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Quit Rambling On

September 24, 2013 by howardfarran Leave a Comment

In 1980, when I was a freshman at Creighton University, one of our professors told us we’d earn 10 extra credit points if we went to see Warren Buffett speak when he visited our campus. One of the clearest things I remember Buffett say to the crowd was when someone pitches him an idea for something in which they wanted him to invest, he would hand that person a 4×6 recipe card and a No. 2 pencil and ask them to explain their entire idea on the card. He said 90 percent of those people couldn’t do it.

This doesn’t just apply to investing, gang – this applies to dentistry! Dental manufacturers will call my practice and try to sell their products to us. We’ll tell them, “For a product to be successful, it has to meet four criteria; it has to be faster, easier, higher in quality and lower in cost.” Many of them can’t explain their products to me with those four simple criteria in mind. In fact a few weeks ago, just out of morbid curiosity, I listened to someone pitch an idea for one hour and 45 minutes. Even after all the time my team and I spent with the salesman we still had no idea what the value proposition was. It blew my mind! It doesn’t just stop at dental manufacturers, though – this also applies to treatment plans. If you can’t explain to your patients what they need on a 4×6 index card, you fail at presenting treatments. Period.

Effectively presenting a treatment plan to your patients is one of the most serious aspects of dentistry. It can be the difference between a dentist who treats one-third of the caries in his or her practice to a dentist who treats twothirds or better. In the best dental practices, treatment plan presentations are typically done by a staff member; someone who can speak your patients’ language and sell the necessary dentistry. In other practices, what you often see are dentists rambling on, trying to explain what’s going on in their patients’ mouths. The patient has a toothache and the dentist says, “You have irreversible pulpitis. You’ll need endodontic therapy, post build-up and a fullcoverage restoration.” And then the dentist opens up a computer program and jumps into a giant, in-depth, scientific lecture about what a root canal is, what it does, what can go wrong, etc. Forty-five minutes later, the dentist asks, “Any questions?” and the patient looks like she got run over by a truck with no real comprehension of what just occurred.

The best treatment plans are simple and explained in ways patients can understand them. The reason Christianity thrived was because the religion was recited in short, simple, understandable parables – and there was a point to each one of them! Stop complicating things and get someone on your team to explain treatment plans to your patients in the simplest terms.

Your treatment plan also needs to be interactive. You need to follow your patients’ cues. When you talk to someone and they break eye contact with you, it means their mind is processing. When they do this, you need to stop what you’re saying and let them process. More often than not, they’ll respond with one of the following: “How much is it?” “Will my insurance pay for it?” “When would you do it?” “How long will it take?” “Will it hurt?” or “Will I need antibiotics?” What matters is you listen to their concerns, explain it in plain English and cut to the chase. I have had several patients come to my practice after they visited other offices to address their loose-fitting denture. In literally two minutes, I present the choices by saying, “Well you’ve got just a few options here. One, we can do nothing. Two, we can re-line it. With a reline, you drop it off at eight in the morning and you come back and pick it up at the end of the day. Three, we can make you a new denture. The fourth option, which would be a lot better, involves implants. We can put two of these little titanium screws into your jaw where the denture snaps on and stays in place. Better yet, we can put four implants in there and then the denture would really snap-on nicely. Or we can put six implants in there and that denture wouldn’t even come out of your mouth. Which one of those options sounds best for you? Let’s have Dawn, our treatment coordinator, go over the fees for these different options and assist you with reserving a time to get started.” What I just wrote would literally take you two minutes to recite. It was simple, explanatory and to the point. Why can’t we all do this?!

We continually see data that suggests dentists treat only 38 cavities for every 100 cavities diagnosed. That’s a terrible statistic. You might be earning your FAGD or your MAGD and think you’re on your way to total dental enlightenment, but I’ll let you in on a little secret – you’re not. Why? Because two of every three kids come into your office with caries and you don’t remove them. I don’t care if you’re using composite or amalgam – you need to treat as many cavities as you can. It’s your sacred and sovereign duty! Easiest way to do this is to get your staff involved in the treatment plans. It’s one thing for a patient to try to trust the guy who’s presenting a treatment plan in Latin (that’s rare), but it’s another thing for the patient to implicitly trust the entire staff standing behind the dentist nodding their heads in agreement and better explaining the treatment plan.

