Author Archive
Giving Recognition and Rewarding
Rewards, Respect and Recognition
Rhonda R. Savage, DDS
Miles Global
As a guide for the doctors and team members, I believe we need to “dial up” the level of praise and appreciation in all dental offices. Praise and appreciation done well is:
- Specific
- Individualized
- Personal
- Timely
- Proportional
- Sincere
- And….it’s ok to have fun! J
Team members need to praise and appreciate their co-workers; doctors need to put the spotlight on what’s done well versus a microscope on what’s not done well. All staff needs to appreciate the doctor and most importantly, we all need to appreciate the patient. To praise and appreciate the patient, you should find one good thing, clinically, that your patient is doing, each time they are in your chair!
Goal setting and goal accomplishments are the mark of a progressive, motivated dental team. The list below serves as a suggestion list for celebrations as well as specific for an individual for a job well done. Feel free to add to this list and ask for your team for contributions:
Celebration Suggestion List:
Give affirmative feedback
Give Chocolate!
Recognize special accomplishments at your team meetings
Give comp time as a thank you
Invite them to lunch or dinner
Give them tickets to a movie/play/cultural event/sporting event.
Send them a bunch of flowers
Let them choose! Ask them to create a celebration list for small, medium and large celebrations.
Recognize them privately.
Write a letter to their spouse, family or significant other
Give special bookmarks
Give a pin that the person receiving gets to pass on in the future:
“SECOND to NONE!”
Give them a certificate to have their car washed and waxed.
Give impromptu cash presents in a handwritten thank you card
Bonus systems:
Bonuses are a great way to reward hard working team members.
Take them on our upcoming SunFun Cruise in March, 2012 to Cozumel, Mexico! For a complimentary copy of our Trip Kitty bonus system and information on our Staff Appreciation Cruise, email me at Rhonda@MilesandAssociates.net or visit our website at DentalManagementU.com
Bonus systems should be motivational, easy to understand and obtainable. Bonuses are considered “extra pay for extra effort” and can be fraught with problems if the office isn’t healthy. Bonus should be earned, not expected. Office bonus programs should also be fair to the practice as a healthy practice, fair to the staff and fair to the doctor.
If your office isn’t happy or productive, we should talk. The first call is complimentary: 877-343-0909 ext 1.
When morale goes up, production goes up. These are tough times, but if you can build team morale, you’ll see a difference in your practice. Effective team meetings, built on trust, goals, fun and enthusiasm, drive a practice forward. Are you slow right now? Just holding your own?
With an increase in praise and appreciation, the entire practice will go up!! With a focus on systems and productivity, morale will go up….gossip and negativity will go down. Your goal should be to keep the patients you’ve got and attract the ones you want: An excited, enthusiastic team can do this for you!
My “Hats Off” to you if you already have a celebration list, a system and a plan for increasing staff morale and you are implementing it! J
Believe in Yourself!
If You Don’t Believe In You, No One Else Can!
By Dr. Rhonda R. Savage, DDS
“When we choose a goal and invest ourselves in it to the limits of our concentration, whatever we do will be enjoyable. And once we have tasted this joy, we will redouble our efforts to taste it again. This is the way the self grows”. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
Describe a time when you took a risk. What was the result? In many practices that I’ve consulted in, the honest answer to the question was: “At this point in my life, I’m having stressful issues (family, work, personal). I don’t take risks. Getting myself out of bed in the morning, getting dressed, and getting myself to work is about all the risk I want to take, thank you very much! If you’ve felt like this, you are not alone. A full 50% of our dental population is more comfortable not taking risks.
Of all that influences us in our lives, I would daresay its “attitude”. With a great attitude, anything is possible! My outlook on life changed during those tough teenage years, but not so much that I believed I could actually accomplish great things. I was afraid to take risks. After all, I might “mess up!” I chose not to attend college after high school and instead landed a job in a dental office. That was so stressful! There was so much to learn, with all the instrument names and procedures it was like learning a foreign language. The first 6 months were the toughest. Everyday, I would march up the stairs to the dental office, with a nauseous pit in my stomach that hit the minute I would smell those dental smells! After six years in the practice, though, working at the chair and front desk, I wanted to do more. I loved working with patients and I wanted to become a dentist. It seemed an impossible dream…8 years of school and no money, but I chose the goal and was willing to take the risk!
It’s easier to procrastinate than to embrace change. Eleanor Roosevelt once said: “It takes as much energy to wish as it does to plan.” How many of you believe this? I know this is true! Many of us wish our practices were different. How can you change this?
