Posts Tagged ‘dental practice management’

Dental Team Retreats – Increase Morale

Hot off Rhonda’s Iphone she talks about Dental Team Retreats. You asked for it, now call us today to find out more 877-343-0909

Bringing synergy to the inner workings of your practice

In a recent issue of the Proceedings of the National Academies, Nathan Mlot, a mechanical engineer at the Georgia Institute of Technology, published an article about fire ants. While a single fire ant struggles when exposed to water, a group of fire ants working closely together can float effortlessly for days. The ants accomplish this by literally linking their bodies together. They actually create a waterproof raft, and as a whole the raft is significantly more buoyant than a single fire ant floating alone. This is much like the fact that a happy, productive dental team can outperform one unhappy dental team member any day of the week. Read the rest of this entry »

Dental Consulting – 20 Marketing Tips to Get New Patients

By Miles Global, The Leaders in Dental Consulting

Here are 20 marketing tips you can use to obtain new patients to grow your dental practice. If you have questions or want to know exactly how to implement these techniques please do not hesitate to call us today! 877-343-0909 ext. 1

  1. The State Board on Advertising needs to critique ads and brochures prior to publishing. Be sure that the mailing list that you are using is also approved.
  2. At the end of the day, the doctor, hygienist or assistant should telephone patients who received extensive treatment to see how well they are doing.
  3. Personal business cards should be printed for each staff member.
  4. Offer to serve as the dentist on call for hotels, offering their employees a courtesy (Your name will be listed in the hotel directory for out of town emergencies).
  5. Offer to serve as the dentist for retirement and nursing homes (often the staff and family members of staff and residents become patients).
  6. Plan a trip overseas to do volunteer dentistry—great publicity.
  7. If you have evening and Saturday hours, publicize them as executive or convenient hours.
  8. Offer a complimentary prophylaxis and exam to couples who were recently engaged (a pre-nuptial prophy).
  9. Offer a 10% courtesy if patients agree to be on your Special Call List for short notice appointments. These patients live or work within a two-mile radius of the office.
  10. Be respectful of your patients’ time. If they are kept waiting, apologize and offer movie, car wash, gas/telephone cards or ice cream certificates.
  11. Have a children’s corner or kiddy theatre in your reception area.
  12. Conduct children’s tours of your practice. Contact local day care facilities, schools and churches.
  13. Go to a Children’s Hospital dressed as the tooth fairy to give oral hygiene instructions.
  14. Offer a $500 scholarship to a student patient who goes into dental hygiene, dental assisting, or pre-dental. The doctor should present the scholarship and have photos taken for the paper.
  15. Give portrait studio certificates to patients who have received extensive or cosmetic treatment.
  16. Send dental baby gifts to new or expectant parents (baby toothbrush, teething ring and baby bib).
  17. Send certificates to new parents stating “Congratulations on your new arrival. This entitles you to your child’s first dental exam when they are 2 years old. Compliments of Dr. — and staff.” associates
  18. Place pamphlets on baby-bottle syndrome and pregnancy gingivitis in the reception areas of OB-GYN offices.
  19. Take before and after photographs of extensive treatments.
  20. Use an atlas of modern cosmetic and restorative dentistry in the reception area and in each treatment room. (Call Smart Practice to order 800-522-0800.)

© Copyright Miles Global • 3519 56th St. NW Suite 240 Gig Harbor, WA 98335 • 877-343-0909 • www.DentalManagementU.com

Dental Consulting – How to Coach for Success

By Rhonda R. Savage, DDS

 

What Does Your Dental Staff Want?   Oh No!   More Feedback!   Yet daily coaching can have a very positive effect on your practice’s team. Tough to do, but well worth the effort:  daily positive and negative constructive criticism will build a well functioning, dental practice.

How do you give feedback without your female staff dissolving into tears?  There are three techniques to implement that will allow you to give your team the kind of feedback that they not only want, but deserve.

1. Don’t let your frustrations build.  Too many of us let feelings build and then  past frustrations spill out into today’s problem.  If you’re angry…anger either leads to silence or to an unreasonable outburst if we haven’t dealt with issues and let them build up. Everyone knows when someone is upset.  Staff, dentists and office managers want to know, not wonder, what’s wrong.