When you and/or your staff can explain a treatment plan in plain English and combine it with some great visuals from your digital X-ray system, every single one of your patients is going to fully understand what’s going on in their mouths and will want you to do something about it. It’s impossible for your patients to grasp what you’re trying to explain to them on a one-inch by one-inch X-ray film. I still can’t believe there are dental practices that do not employ digital X-rays in 2013. You want to explain something to your patient? Blow up the image on screen and do some teaching. Better yet, print off their X-ray on a piece of paper and circle the trouble spots, then give them the printout to take home as a reminder of what they need to have fixed.

Every single dental practice consultant I’ve ever met has told me when they walk into an office and pull up the report generator on the practice management software, 80 percent of all of the reports have never been run once. So, maybe you are only treating a third of the diagnosed dentistry, or maybe you’re doing a better job than that… or maybe you aren’t. You’d never know because you don’t know what the score is. You don’t know what your close rate is. You don’t track it. When you start tracking the dentistry you’re doing against the dentistry you’re diagnosing, you start to become a much better dentist. You start to realize you might not be the best person in the practice to sell dentistry to your patients. Your close rate will improve and your patients will be much happier with healthy mouths. You owe it to yourself, your practice and your patients to start running your treatment plan reports and actively reviewing them to help identify your monthly close rate. It’s time you start taking the selling process more seriously. Taking 500 hours of CE and earning your MAGD is completely useless if you’re not going to treat two-thirds of the people who come through your doors.

Filed Under: Dentaltown - Howard Speaks Tagged With: dental, dental office, dental practice, Dentaltown, Dentaltown Magazine, dentist, dentistry, howard farran, howard speaks, meaning of life, practice management, treatment plan

Getting Poised for Growth

September 24, 2013 by howardfarran Leave a Comment

Humans are social animals. Social animals exist in tribes, and for the survival of every tribe you need order. For there to be order, there needs to be control. Social animals are hard wired for control, and because of this a lot of businesses become unsuccessful because the owner or CEO abhors delegation and feels the strong need to control everything. How does the CEO of a Fortune 500 company run her operation of 100,000 employees if she doesn’t delegate anything? It would be impossible! The leaders who rise to the top don’t fear risk or delegation – they retain and attract quality key people, give them responsibilities and then get out of their way. Success is counterintuitive to how humans operate.

Another great example is how most dentists imagine the way they are going to retire and sell their practices at age 65. At age 55 they start thinking, “Well, I’m going to retire in 10 years, so the last thing I’m going to do with this practice is invest in any new equipment or new technologies or implement any new techniques into my repertoire.” They’re content with milking the cow dry and refuse to feed it anymore oats, grass, grain or water. But here’s the amusing part: when it comes time for that dentist to sell her practice, she thinks it is going to sell for some huge amount, but it’s not going to happen. Nothing in the practice has been updated, new patients have dwindled to zero and it has become a business that nobody in their right mind would purchase at the price in the dentist’s head.

You have to realize the final 10 years that you are in practice are the most important years to double down on your business bet! In this time you can’t be milking your practice of what it’s currently worth only to sell it for pennies on the dollar. You need to modernize your practice. You need to move it from a lousy 1,000 square foot rental space on the third floor of a medical building to a premium 4,000 square foot building right out on Main Street with a huge sign. This is the time for you to upgrade from 2D X-rays to 3D cone beam computed tomography! This is the time to invest in CAD/CAM! In dentistry the only dogs that can’t learn new tricks are dead dogs!

If your practice is neglected because you milked it for the last 10 years, you will end up with an illiquid asset. You have to get your business poised for growth. You can’t sell a sinking ship. Just like with the sale of a home, when a window breaks, you don’t say, “Let’s just wait until two other windows break and then we’ll fix it.” No way.

Here’s another housing example tied to liquidity: a three bedroom, two bath house in Phoenix, Arizona, can easily sell within 30 days, but a 10 room house with an eight-car garage and a tennis court and Olympic-sized pool can sit there for three years because it is just not a liquid asset. Nobody wants it or can afford it. Along these same lines: the corner commercial lot on the corner of 1st and Main, you can sell in a heartbeat for premium price. But if you go just 300 yards down the street either way, you might be looking at half the price and, worse, you might never be able to sell it. I mean there are intersections in Phoenix that are still vacant from when I moved here 25 years ago because they just weren’t perfect. This is why location is key! So if you’re renting in a medical building or you aren’t set up on a great location, you need to be poised to sell, so get moving!