Start by recognizing the qualities of a leader:
- Has a great understanding of people
- Imaginative
- Accepts responsibility; doesn’t pass the buck
- Is not satisfied with status quo
- Is organized
- Stays calm in the face of a crisis
- Takes risks
- Is secure and not defensive; is open to criticism
- Stays flexible
- Has team spirit
- Accepts change
Think about the last time you took a risk. Do you need to stretch your limits again? What have you done recently that’s outside your comfort zone? Focus on leadership development, which is a lifelong practice. Read leadership books and listen to audio CD’s when you’re commuting. Most importantly, remember that if you don’t believe in you, no one else can!
Wanting to bring in new patients for the new year?
Low Cost ways to Increase New Patients Numbers
Rhonda R. Savage, DDS
Every dental practice can increase new patient numbers by connecting and staying connected with their patients.
How? You’ll need key staff, a systematic approach, a budget, a personable doctor(s) and consistency.
The method: Put your patients and the relationship ahead of your product (the dentistry). Deliver quality care in a warm environment, going above and beyond what the patient expected.
How many new patients do you need? It depends on your demographics, your type of practice and your practice philosophy. For a general practitioner, you need 10-20 new patients a month just to maintain your patient base. If you need to grow your practice, you’ll need, minimally, 25-40 new patients/month/doctor. A specialist or a general dentist that provides comprehensive care will have a higher need for new patients.
Internal Marketing:
Value the relationship: The number one determining factor is warmth. Maintaining a good relationship will set you apart and patients in your practice. A relationship means you need to “give them a little piece of you” at every appointment. As you talk with them, be sure to tell them something small that is about you personally. To the patient, the relationship is more important than your product, “the dentistry”.
When your patient receives great service in a warm, caring environment, you then have the ability to ask for a referral. Say: “If I can help you in any way, just let me know! And if you happen to know any friends or associates that could use my services, I’ll treat them just as I’ve treated you. This is how I do business.”
Here are some marketing ideas to implement in your practice. These ideas will help you develop “The Warmth Factor”:
1. Have a nicely decorated cork board in the reception area and the team puts up personal pictures. Pictures may be of travel, family, hobbies, pets, staff events or sports participation. This gives the patient something to break the ice and start things off on a comfortable personal level.
2. Deliver quality care in a warm environment: Warmth and connecting is very important throughout the practice and especially at the chair. I understand how hard it is to be the boss, deliver the dentistry and manage a business. Stresses can add up, coming out in frustration with your employee. You will anti-market the practice, however, if you let your frustrations boil over at the chair or come out with negative body language.
3. Listening skills: Good listening skills make your patient feel special. Great eye contact, smiling and taking the time your patient needs will increase your case acceptance and referrals from patients. Toast Masters International is a resource for becoming a better case presenter, increase your listening skills and learn to answer questions under pressure.
4. Be an on-time doctor: Patients today are more impatient than ever before!
If your patients are waiting on a regular basis, you’re actually anti-marketing your practice. If you do keep them waiting, give them a small token of appreciation for their time: A $5.00 Starbucks card, a gasoline card, movie tickets or ice cream coupons are some ideas.
Do not routinely move patients appointments to fit your own schedule.
5. Stay in touch (newsletters, recall/reactivation, calling recare patients and sending cards/gifts.)
Have a graduated system of staying in touch. Develop a budget and don’t be cheap! 80% of your referred patients will come from 20% of your patient base. Paying $60 for a gift when a patient spends thousands is nothing!
6. Send thank you cards, get well cards, birthday cards, Happy New Year cards, 4th of July and Thanksgiving cards. Use Plaxo.com to send cards by e-mail inexpensively. It’s a great opportunity to routinely collect email addresses from patients and increase your ability to contact them.
In today’s world, you cannot be 1000 times better than your competition, but you can be better in 1000 small ways. How is your practice different than the competitions.
Getting new patients is always a good thing, but what about maintaining the current patients within your practice?
To learn more be sure to register and attend our upcoming webinar “Total Recall“ which will be:
Tuesday, January 10th, 2012 @ 1:00PM(Eastern)/12:00PM(Central)/11:00AM(Mountain)/10:00AM(Pacific)
Does you Team “Click”?
Why Some Teams “Click” and Some Don’t!
Rhonda R. Savage, DDS
Have you ever noticed the individual who can connect with everyone, it seems, every time he or she is out and about? This same person can make you feel special each time you meet them! How is she different than you? What is the ‘magic’ that he or she works?
I think the same thought is true with teams: Why do some teams seem to function outstandingly… absolutely wonderfully, yet others struggle? Have you seen those dental teams who do so well that they never seem to struggle? Does it seem that their success happens with little or no effort?
