Recently
I ran across the following article in Dentistry IQ written by Roger P.
Levin, DDS. How are you recording and tracking your “big data?
You’ve probably heard the term
“big data,” which refers to all of the electronic activity tracked by
businesses today. With the various software programs that are available to
administer scheduling, accounting, inventory, payroll, and more, dental
practices now generate their own big data.
How can dentists take advantage
of this information to monitor and increase practice development? The secret is
to know which numbers actually indicate growth or decline – the Key Production
Indicators™ (KPIs)
For general dental practices,
following the metrics listed here will provide a solid picture of how their
practice measures up:
1. Production: What are the
daily, weekly, monthly, and annual production figures? These provide the big
picture of how a practice is doing.
2. Collections: What percentage
of fees charged are actually paid? If a practice isn’t collecting 98%, your
policies and scripts may need to be adjusted.
3. Profit: What is the practice’s total revenue after
operating expenses are subtracted?
4. Overhead: Is overhead 59% or
less of total income? If not, doctors should examine expenses to see what can
be reduced.
5. New patients: How many new
patients are coming in each month and each year? This indicator should be
increasing 10% to 15% annually.
6. Fee-for-service vs. insurance
production: What is the ratio? Can it be adjusted one way or another to the
practice’s benefit?
7. Case acceptance: How do patients respond to treatment
recommendations? Are at least 90% of case presentations accepted?
9. Percentage of hygiene patients scheduled: Are 98% of the
practice’s patients scheduled for their next appointment at all times?
10. Cancellation and no-show rates: Is the rate 1% or less?
If not, the practice may suffer from unproductive gaps in the schedule.
Of course, recording the numbers
is only the first step in making headway. KPIs must not only be recorded but
also analyzed each week. A quick review should take two to five minutes. Over
time, consistent evaluation of KPIs makes it possible for the doctor to rapidly
identify performance gaps and make corrections to marketing, expenses, systems,
scripts, and other policies as needed. The next step is to create goals, share
them with the team, and monitor progress toward meeting them.
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