2. Express how you feel daily.  Female team members want to go home at night and know everything is ok.  Wait until you are not upset.  Start by evaluating what you really want out of the situation.  Focus on your heart:  what are your motives?  Do you want to prove the person wrong?  Belittle them?  Or affect a change that will have a positive result?
Read the rest of this entry »

Rewards and Recognition

Great dental practice management doesn’t just happen – it takes both effort and a healthy work environment in the dental office, and creating that healthy work environment requires a positive approach, by the doctor and the dental staff. Read the rest of this entry »

8 Low Cost Ways to Increase New Patient Numbers

In the world of dental patient management, increasing your base of quality patients is key. These eight powerful suggestions will help you do just that. Read the rest of this entry »

Almost 10 Things Your Staff Hates About You

10 Things
by Rhonda R. Savage, DDS
Dr. Parrish was always very open with his team, but when it came to selling his  dental practice and retiring,
he decided to keep it quiet. After some searching, he found a buyer. The deal was nearly complete
and the staff didn’t have a clue.

As the day approached, the legal documents were unexpectedly delayed for two weeks as the
lawyers haggled. Having planned on the closing, Dr. Parrish forgot to cancel the sign painter that
showed up to repaint the sign on his front door! He fluffed it off, sweating internally, and said it was
for some personal work. The team was still in the dark.

On the day of the sale, he had a team meeting and told them he was selling his practice. Shocked
and stunned, one staff member said: “When?” To which he replied: “Now!” Another staff member
said, “When do we meet the new doctor?” Dr. Parrish looked around the room. Rebecca was crying,
Sarah was glaring and the rest had vacant looks on their faces. He said, “In 10 minutes.”
Seriously, a transition time might not be something you can share with your team. There are
many other times, however, when our staff “hates” the doctor or things the doctor does… things you
might consider handling differently. These common, day-to-day stressors hinder the patient care,
customer service and team development.

If you scan the items of all the things your staff hate you might say, “Well, this is my train set.
Why should I bother changing?” The answer is because creating a stronger “team” environment
improves morale. When morale goes up, production goes up. You’ll also attract more patients
through inexpensive internal marketing if you can change the things you do that drag the practice
down. Life will be better!

The burning question for the doctor: On a scale of 1-10, how willing are you to change? If you
are a 4 and you want more from your practice, then, doctor, that’s not good enough!
Challenge yourself and ask your team to give answers to these prompts:

  • “My goal for this upcoming year is to be a better leader. Please list two to three things I can
    change to make our practice a better place to be.”
  • “My second goal for this next year is to be a better time manager. Please write down the things I do on a regular basis that waste the time of the team or the time of the patients.” Add a P.S.: “You won’t get fired for being honest. I need your help!”

1. Your staff members hate when you don’t keep them in the loop.
There are many times in your practice that can bring conflict if you fail to keep your staff up to
date. Practice transitions are just one of the times that can be a very sensitive time. Staff hate it when
the doctor doesn’t keep them in the loop. You can understand how they feel, but there are times that
secrecy might be important. Dr. Parrish’s staff felt betrayed and that he didn’t trust them. Share what
you can. Maintain good communication with your staff. Keep them involved.

2. They hate when you come into work grumpy.
Each day depends on your attitude when you walk in the door. Make a mental choice the
moment you wake up in the morning. Your first thought should be, “Today is going to be a great
day.” Only you can make it happen. You know life can be hard, challenging and tiring. But, you
need to fake it and work at changing your thought process.
At the morning huddle, have someone assigned to bring an inspirational thought for the day or
a humorous incident or joke to start the day off on the right foot. Doctor, do not complain about the
schedule. Look at the schedule two days in advance for any complications and resolve them early on.