This article is NOT for the faint of heart. Set this aside and read it ONLY if you are interested in a challenge!
The good news is, I’m quite certain there’s a formula for team success and it goes like this:
1. Remember your role:
It doesn’t matter what needs to be done…no one should be ‘too good’ for any job in the dental practice. What is your role? For anyone in dentistry: The first priority is patient care.
Dental Assistants:
- Your number one priority: Patient care. Whatever it takes to seat the patient and dismiss the patient.
- Whatever it takes to make the patient care possible…stocking your room and instrument sterilization are two examples.
- Helping the hygiene team…what ever it takes to keep the patient on time.
- Supply and laboratory case management.
- Number five: Go up front and say, “I have 20 minutes; how can I help?”
(Front desk: be prepared with 20-30 minute ways your clinical team can help)
Dental Hygienists:
- Number one priority: patient care. Whatever it takes to seat and dismiss the patient.
- Whatever it takes to make patient care possible: Instrument sterilization and stocking your room.
- Helping the dentist/assistant stay on time.
- Instrument sterilization
- Number 5: Going up front and saying, “how can I help?” I have 30 minutes. Especially: The hygiene team should help with recare and reactivation.
Front Desk:
1. Whatever it takes to help the patient schedule, pay and reappoint.
Everyone up front should have defined duties (80% of their job), but they bend over backwards for each other (20%). The front desk can be cross trained to seat and dismiss patients and take x-rays, but keep in mind…if you’re continually pulling from the front to help the back, with few exceptions….you are short staffed at the front desk.
A typical two staff front office has these duties:
Scheduling coordinator: Greets patients, answers the two primary incoming lines and does the majority of the scheduling. She engineers the day. She’s responsible for recare/reactivation and follow-up calls with patients who say, “I need to think about it. She has a warm, enthusiastic manner, yet is organized.
The Financial coordinator: A more direct person who is used to leading the patient to accept treatment, yet still is friendly and warm to the patients. She checks patients out, processes the insurance, collects the payment and also is responsible for follow up on past due insurance and past due accounts.
Proper staffing up front is critical to your success: I can’t say if you’re under or overstaffed without crunching numbers and evaluating key information to know about your style of practice. For a PDF on staffing responsibilities, email me at Rhonda@MilesGlobal.net
The newer style of the front desk is to be ‘front desk-less.’ A word of caution: Be certain ALL team members are trained to the same level of ability AND have the personalities that facilitate case acceptance, a challenge to be sure.
Doctors:
Your job is patient care. Stay on time with restorative procedures. If you’re “Doctor Add-On” we should talk. Stay on time with your hygiene exam. Your time in the hygiene chair should NOT be more than 4-6 minutes. If it takes longer, you’re talking too much or socializing too much.
Some doctors say, “I don’t want to give up this time with patient. This is what connects me with the patient.” I say, “OK…but you’ll never be as productive as if you were to ask your team to do more talking for you; that’s your decision.”
I can guarantee you: If you train your team to talk and write for you, you can make $100,000 more annually and NOT increase your stress. In fact, stress will decrease!
And, here’s the kicker: Your relationship with the patient will actually improve!
Times have changed and will never be the same again. Are you willing to change? Don’t call me if you’re not willing to change.
What do you need to do? Doctors: Don’t hang at the front desk. It sends the wrong message. Your attempts to be personal inhibit the front desk’s ability to schedule, collect money and process insurance. You bother the patient who’s on the phone with the front desk person.
Also, Doctors: only take personal calls if it’s absolutely urgent. Stay away from your computer and your cell phone. Answer a specialist’s call during business hours only if they have your patient in the chair.
Why don’t some teams click? Teams that “don’t click” have little organization. “Everyone is responsible for everything!” There is little accountability. People are sensitive to any form of perceived criticism about their job. Gossip exists. Favoritism exists.
2. Focus on the work:
There is ALWAYS work to do in a busy dental office. If you’re not busy…follow my recommendations and you WILL be busy!!
Closely examine your front desk effectiveness regarding the Accounts Receivables, the Past Due Insurance, the Recare effectiveness and their systematic way to follow up with patients. However: Do NOT micromanage.
Clinical team: look at your space from top to bottom: clean it quarterly in depth. Stocking, laboratory work, sterilization, supply ordering and helping up front…the work is NEVER done. There is no reason to be standing around, which leads to gossip. Gossip is the number one detrimental thing that drives morale down.
Ok, Doctors: Here’s where I put your feet to the fire.
