If you only review numbers once a month, you’ll always feel behind. The best-run practices use simple weekly dashboards to spot issues early—before they become
Insurance creates complexity, but patient experience still matters. The most successful practices collect patient balances without sounding harsh—because they use clear policies, consistent scripts, and
Efficiency is important. So is compliance. The best practices don’t choose one—they build a workflow that protects patient information while keeping claims and payments moving.
Many practices think insurance profitability is a “volume” issue. Yet often, it’s a pricing issue. Small differences between your fees, contracted rates, and posting habits
Most practices don’t decide between “in-house” and “outsourced” because they love spreadsheets. They decide because the day feels heavy: phone holds, denials, aging A/R, and
Major treatment should feel exciting for patients—yet one insurance delay can turn an eager “yes” into a hesitant “maybe.” That’s why dental prior authorization matters.
Running a dental practice means balancing care, people, and business. Yet insurance work can quietly steal the time that should go to patients and growth.
Most practices know insurance work is time-consuming. However, many don’t know the actual monthly cost until they calculate it. When you put a number on