3. They hate when you micromanage.
Excessive attention to detail can hold back the growth and development of your practice and
your team members. Staff or co-workers who are disempowered feel frustrated, lose confidence,
become timid and are discouraged. Micromanagement creates an atmosphere of distrust. Why
should they bother if it’s going to be “wrong” anyway? Attention to detail is a positive attribute, but
if you’re correcting every little detail or must do it all yourself, you’ll hurt your performance and that
of the team.
As a doctor, you need to delegate, follow up without micromanaging and hold people accountable.
Ask your team to create a Google calendar ready for your eyes at any time.
On the calendar: Have your employee clearly outline their goal, the plan, their accomplishments,
communicate concerns and ask: “What’s missing?” You need to be clear upfront and then set deadlines.
Ask them to give you feedback on a certain date. And doctor, stay away from the front desk.
Constant interruptions hinder their ability to do their job.
Most micromanagers don’t listen well and are sensitive to criticism. Many micromanagers will
affirm that their management style is the right one by tossing the employee to the wolves. They’ll
assign a task and walk away, expecting the person to fail. Knowing this, try to change one thing at a
time – let them know you’re trying and ask for your team’s input. Don’t doom the employee to failure
because you don’t follow up.

4. They hate when you are “hands-off” and don’t hold them accountable.
The opposite of the micromanager – a doctor with unclear goals that divide the team. This type
of doctor wants to please whoever is in front of him at the moment. He does not make the best business
decisions or stick with them. The team has many communication difficulties because of this.
Solutions include:

  • Effective, powerful team meetings. Set goals. Ask for volunteers. Have deadlines. Mark them
    in the calendar and follow up. Be firm, fair and consistent.
  • Designate duties, as well as “down time duties.”
  • Have zero tolerance for wasted time: cell phone use, Internet use, leaving early without supporting
    the entire team. No gossip, no backstabbing, no favoritism.
  • Lead by example. Be early to work. Have a smile on your face. Bring them coffee and donuts.
    Say, with huge enthusiasm, “Look at this perfectly engineered schedule! This is going to be a
    great day!”

Good leaders coach and mentor, but don’t micromanage or let things float along. You know the
strengths and weaknesses of your staff. You work to improve and grow your staff. Truly, you need to
temper both the “hands off” and “hands on” styles of management to be successful. Try to read a
book per month on leadership and communication.
The days of dictatorial leadership are gone. Most employees today thrive on independence,
growth and involvement. And yet they also thrive on feedback, accountability and firm, fair leadership.
Finding a balance is crucial for the success of your practice.

5. They hate when you complain about cash flow.
This is a difficult time in the economy. Difficult times occur due to divorce, moving, family
issues… and everyone has them. Your team members care about you, but if you’re burdening them
with your woes, the morale will go down. Don’t share everything. They don’t need to know it all.
Focus on being positive, cheerful and supportive.
Now some might argue: The staff needs to know the facts. Yes, but do not harangue them daily
that their job is in jeopardy. Let them know what the goals are and how important each and every one
of them is to the success of the practice. When you feel a need to cut staff, ask yourself: Are they “digging”
deep? Can you be training and encouraging them to do more and be more? How is your customer
service? Should you be working on your business before you take a drastic measure to cut staff?

6. They hate when you bring your personal problems to work.
How is your customer service? This is your number-one deciding success factor. If you have a
negative tone in your voice, you’re anti-marketing the practice. We all have those days. But regardless
of how you feel… tired, stressed out… realize that the course of the day, particularly how your
office deals with you bringing your personal problems to work, will rise and set with you.
Ignore your other life. Park it at your front door before you leave. Connect with others who are
upbeat and tune out the others. Don’t watch the news or read the newspaper. Laugh! There are a
number of books and audios available. Subscribe to Success magazine and listen to their audios over
and over again. Do this on your way to work and you’ll be amazed at how good you feel.

7. They hate that you won’t deal with the “problematic staff.”
If you don’t deal with problematic staff, one of two things will happen: the others will begin acting
like them or, worse, you’ll lose the respect of the staff.
You cannot ignore a problem. It will build or you’ll have resentment. Deal with issues early on;
“sniff ” out problems by walking around. Ask your team members privately how they’re doing. Talk
to key people and ask if there are any issues you need to help resolve.

8. They hate when you take time off without proper notice.
Sometimes, emergencies come up. But if the practice, whether the hygiene department or the
doctor, is rescheduling patients to fit their schedule, you’ll have more broken appointments and last
minute cancellations. If patients feel you do not respect their schedule, why should they respect yours?
To prevent this, set your schedule at least six months in advance, preferably a year in advance.

