Minding the Gap
If you’ve ever been to London and have ridden the London Underground, you’re probably familiar with the phrase “Mind the Gap.” This warning is placed in spots where a gap exists between trains and walkways and is a reminder to pay attention to the “gap” so you won’t fall onto the train tracks. The phrase was first introduced in 1969 and has since become a metaphor for paying attention to the “gap” between desired outcomes and current realities.
So, how wide is the “gap” in your dental practice between what’s optimal and what’s happening right now? Just a few inches away from perfection? Grand Canyon-sized? Somewhere in-between? Do you know? Is it even possible to know? Paying attention to the business side of your practice is a good beginning, but insufficient. In contrast, knowing which key indicators to pay attention to, and knowing what to do to improve those mission-critical areas, can be transformational for your practice and patients.
Case Study
- Six-location general practice. 20 dentists. 28 hygienists.
- Explosive growth, but high cancellation/no-show percentage.
- Significant new patient growth, but many existing patients didn’t have a next scheduled appointment
At the beginning of 2017, the leadership team at CarolinasDentist, a fast-growing, six-location general practice headquartered in Fayetteville, North Carolina, realized there were several gaps between where they were and where they wanted to be. Aggressive growth was great, but it was also causing some real challenges.
- Canceled and “no-show” appointments were averaging 25-30% in some practices and were projected to cost CarolinasDentist $1.8 million in annual revenue.
- Many patients were leaving the practice without a scheduled next appointment.
Treatment was being presented, but if it wasn’t accepted while the patient was in the office, they often got lost and missed out on needed treatment. CarolinasDentist’s hygiene departments were also underperforming, or at least, it seemed like they were underperforming. These and many other issues were creating some real headaches for the leadership team.
Dr. Eric Roman and Dr. Clifton Cameron, co-founders of CarolinasDentist, had anticipated these challenges, and they believed the plan they had in place to respond to rapid growth would be more than adequate. Their combined experience from working in dental service organization [DSO] operations was the inspiration behind the formation of CarolinasDentist.

CarolinasDentist Leadership Team
This included the creation of their Complete Dentist Process, a proprietary training program that combines 25 unique skills and philosophies in a manner that allows dentists, even new graduates, to produce more than double the national average for a general dentist by month nine of their time with CarolinasDentist. Top performers with The Complete Dentist Process will often eclipse the performance of the top 1% of dental providers in the United States and the process has proven itself time and again with more than 50 dentists.
Having this and other systems and goals in place were certainly a significant factor in CarolinasDentist’s success. And yet there was something crucial missing: Actionable data insights. The leadership team knew they needed to make some changes, and they knew doing so would have a positive impact. But what could they change? And if they changed something, how would they know it was the right thing to focus on? Implementing change based on emotions or what one can visualize is one thing. But making adjustments or course corrections based on actual data is much more effective. Knowing this, CarolinasDentist began searching for a solution.
The Power of Actionable Data
After looking at different partners, CarolinasDentist chose to work with Dental Intelligence. Dental Intel helps thousands of U.S.-based dental practices to discover opportunities and develop processes within their practice that can be implemented, measured and verified for effectiveness. CarolinasDentist wanted much more than just a way to view their practice data. They needed help in analyzing and interpreting the results of their data, so they could act.
Josey Sewell, Director of People and Hygiene at CarolinasDentist, recently shared some of the ways understanding the meaning of their practice data has impacted patients and team members.
Interview excerpt:
Dental Intel:
“What was an issue you were hoping to resolve using metrics?”
Josey:
“We’d heard complaints that our hygiene team wasn’t producing to their full potential. At first, this seemed valid, but in reviewing our numbers, we learned that, as is so often the case, what we thought was the issue wasn’t really the issue.”
Dental Intel:
“So, what was the issue? What did you discover?”
Josey:
“Our real problem was cancellations and no-shows. In some of our locations, they were as high as 25-30%. This meant that on an average day, three out of ten scheduled appointments weren’t coming into one of our practices, which meant we weren’t providing our hygienists with sufficient opportunities to diagnose and treat patients. With the patients they were treating, the data showed they were actually performing pretty well.”
Dental Intel:
“With this insight, what did you do?”
Josey:
“It was all hands on deck. We focused our entire team on lowering cancellations and no-shows. This included our front-desk team, doctors, office managers, treatment coordinators, and schedulers. Scripting was created that discouraged canceling or missing appointments. Team members focused on helping patients to understand how important it was to keep appointments. Within a few months, our cancellations had dropped to less than 10% – a phenomenal improvement.”
Recapturing Unscheduled Patients
Another problem CarolinasDentist’s senior leadership was trying to solve was the number of unscheduled active patients.
- With a monthly marketing budget of 4-5% of revenue, they were investing significant resources in trying to capture new patients.
- One of their locations with four dentists had a goal of adding 75 new patients each month for each doctor.
Before working with Dental Intel, CarolinasDentist’s total number of unscheduled active patients numbered in the tens of thousands. This number continued to grow each time a patient left an office without scheduling their next appointment. They knew this was a problem, but they weren’t sure how to go about fixing it.
As part of their training with Dental Intel, CarolinasDentist learned about a resource called Auto Follow-ups. This tool captured all of the unscheduled patients in a practice in one place, based on settings customized by the practice. For example, they could set up an automatic notification each time they logged into their software showing all unscheduled broken appointments or unscheduled treatment. Armed with this powerful data, CarolinasDentist focused on how to reduce the number of unscheduled patients.
- In January 2018, before they began using follow-ups, CarolinasDentist rescheduled about $2,500 in treatment.
- After committing their entire team to use this solution, between February 1st and the end of March, at just one location, they added over $66,000 in unscheduled treatment back onto the schedule.
According to co-founder Dr. Clifton Cameron, “We committed to making follow-up calls daily, including a ‘Power Hour’ each day where every available team member jumped on the phone to call unscheduled patients.” In one “power hour” for example, they added over $16,000 in unscheduled treatment to the calendar.
“The impact on our team unity and culture has been amazing,” Dr. Cameron said. “Being able to see our key numbers in one place and having a system that empowered us to act on those numbers has changed our practice. We now look at our key numbers together during our morning huddle – on our smartphones – and then plan around how to hit our goals for the day.”
A recent example of how this impacted a patient’s health was shared by Gabby, the team leader at CarolinasDentist’s Fayetteville office:
“Our huddle was a home run!” Gabby said. “We had a hygienist who was doing a right-side SRP, and by using the Dental Intel app, she was able to easily see the patient also needed a filling on the right side. We spoke to the patient as soon as they walked into their appointment and added that production to the schedule right then!! The best part is how appreciative the patient was for only having to get numb one time!”
The compelling “why” behind all of these efforts at CarolinasDentist was simple: Improving patient care. Rescheduling canceled/no-show appointments or unscheduled patients not only closed the gap but could now be directly correlated to an increase in the number of healthier patients. A meaningful side-benefit was the positive impact these efforts also had on the teams in each practice. Using metrics to drive performance wasn’t the real point behind all the work CarolinasDentist put into these initiatives. Their vision was to provide more and better dentistry.
So, what are YOUR gaps? Do you know? Would you like to find out?
Our purpose at Dental Intelligence is to help your practice to achieve real, lasting growth. We’d love to show you what’s happening right now in your practice – for free. Just visit us here to request your no-cost, no-commitment practice analysis. Let us help you close the gap!