Here’s something else you need to think about if you’re considering retiring and selling your practice in the next 10 years: interest rates on CDs right now are at two percent, so that means for every million dollars in cash you have in the bank, in government bonds or CDs, you are going to make $20,000. Let’s say the average dentist makes $140,000 dollars a year. That means they would have to have $7 million in cash in a two percent government bond or CD at Bank of America or Chase to maintain their income. That is just not going to happen. I don’t know of too many dentists that can walk away at 65, sell their practice and have $7 million in cash earning two percent.

If you’re a renter and you sell your practice for $400,000, that’s it. That’s all you get. But if you owned your practice and you owned the building, you could sell your practice for $400,000, but keep the building, so you would charge rent to the new dentist who purchased your practice. Every year you can adjust the price of the rent based on the Consumer Price Index, and over the next 10 years, you could earn an additional $400,000. Then, maybe, at the end of the 10- year lease, the new dentist wants to buy the building. Then you finance that to the new dentist and you end up with yet another 10-year income stream. Think about it: the renter made $400,000 and gave half of it to Uncle Sam, so she’s sitting there with $200,000, which at two percent is making $4,000 a year. At that point the renter dentist is going to have to go be an associate somewhere else (at age 65) in order to live the way she did when she was practicing! So instead of continuing to rent the space for your practice, you need to get poised for growth. Buy that premium property on 1st and Main or a 4,000 square foot building right next to a WalMart, then sell your practice and rent out your building to earn revenue the smart way.

But this only applies to dentists who want to retire. Me, personally, I never want to retire. Sure, the first year of retirement is fun – you get to golf all the time and go fishing. It’s like a really long vacation. But by the second or third year of retirement, you start to see some dysfunctional behavior. There’s no passion for life. They let themselves go. They don’t have a reason to shower in the morning, let alone get out of bed. Here’s something you should consider if you’re actually considering retirement: don’t retire! I’m serious! There are 5,000 new dental school graduates entering the dental profession every year and they’re looking for a job. These kids are so desperate for a job, when the government asks them to join the military and sit on an aircraft carrier in the middle of the Pacific Ocean or Afghanistan, it sounds really enticing to them. And I hear the excuse all the time from dentists in rural areas that they can’t find an associate because they practice in Middle of Nowhere, Montana. Really? You can’t convince someone to stay in America where nobody’s shooting at them but the government can convince them to practice in Iraq? Stay in practice and be a mentor for crying out loud! Do you know what your unique selling proposition is to these new grads? Do you know what you have to sell more than anything? You! You get out there, you get poised for growth, you go to the finest finishing schools in America like The Pankey Institute or Spear, you get your practice to the very top of your game, and then you get your pickings from 5,000 graduates, some of which are seriously considering going into the military and practicing dentistry in some third world country. Instead you could just reach out and say, “Hey you, new grad, come work for me. You’ll probably look back on this decision when you are 65 years old and realize it was best decision you’ve ever made, because I’m going to teach you how dentistry gets done. It’s all going to be cool, we are going to have a good time working together and you are going to become a very successful dentist.”

Best Tips for Better Practice in 2013

Dentaltown Magazine wants to know what you’ve done this year to make your practice the best it can be! Visit www.dentaltown.com/BestTips2013 to tell us what you’ve done to improve your practice. Keep your eyes peeled for the December issue of Dentaltown Magazine and your tips could be featured in that issue. One lucky contributor will be drawn to win a copy of Dr. Howard Farran’s One-day Dental MBA DVD.

See more at: http://www.dentaltown.com/Dentaltown/Article.aspx?i=334&aid=4538#sthash.iedaYMzG.dpuf

Filed Under: Dentaltown - Howard Speaks Tagged With: dental, dental office, dental practice, Dentaltown, Dentaltown Magazine, dentist, dentistry, howard farran, howard speaks, meaning of life, practice management, treatment plan

Dentists are Still Doing Way Too Many Three-Unit Bridges

September 24, 2013 by howardfarran Leave a Comment

Dr. Carl Misch, who is regarded by many as the number-one implantologist in the world today, (and who just filmed a series of four awesome online CE courses for Dentaltown.com), wrote in his book Dental Implant Prosthetics that the 15 year survival rate of implant restorations is 95 percent and for a three-unit bridge the survival rate is 74 percent. In this day and age, dentists really have to ask themselves, “If an implant and crown has a 21 percent higher success rate over a three-unit bridge, why are we doing so many three-unit bridges?”

