In my last blog, I received a lot of very cool compliments. If you missed the last one you can get it here:https://dentalmanagementsecrets.com/blog Some of the comments are attached. (I removed the last names for privacy)
Truly empowering eye-opener. thanks, please, pour more into my cup. Dean
Greetings Dave, Pure Gold. Regards, George
Dave, Good stuff…I’ve been at it since 1993 and never thought of it that way. Thanks for the email! Steve San Diego
Hi Dave, I appreciate your information. I’m a business guy. Owned (at one time) 3 dental offices. Now, I operate just one. Aside from that, a few other enterprises. You’re on the money: Decide if you want to be a technician or a business owner. Your choice. Good stuff. Take care, Jerry
However, that is not what I wanted to write about today. I also received one disturbing email. Here it is:
I didn’t really get a good impression from the blueprint email you sent out a couple days ago. The entire time I kept waiting for you to say something about how you are able to do both sides well – the business side and the patient care. I think it’s important for people to realize that there definitely is a different skill set required for each side of the equation, but that it is possible to do both well (and that doing the business side well will allow you to maintain great patient care). The way you presented it, it made it sound like in order to succeed in the business of dentistry you have to be cold and a hard-ass that people don’t like. It sounded like you were making people choose between the two. I think dentists feel an ethical obligation to the patient care side and if you’re making them choose one or the other, they’ll choose patient care to at least pretend they are good, caring, ethical people. Just a thought. Kevin
Wow, Great Comment! If I gave the impression that patient care and dental practice management are mutually exclusive then I want to correct that right now. These skills enhance each other. The better you manage your practice, the happier your patients are going to be. Some people jump from business skills automatically to presuming that means being ‘hard-nosed’. Good business people do everything they can to make their customers (or patients) happy. A business person (practice owner) does sometimes need to be firm. But the real job is making patients and staff as happy as possible. In dentistry this means that in addition to doing great dentistry we also want to be great managers; so that scheduling, financial arrangements, hours of operation, and the overall level of care and attention that all your staff provide is just as good as what we do at the chair. If we are performing great patient care and our staff members are not, we still lose. So YES, you can and should be good at both. My entire writing and dental consulting world revolves around helping dentists get the second part right and many dentists’ practices have been totally turned around when they realized their part (dentistry) cannot carry the whole patient experience in their offices. You need your staff doing a great job too and that is what practice management is all about. Sorry for the confusion.
All for now, Dr. Dave
PS We have begun a new program where we train your manager instead of training the dentist; after all, the office manager is supposed to manage the office. Contact us here if you want info on our next Train Your Manager session:craigh@deervalleydentalcare.com
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