9. They hate when they can’t approach you without you getting mad.
You can be a good leader 90 percent of the time, but if you’re losing it 10 percent, that’s what
they’ll remember. Silent treatment or anger… both are bad. You need to work with your team; know
what they know, or your practice might be in danger. Do you ever feel like… “all I want to do is
dentistry and go home?” You’re not alone. There are methods, strategies and systems for success.
They hate when you are unapproachable about staff problems. One touchy subject is when the wife of the
dentist is one of the hygienists. My words of advice: never hire someone you cannot fire. But on
the other hand, many family members are truly advocates and great team players. Remember this
rule: family will always, always have to do more, be more and be even more accountable.
Going back to Dr. Parrish – a beloved doctor, but not without faults. Did they have to rescue
the new doctor? No, he held his own and the new team laid down the law. Your practice is like a
family environment. You all have to work at being better team members. Begin by realizing
the strengths and weaknesses that each of you have. Work to be a better team and better health
care providers for your patients. If you’re all doing your best, success will come! If you’re not,
something’s got to change.

Author’s Bio:

Dr. Rhonda Savage began her career in dentistry as a dental assistant in 1976.
After four years of chairside assisting, she took over front office duties for the
next two years. She loved working with patients and decided to become a dentist.
Savage graduated with a B.S. in biology, cum laude, from Seattle University in 1985;
she then attended the University of Washington School of Dentistry, graduating
in 1989 with multiple honors. Savage went on active duty as a dental officer in the
U.S. Navy during Desert Shield/Desert Storm and was awarded the Navy Achievement
Medal, the National Defense Medal and an Expert Pistol Medal. While in private practice
for 16 years, Savage authored many peer-reviewed articles and lectured internationally.
She is active in organized dentistry and has represented the State of Washington as
President of the Washington State Dental Association. Savage is the CEO for Linda L.
Miles and Associates, known internationally for dental management and consulting services.
She is a noted speaker who lectures on practice management, women’s health issues,
periodontal disease, communication and marketing and zoo dentistry. To speak with
Dr. Savage about your practice concerns or to schedule her to speak at your dental society
or study club, please e-mail rhonda@milesandassociates.net, or call 877-343-0909.

The High Cost of a Broken Appointment: 6 Ways to Keep Patients on your Schedule

By:   Rhonda Savage, DDS

Is it common place for your dental office to have openings in your hygiene schedule?

Do you have patients that fail their appointments or cancel last minute?

Unfortunately, these problems occur regularly in our offices.  Does it seem to you that this is happening even more with today’s economic times?  Why do so many patients fail or cancel last minute?  There are six basic reasons that I would like to talk to you about in this article.  These six reasons actually begin within our own practices and quite frankly, they boil down to lack of communication.

I’ve been in dentistry for over 30 years and know broken appointments are the number one concern of most offices.  I started back in 1976 as a dental assistant, trained “on the job”, then moved to the front desk and worked in the practice for 10 years as I went through college and dental school. Right after dental school, I was active duty in the U.S. Navy during Desert Shield/Desert Storm.  Interestingly, the military also has problems with failed appointments!

During my last year in active duty, I was stationed with the Marines at Camp Pendleton, CA.  When the war started, so many marines were not “dental ready,” which meant they were deployed with dental problems.  Dental emergencies were rampant and the dental facilities overseas  were either nonexistent or lacked the necessary supplies and equipment. Upon the troops return, the base commandant required that all troops become 80% dental ready, which meant that 80% of the men could not have pressing dental issues. As the dental officer for 1400 marines, I went to the colonel in charge and let him know the dental requirements that were coming down from the base commandant.

He looked at me with his steel blue eyes and said “I want your clinic open on Saturdays to get my men ready.”  I replied, “Sir, I could do that, but your men fail 32% of their appointments! Why should I ask my people to work extra days for you when your men fail so many appointments?  I can have a “stand down” for your troops, where we just work on your men and get them where they need to be.  But Sir, it has to come from you as their colonel.  Frankly, Sir, if you don’t care…..I’m not going to care!”  When I left 8 months later, I received an award in front of the troops for getting them to 92% dental ready. His men did not fail their dental appointments!

