The best dental management principle that I have come across this month is the following:
People (including dentists!) often fear making changes. And with good reason. Change is difficult, risky, uncertain and many things could go wrong.
So why would someone make a change?
It may be worth the risk in most cases, but in some cases it won’t be.
What you need to determine is whether the Cost of the Status Quo is actually greater than the Risk of Change.
In other words, sometimes what we are doing is working so poorly that the cost of doing nothing is far greater than the risk of something going wrong with making a change.
Of course this brings up another issue. Are you capable of making a change? I was talking with another dental consultant recently about a client she is working with. She recommends something and he gets all excited and says “YES, let’s do it!”
Then he tells his staff and they don’t want to do it. Then he phones the dental consultant back and says, “Sorry, I guess it’s off; the staff don’t want to do it”. Then she reminds him of the reason for doing it and why it is important and he gets excited again and agrees to do it again, only to face opposition from the staff. He usually gives up and nothing ever improves.
What I have found is that the practices that have this problem and being afraid to upset the staff tend to deteriorate over time because the owner feels he or she has great staff and does not want to upset the applecart. Well if they really are great staff they would go along with office improvement ideas.
I remember a kind of coming to age issue for myself in this regard.
We used to do the dental work, send the claim to the insurance company and then bill the patient for any amount their plan didn’t pay. As you all know this sets up perfectly for a situation where you spend hours per day hassling patients who have a hundred excuses why they shouldn’t have to pay. You have all heard them so I will not repeat them here.
But we were always in conflict with our patients. Sure, some paid happily. But most people faced with a bill they did not want to pay well after the fact became our adversaries in this tug of war over the money they owed.
I can still remember finally taking a stand. I decided we were never doing this again. We were going to collect up front and eliminate billing after the fact.
Of course the staff were mortified because they knew many patients would be upset with the new arrangement. And certainly some were. So I was facing a situation with upset staff AND upset patients.
But I also knew that the status quo was unacceptable. We had developed a reputation for being in constant argument with our patients. Plus we were still not collecting a lot of these accounts. Plus we were losing many patients who thought it was somehow our fault.
So I knew we had to fix it no matter who didn’t like it. The risk of change in my mind was less than the huge cost of the problems that existed already.
Of course we got through that. We lost a few patients and probably some staff who would not make the change. But we fixed it. Now we never argue with patients or chase them. If it’s too expensive or not covered we do something cheaper or maybe nothing at all. But we don’t just do it and then chase them later to pay us.
Of course on looking back at that it was also a critical stage in my development as a dental practice manager. Until then I too was afraid to make changes in case I lost a team member or patient. I also learned that there is a price to pay for anything worthwhile. And the staff learned that when I took a stand that I really meant it.
So, what is going on in your life or practice that begs for a change but you have not confronted it and the cost is mounting every day?
Change is tough, but deteriorating slowly is even worse. Do you want to treat the disease or let it fester?
As you know, we love to help offices make these changes. You already know that every problem you face we have faced at some point and found a way to deal with it.
We are real life dental consultants running a real practice just like you. We are not theoretical consultants who can only tell you how they used to do it or how they think you should do it.
So contact us if your Status Quo is getting expensive.
You can help yourself, like I did with some help from my online programs at www.dentalmanagementsecrets.com or contact us for one on one help at info@dentalmanagementsecrets.com or call me at (587)-391-5883 if you are interested.
By the way, we held 4 webinars on our new Automated Manager System last month. We had more people try to get onto it than we expected and I know some people could not access it. Even the email did not work as it was tied into it. But it works now.
Please contact us to receive a personalized one on one demo and we will still honor the introductory special if you call right away. Email us at info@automatedmanager.com or call Craig at (587)-391-5883.
All for now,
Dr. Dave
#30 1221 Canyon Meadows Dr.
SE Calgary, AB T2J 6G2
Phone: (403) 984-0114
40837 N 97 Street
Scottsdale, AZ 85262
Phone: (480) 840-7323