Insurance Coverage?

Is it because insurance still doesn’t cover implants? We all know that’s not true! Twenty-five years ago, when I opened my Phoenix, Arizona, dental practice – Today’s Dental – almost zero insurance companies offered any coverage of dental implants. Today, based on the insurance plans that we have verified and have in our system at my practice, we have come up with the following percent of insurance plans that have implant coverage:

  • Delta of California 86%
  • Metlife 76%
  • Delta of Arizona 74%
  • Aetna 53%
  • Cigna 35%
  • Humana 18%

When I started my practice in 1987, implants were not a covered benefit under most insurance plans, but today, we are seeing an upward trend in insurance companies realizing the benefits of implants; such as, preserving tooth structure and making it virtually impossible for decay to form. With more and more insurance plans covering dental implants, it can’t possibly be a good enough reason to not be placing implants.

Pricing and Presentation?

Here’s another reason why we might be placing way too many three-unit bridges: price breakdown and case presentation. When I graduated from dental school in 1987, I argued with a lot of local Medicaid plans because coverage of an extraction was $2 cheaper than a filling. Moms in lower socioeconomic brackets had the economic incentive to pull their babies’ teeth instead of fixing them, just because it was cheaper. I always thought the extraction should cost $2 more than an amalgam filling, because when it comes to certain procedures for certain patients, affordability was always the key decision maker.

The same thing is happening with bridges vs. implants. Most dentists will offer their patients an exact flat fee for a bridge, and they’ll say they can prep it today and cement it in two weeks. Then when the patient asks about an implant, most dentists break it down to something like, “Well, um, it’s $1,500 for the implant and it’s $1,000 for the crown, but then we might have to do a bone graft, and we might have to do a gum procedure, and I won’t really know what we’re looking at until I pull the tooth to know how long this will take…” It’s a total confusing quagmire! The implant is the better option, but you make it so difficult for the patient to understand. I mean, I’m a dentist with an MBA and an MAGD and because of the way you present a bridge vs. an implant even I would opt for the bridge!

You need to figure out a way to explain that the cost of an implant is the same as the cost of a bridge. If you charge $3,000 for a bridge, then an implant should be $3,000 as well. Now, whether or not you have to do a bone graft or something more, that’s just the cost of doing business. Obviously some cases will be easier than others, but that’s life. It’s also the way everybody else does business. When you take your car in to fix your radiator, they’re going to do it at a flat fee. I guarantee some radiators are easier to fix than others – you’re not going to get nickel and dimed because your radiator was harder to fix than the last one they worked on.

You know what would help you place more implants in your practice? If your implants cost less than a bridge! They have a 21 percent better success rate, after all! You need to take the economic incentive to do the cheaper but less effective option out of the equation. If you tell your patients it’s cheaper to do an implant and a crown than it is to do a bridge, you’re going to be placing a ton more implants, doc!

Specialists?

I recently spoke about this issue with Dr. August de Oliveira, the author of Implants Made Easy, and he brought up a survey conducted by Straumann, which indicated the United States of America currently ranks fifth in total implants placed. More than 85 percent of general dentists in South Korea place implants, more than 50 percent of all general dentists in Europe place implants, and the most implants placed in the world is Israel. When I asked August why he thinks so many dentists still do bridges over implants he said, “It’s a loss in production if general dentists send out the implant case. Rather than learning how to do implants themselves, they do bridges and send out an occasional implant. That is changing as patients are getting educated on the benefits of an implant crown vs. a three-unit bridge.”

In America, culturally, we got into this groove where oral surgeons and periodontists place implants. GPs don’t want to do implants because it’s inconvenient, it’s a loss of revenue to send out, and you have to work with a specialist. If you’re not going to place implants yourself, you need to work with a specialist who will agree with your vision of a flat fee for all implants placed. If you charge $3,000 for a bridge, you’re going to charge $3,000 for an implant whether you place it or the specialist does. You want the safety of being able to tell your patients that they’re going to go to another doctor who will place the implant, it will be the same fee, and there will be no nickel and diming. If your specialist cannot work with the laws of averages like every other service industry does, then find another specialist! Either that or learn how to place implants. Too hard, you say?