To affect the kind of change that I’m going to recommend, the changes must start with the leader.  All of you that are reading this article right now ARE leaders in your office and I commend you for having the initiative to further your knowledge!  The changes I’ll be discussing need to begin at the very top and must be threaded throughout the entire office, which means you’ll need regular team meetings to address these recommendations.  Change isn’t easy!  If you’re not having regular, productive team meetings, talk about this as a team.  How can you fit 4 hours of meeting time into your monthly schedule?  It used to be, years ago, that we could get by with one hour a month, but with all the new technology, materials and techniques, we need to focus on training and communication.  This begins with team meetings.  OK…the six reasons are:

  1. The dental team is not creating value for the next appointment.  We  need to stress the importance of the upcoming appointment.  Look the patient in the eyes during the last 30 seconds of the appointment and let them know the reason why they need to return.  Get rid of the word:  Just. There is no more “Just” in your vocabulary.  She needs to come back, “just” for a filling”.  Or,  “it’s just a cleaning”.  Every appointment is valuable!  If you want the patient to return for a follow up endodontic x-ray, let them know it’s “complimentary” (nothing is free) but it’s very important they make the appointment so you can be certain the infection is “gone from the bone”.

    Be basic in your language with patients.  They know the word “infection” and “x-ray”.  They do not know what a “periapical” is.  With your hygiene appointments, find a reason for the patient to return.  Let them know “how well they’re doing” HOWEVER….during the next hygiene appointment, you’re going to focus on this area and it’s “very important they make their next appointment on time.”   Even if they have a clean, healthy mouth…find a reason and document it! If the last thing the patient hears is:  “it was great seeing you, have fun on your trip!” this is what they will remember.  If you’ve just prepped a tooth for a crown, let them know that everything went wonderfully; however, it’s very important they make their next appointment in a timely fashion or the temporary could come loose, causing sensitivity.  Also, the prepared tooth could shift and the new crown wouldn’t fit as well.

  2. Too much social “chit chat” at the chair:  We have a window of time to educate our patients about the value and importance of dentistry.  So often, as a consultant, I hear a lot of social talk.  Most offices have 75% social talking and only perhaps as little as 25% be about dentistry. We like to reverse these numbers.  We do want you to connect with your patient and make them feel important.  But try to talk more about dentistry.  Your patient will only be as excited about dentistry as you are! As you’re working over your patients, talk about upcoming courses you’re attending, or one you just attended.  Talk about the new materials or techniques that you’re excited about.  At the hygiene chair, talk about the links between periodontal disease, smoking, diabetes, heart disease, low birth weight babies etc.
  3. Misguided communication:
    1. Friendly disappointment:  when the patient calls to reschedule last minute, we should be able to keep about 65% of the patients on the schedule by not making it easy for them to reschedule.  I know this is difficult to do, but do not give them your next opening.  Let them know that you’re all so busy that you cannot possibly get them in soon.  Give them an appointment three weeks out, even if you have an opening tomorrow!

      People go “where it’s busy.”  People like to be associated with successful, busy people.  The same is true in the restaurant business.  You’ll go to a restaurant that has a lot of cars outside because the food MUST be good!  When the patient calls to cancel or reschedule at the last minute, be friendly and nice, but very disappointed.  Let them know the VALUE of the appointment. Recognize that whatever has come up is important, but this appointment is also very important because….the hygienist is going to focus on this area; the tooth could shift and move if the temporary comes loose etc.  (The reason has been documented in the chart and the front desk knows what to say!)

