look externally from your practice to meet all of your professional goals. There may be other reasons, but the point here is you have developed hundreds, perhaps thousands, of trusting relationships with your existing patient base. These patients are more likely to follow your treatment recommendations based on the rapport and understanding you have gained over the months and years they have come to the office to see you and your hygiene team. It is often forgotten that we have a radically different viewpoint than most of the outside world toward dental health, and it often takes time to educate patients and change their viewpoint. Your existing patients who are in recare should share more of your viewpoint from the repeated learning experience each visit to your office has cultivated.
SHIFT NO. 3
Patient education is the cornerstone of your practice. Patient education is probably the most neglected area of patient retention, yet it is by far the most important. It can make or break a practice. It is the difference between smoothly running, profitable practices with high patient compliance and treatment acceptance versus those that are not. If there were only one thing you decided to do to turn the tide of practice success in your favor, it would be to implement a strong patient education system.
CONCLUSION
For many practices, it is a major “shift” to give patient education its rightful importance and make it above all else the foundation for growth and expansion of the practice. When patients completely understand and agree with you, your treatment philosophy, your standard for care, and why you operate your practice for their benefit, they will accept it, comply with it, and value it.
ceptance, and happier, healthier patients who refer other quality relationships to you.
Mr. Kadi and Mr. Massotto are the managing partners of Staff Driven Practices. They have been nationally recognized by ABC, FOX, CNN News, Entrepreneur magazine, and Dentistry Today. After 10 years of business consulting success, Mr. Kadi and Mr. Massotto joined forces to use their extensive expertise in business and people development to master their application in the dental field. Since 1997, their unique processes have helped create fulfilling lives for dentists and their teams. If you wish to receive a copy of their book, The 25 Surefire Ways to Destroy Your Dental Practice, call (973) 812-2188 or e-mail gary@staffdriven-practices.com.