Implants Are Hard? Really? In 2013?

I learned how to place implants early on in my dental career. I earned my Diplomat in the International Congress of Oral Implantologists (DICOI) and my fellowship at the Misch Institute. In 1987 placing an implant was hard. You had 2D Xrays, panos and PAs, and you never truly knew what was going on until you laid a flap. Today, with 3D cone beam computed tomography (CBCT), diagnosis is twice as easy – heck, even the software that’s been developed for these systems will tell you how long and wide the implant can be to place in your particular patient. You almost don’t need to think about it. Oh, and anatomical features that scared us to death back in the day, like the inferior alveolar nerve and the sinus, are all spelled out for you in a 3D image. You know exactly what you’re looking at before you even pick up an intrument. This harkens back to my May 2013 column “Is Dentistry Getting Too Easy?” It’s twice as easy to do a root canal today (with high-speed handpiece-driven NiTi files), and it’s just as easy to place an implant with the help of 3D CBCT.

It’s time we all sit back and rethink placing implants. Placing an implant today is so much easier than pulling a wisdom tooth – yet I know more dentists who pull 10 to 30 percent of their wisdom teeth but don’t place a single implant. I think that’s completely backward (and bizarre)! That’s like saying you can repair your car but can’t fix the chain on your bicycle. You need more skill to pull a wisdom tooth than to place an implant. With the technological advancements we have at our fingertips today, it just doesn’t make any sense why dentists don’t place more implants.

Remember the 4,000lb Gorilla in the Room

When it comes to the dentistry we do, nobody likes to talk about the 4,000lb gorilla in the room – mortality. The average man dies at age 74, and the average woman dies at almost 80. When grandma and grandpa go into the nursing home to live out their remaining days, all the dentistry we’ve performed over their lifetime crumbles and rots after 18 months. I’ve been a huge proponent of there being less inert and more bacteriostatic restorative materials in the dental market – and dental implants fit that bill. When I visit nursing homes, it’s sad to say that the lucky ones are the people who have dentures and implant-supported prosthetics. The people who have their mouths full of $20,000 worth of root canals and crowns are the most unlucky, because their teeth turn to mush from root surface decay. These people are too old and brittle to do any extractions or full-mouth restorative, and their home care is essentially nonexistent. You really need to start asking yourselves, especially by the time a patient turns 60 years old, are we really going to do a root canal buildup, a crown and a three-unit bridge instead of titanium implants, which the Streptococcus mutans won’t eat? Think about it.

In Summary

While I was wrapping my head around this issue, I talked to longtime Townie, Dr. Jay B. Reznick, oral surgeon at the Southern California Center for Oral & Facial Surgery, in Tarzana, California, and founder of OnlineOralSurgery.com. He sent me an e-mail that summed up the issue of why dentists don’t place implants more than bridges quite nicely. Jay says:

“A dental implant is designed to be ‘permanent,’ however there are a lot of factors, such as hygiene, patient general health and nutrition, systemic disease, local factors, age, implant positioning, prosthetic stresses and individual variation that will reduce the longevity. I always tell my patients, ‘Dental implants are as permanent as their “permanent” teeth,’ so they understand that even what nature gave them is not always perfect and can fail under the right set of conditions. A three-unit bridge is also meant to last a long time, but dental insurance companies will pay to replace a bridge after five to 10 years (depending on the policy), so that should tell you a lot.

“There are a number of reasons why dentists may choose to do a bridge over an implant. I think the biggest is still the misconception, especially in the older practitioners, that implant dentistry is too complicated. They also feel the bridge will be delivered sooner than in the case of an implant, where the extraction site needs to heal and the implant needs time to integrate. Right behind that is the economic desire to keep all the revenue within their practice, rather than sharing the case with a surgical specialist. Of course, that model is changing rapidly, as more and more general dentists are becoming trained and placing their own implant fixtures and then restoring them.

“We are seeing an increase in the number of dental insurance carriers that are covering implant treatment. They are usually the more expensive plans for the patient or employer, and reimburse at a substantially reduced rate from usual, customary and reasonable (UCR) charges.

“The only advantage a bridge has over an implant is that it is faster. The implant helps preserve bone and soft tissue architecture, is easier for the patient to maintain, and leaves a one-tooth problem as a one-tooth problem, rather than creating a three-tooth problem (which will become a four-tooth problem, and eventually a denture).”