    2. Hygiene should be pre-appointing the upcoming recall visit.  When the patient says “Oh, I don’t know what I’m doing in six minutes much less six months!” Let them know that you understand how they feel, however, you do preappoint 95% of your upcoming appointments and if we don’t schedule now, they will not get the time of day and day of week they enjoy.  DO NOT then say “and if you want to change it when the time comes, it’s OK!”  It’s not OK!  We need to reduce the number of changed appointments that happen at the front desk.
    3. Check your recall cards and upcoming appointment cards. If they say, anywhere, that “kindly give us 24-48 hours notice to change the appointment” re-do your cards.  Instead, say:  “We trust this card to be a confirmation of your upcoming appointment and look forward to seeing you soon.”  Make it positive, but do not give them a reason to think it’s ok to reschedule.  We have trained our patients that “it’s ok if I call ahead”.
  4. Patients owe you money:  Look at your accounts receivable balance.  The 60 and over column should not be more than 4-6% of the money owed to you.  The 90 and over column should not be more than 2-4%.  Be careful of credit balances.  If you’re carrying credit balances on your accounts receivable, run a credit balance report and then run an AR report “de-selecting” credit balances.  Have a clean AR report with NO credit balances and see what your true numbers are.  Patients that owe you money will fail more than others.  Have a clear financial policy in place. For a complimentary copy of our “Collecting Your Due” form, please feel free to e-mail me at rsavage@harbornet.com.
  5. An “Unmotivated Staff”:  I do NOT believe that our team members intentionally get up and go to work in the morning “unmotivated”.  They do become “un-motivated” when they are continuously worked into lunch and/or late after the closing hour.  If you are continuously working into lunch or after hours, this is a scheduling issue. Our team members need time to grab a bite to eat and go to the bathroom!  They have obligations, commitments and chores to attend to after work also!  I don’t mean that an occasional issue is unacceptable.  We are in the health care industry and emergencies or unforeseen changes do happen.  But…however….if these issues are consistently happening:  it’s a scheduling problem.  If we are not respectful of our staff’s time, they will not be respectful of yours. They will pray for cancellations and broken appointments!
  6. I leave you with this final important thought:

    If you keep patients waiting, they will fail and cancel last minute. I was guilty of this myself at times.  It’s an easy trap to fall into.  But, if you do not respect your patient’s time, they will not respect yours.  As a consultant, I travel all over the U.S. The last time I flew, a fellow seat mate asked me, when she found out I’m a dental consultant, said: “Tell me….why do dentists even bother making the upcoming appointment for me?  90% of the time, they call and change my appointment.  I make the appointment to fit my schedule!  Why do they even bother?”   That is the frustration of the patient.  Do not move your patient’s appointments to fit your schedule.  It is much better to have a pending appointment list (a VIP list) of patients who would like to be seen sooner. We (somewhat) jokingly say:

    There are only three reasons to change a patient’s appointment:

    1. Death of the doctor
    2. Death of the hygienist
    3. The patient insists and we cannot dissuade them with friendly disappointment.

    If you are desperate and absolutely need to move a patient up, let them know that you “rarely have changes in the dentist’s or hygienist’s schedule, but there has been a change and you’re the first person I thought of…”  We always need to look busy, not needy!

    Other patients will be annoyed if they’re kept waiting in the reception room or in the chair.  Have a team meeting and discuss this issue.  Do you keep your patients waiting?  In hygiene, the doctor should go in at any point and do the exam.  Do not keep your hygiene patients waiting!  Remember these final words:  People count up the faults of those who keep them waiting. If you do not respect your patient’s time….they will not respect yours.  Do not be “Doctor Add On” and keep your regularly scheduled patients waiting.

    We spend so much time, money and energy attracting patients, yet you may be losing them out the back door.  I want you to be successful and thrive!  From a consultant’s viewpoint, I know that if you focus on making these changes, your office will experience fewer broken appointments. The statistics are there! The offices that Linda Miles and Associates have consulted in this year have increased by 30% or more, even in these recessionary times. With a focus on systems, teamwork and communication, you can continue growing.  I’ve listed six reasons why patients fail or break appointments; all of the reasons have to do with failed communication!  Do a top to bottom review of your office:  verbal skills, financial policies and scheduling… and do it now!  You can’t afford to wait!

“Oh Crap!” Does Your Dental Practice Keep You Awake at Night?

“Rhonda, what keeps you awake at night?” I was thinking about this very question – posed to me earlier in the day by Dentaltown Magazine Editor Ben Lund after I’d asked him what he wanted me to write about – when an advertisement for Huggies Diaper Wipes popped up on my TV screen. A green box of wipes sat on a small carpet in the nursery, surrounded by baby toys. Behind the wipes box, in giant marshmallow-like letters were the words, “Oh Crap!” I instantly laughed at the phrase often blurted out by dental professionals who constantly have work on their minds. Read the rest of this entry »

Patient-Centric Marketing

With all things being equal — your location, training, fees, and team — what sets you apart from other dental practices? You cannot be a thousand times better than another practice, but you can be better in a thousand small ways. The personal interaction, looking people in the eye, a calming demeanor, the confidence of a successful outcome, and concern evidenced by the team ... these are the reasons patients come to your practice. They come for “non-dental” things, all of which center around great customer service. Read the rest of this entry »
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