The number one thing that detracts from your ability to produce effectively is your cell phone, your computer and “dinking.” Dinking is a School of Dentistry term (so it’s quite official) (that’s sarcasm) that means: “To tinker something to death until it no longer is as good as if you’d stopped 15 minutes ago”
Close your office door and do the dentistry! Make your hands “be like butterflies” and fly with a focus on quality but also speed. I’ve never heard a patient say, “Geez, Doc, I wish you would’ve taken longer!”
Here’s another quite painful, yet true thought: Have you ever noticed that when you’re slow, you get slower? Yet, your patients have their own time frame. If you have 1.5 hours for a 1.15 minute time…do it in 1 hour, 15 minutes! Teams that get used to being slow then subsequently have difficulty readjusting to a faster pace.
Teams that don’t click run behind. They reschedule patients to fit their own schedule. They’re stressed. Staff gets little time for the bathroom or to eat. They get out late at the end of the day. Morale is down. Time is slow….or way too busy.
3. Share information:
No one likes to work in an information vacuum. Focus on effective, dynamic, productive, fun team meetings. Have a morning huddle, meetings by departments, and if you’re a large practice, a core team meeting. Have performance reviews and coach daily for effectiveness. Focus seriously on communication. You need to coach daily.
Regardless of your perception is: “Some teams are blessed or graced with an ease that you can never achieve” it is NOT true. Communication is the key to your success in all that you and your team do!
Teams that don’t click don’t talk. They don’t talk about the tough things that need to be discussed. There’s little trust at the team meeting. They’ve been ‘shut down’ before; ridiculed or laughed at during the team meeting. One or two people dominate the meeting.
Or, worse yet, they never have a team meeting. The “doctor is non-confrontational.” He or she doesn’t like performance reviews or team meetings. Ouch! Time to change, doctor! The world has changed. Are you willing to change?
4. Take your job seriously:
How passionate about dentistry are you? Doctors and Associates, I’d ask you to draw a line in the sand: On a scale of 1-10, (10 being the most) where do you put your mark regarding dentistry? No one will be as enthusiastic or passionate as you are AND you will not be influential unless you are passionate.
Ask your team: “If this was your practice, what would you do to increase production and decrease overhead?” Have them to write down their answers and bring them to the team meeting. Use this as a discussion to talk about how to improve your practice.
Ask: “What’s going well? “Are there any patient complaints?” “Is there anything we need to change?” The team (everyone should be expected to participate) needs to come with 1-2 positive suggestions for change.
Another question: “How am I doing as a leader?” “What do I do on a regular basis that wastes your time or the time of the patient?”
Teams that don’t click: Team meetings are boring. We say the same things and nothing ever happens.
It’s time to click-on your team! Teams that click communicate well. There is little staff turnover. They are excited and happy to come to work and enjoy their co-workers. You know the person who’s coming to work because they’re consistently the same person. They choose their attitude, are present in the moment and have fun at work! They care deeply about each other, but do not hesitate to ‘call a spade a spade,’ and do so in a professional, caring way. They know that “it’s all about the patient.”
A successful team puts the patient first, the practice as a healthy practice second. They put their own personal needs, wants and desires third.
Facebook in your Practice
Facebook participation can be an asset to the practice. How do we use this opportunity to promote the practice yet ask team members to be cautious in their postings? What should the doctor and office manager post? The guidelines listed below must apply to every member of the dental team, including the doctor. Because of the potential downsides, many dental offices shy away from any form of social media and internet visibility like a website. Lack of visibility on the web can be detrimental to your practice. One use of Facebook is to let the patients and potential patients know something about you personally. Patients come to you for a relationship. They assume that you know how to do the dentistry. A relationship means that we share something of ourselves. One way your Facebook can help connect you to people is with a link from your website. If you don’t have a website in this day and age, you’ve dated your practice. Patients will look for your presence on the web; a website says you’re current and up to date!
Facebook can be a tremendous networking tool. Business pages on Facebook can elevate your website status through Search Engine Optimization. In addition, if you have a Facebook Business page link on the opening page of your website, potential patients can feel that they know you and your office before coming in for their new patient experience. I know of dental practices that have gained new patients, referred in by not yet seen new patients, simply because of the Business Facebook page! Think of Facebook a bit like a cocktail party, where you circulate and share snippets of conversation.
Author: Rhonda R. Savage, DDS, CEO Miles Global
For any feedback, comments, or concerns contact me at:
Paul J. Lackner Miles Global (formerly Linda Miles and Associates) (877) 343-0909 x1 office (253) 857-0834 fax www.MilesGlobal.net