It’s time to change the way we think about implants and the way we present this incredible option to our patients – the future of the dentistry we provide depends on it!

Filed Under: Dentaltown - Howard Speaks Tagged With: bridges, dental, dental office, dental practice, Dentaltown, Dentaltown Magazine, dentist, dentistry, howard farran, howard speaks, meaning of life, practice management, treatment plan

Here’s What Really Happens When You Extend a Deadline

August 20, 2013 by howardfarran Leave a Comment

Here’s a great blog post from the Harvard Business Review on deadline extension… check it out!

 

In June, the Obama administration pushed back the deadline for employers with fifty or more workers to provide health insurance for their employees by a full year — until Jan 1, 2015. Admittedly, the implementation of anything as complex as the Affordable Care Act is going to take time, and those involved have been working furiously to try to meet the government’s deadlines. So, at least with respect to this particular part of the ACA, everyone has an additional year to get everything just right. Sounds like a good thing, doesn’t it?

Only — how furiously do you think everyone with this new, extended deadline is working now? Are they still burning the midnight oil… or are they saying to themselves, Let’s take a breather. We’ve got plenty of time.

Read the rest of the article here: http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/08/heres_what_really_happens_when.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter

Filed Under: Dentaltown - Howard Blogs Tagged With: ACA, dental office, dental practice, Dentaltown, Dentaltown Magazine, dentist, dentistry, Harvard Business, howard farran, Obamacare, practice management

Parents sue Texas City man after boy’s teeth ripped out in dog attack

August 20, 2013 by howardfarran Leave a Comment

A civil lawsuit accuses a Texas City man of failing to control his dog, which attacked a boy so severely in 2011 that it ripped out the child’s teeth. Read the rest of the article here: http://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/Parents-sue-Texas-City-man-after-boy-s-teeth-4744490.php

 

That’s one heckuva dog bite! Comment on this below!

Filed Under: Dentaltown - Howard Blogs Tagged With: attack, dental office, dental practice, Dentaltown, Dentaltown Magazine, dentist, dentistry, dog bite, howard farran, practice management

Burglar Caught on Video Inside South Philly Dentist’s Office

August 20, 2013 by howardfarran Leave a Comment

Hey gang… Check this out… What would YOU do in this situation??

 

Philadelphia police are on the hunt for a man who broke into a dentist’s office in the Pennsport section of the city over the weekend: http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2013/08/20/burglar-caught-on-video-inside-south-philly-dentists-office/

 

Comment below!!

Filed Under: Dentaltown - Howard Blogs Tagged With: burglar, dental office, dental practice, Dentaltown, Dentaltown Magazine, dentist, dentistry, howard farran, practice management

Dentistry Could Come Back with a Vengeance

July 8, 2013 by howardfarran Leave a Comment

This recession has been hard on all of us, but there is a little economic secret that you all should know that will turn your frowns upside down. It’s called pent-up demand, and you’re going to be seeing the results of it very soon.

During an economic contraction, if you decide at lunchtime you are not going to go to Arby’s and get a sandwich, fries and a Coke, but instead bring a sack lunch to work, Arby’s loses that sale. It’s finite, they’re never going to get it back. Knowing money is tight, you go home and instead of taking the family out to the local Mexican restaurant, you might stay home and eat Ramen noodles. That’s a sale the Mexican restaurant will never ever see. This always happens in down economies.

The thing we all need to keep in mind is with the nine recessions we’ve seen since World War II – the current one being the 10th – the economy always comes flying back. Why? You might not be spending discretionary income on things you don’t need, like going out to lunch or getting a facial, but you are still driving your car, your tires are getting bald, you’re still using the refrigerator you’ve meant to replace for years, lightbulbs need to be replaced, etc. Important things are breaking down; they are things you use every day that you need to replace soon before you end up in the dark, with a flat on the side of the road or with a refrigerator full of spoiled food.

That also pertains to dentistry and orthodontics. I’m 50 years old and when I was kid growing up in Kansas, there were a lot of families that had around five children. Usually then the child with the most crooked teeth was the only one in the family who got braces. Now, with birth control and as America progressed, we average around two children per family, and every child gets ortho. Since the beginning of the recession in 2007, a lot of orthodontic practices have experienced a huge drop in the number of cases they’ve started. Several ortho practices have had to shut their doors because of this. For the ones who have stuck this recession out, I want to remind you that all those families who put off braces for their children over the last five years are going to come back and get braces soon. It’s pent-up demand! Maybe Molly didn’t get braces at 12, but she’s sure as heck going to straighten her teeth when she’s 16! Maybe she’ll even pay for Invisalign herself when she gets her first job out of college. You might not have seen her in the last five years, but I guarantee you’re going to see a lot of her soon when she finally comes around to get treatment.

The economy is coming back in America. They say it’s always darkest right before sunrise, and I’m here to tell you I’m already seeing the sunrise in Phoenix, Arizona. We were hit massively hard here during the recession. Construction companies were building 60,000 homes a year here up to 2006, and after the great economic contraction, that number shrank to 10,000. All the people it took to build those other 50,000 homes each year lost their jobs. Home prices contracted big time. Also during this time, around 150 dental offices here in the Valley of the Sun closed their doors forever.

The other issue we had in Arizona was until recently the state didn’t have a dental school. Now we have two: Arizona School of Dentistry & Oral Health – A.T. Still University, and The College of Dental Medicine-Arizona (CDMA) at Midwestern University. See Fig. 1 for the number of new dentists each school has graduated since 2007:

We saw hundreds of new dentists graduate from our brand-new, local dental schools during the recession who tried to open their own practices and failed because they thought all it took to own a practice was to open up in a great visible location, in a strip mall anchored by a grocery store or a Walmart, next to a four-lane intersection, do some direct mail, and put up a website. The supply of dentists in our area was way oversaturated and massively changed the business of dentistry in the Phoenix area. The problem isn’t local to Phoenix, it’s everywhere. Look at Fig. 2, which shows unemployment figures from the Department of Labor since 1984, then take a look at Fig. 3, which shows the total number of practicing dentists each year since 1984. You’ll also notice in Fig. 4, that during this latest recession, the dental school graduate numbers have risen. Everyone talks about a demand problem in dentistry with this current recession, but what dentistry really faced in the latest high-unemployment years was a supply issue.

Things are changing, however. According to InternationalForestIndustries.com, due to rapidly increasing housing starts in the United States, “lumber and panel prices will move to new highs in 2013 and record highs for lumber in 2014.” The average median real estate price in Arizona has risen from $248,229 in Aug-Oct 2006 to $320,164 as of January 30, 2013 – that’s a 22 percent increase. Housing is the biggest sector of the economy. Everything I’m reading indicates housing prices are increasing, which means the inventory is being bought up, and wherever real estate goes, so goes the economy.

As the economy improves, we’re going to start seeing the results of a five-year pent-up demand for dentistry. It’s already happening! I’ve owned my dental office since 1987, and today we are doing more root canals as a percentage of income than we’ve ever done before.

I’m sorry to sound this upbeat and positive, because this truly is the dark side of economics. When the media talks about how bad Hurricane Sandy and Katrina were, it’s true, those storms were devastating. People lost their homes, their jobs and their way of life. On the other hand you don’t hear any construction companies complaining about it because they get a ton of work in the rebuilding process. Whenever you see a house burn down, it’s really sad for the family, but that devastating fire does provide jobs for firemen and people who build and remodel houses.

In dentistry, we diagnosed a lot of cavities in 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012, when patients just said, “I lost my dental insurance because of this recession. I really can’t afford to take care of these cavities right now,” and walked away. Now those little $250 cavities have grown into the nerve, they’re painful and they require a $2,000 root canal build up and crown. You don’t feel good about it, but on the balance sheet, man, it’s just endo heaven. I’m also hearing stories all over the dental profession like little Molly has been whining to her mother for five years about her crooked teeth. When is she going to get them straight and when is she going to get braces? Housing is coming back, people are now getting root canals and crowns, and I see ortho starting to come back with a vengeance.

Better times are ahead, gang. Remember, dentistry is a need, and we’ve seen a lot of pent-up demand accrue over the last five years. The economy is improving and dentistry is just going to explode! What didn’t get fixed in the last five years is going to get fixed. – See more at: http://www.dentaltown.com/Dentaltown/Article.aspx?i=316&aid=4291#sthash.6CuPBQZA.dpuf

Filed Under: Dentaltown - Howard Speaks Tagged With: business development, dentist, dentistry, human relations, humor, inspirational, marketing, motivation, practice management, quotes

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