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Nick Fotache

The Best Dental Marketing Strategies, According to Dentists Who Tried Them

Nick Fotache Filed Under: Dental Marketing April 15, 2026

Table of Contents

  • Key Takeaways
  • The Best Free Dental Marketing Strategies
  • The Best Paid Strategies That Bring Patients
  • Part 3: Where Dentists Set Their Money on Fire
  • The Best Marketing Strategy With a $1,500 to $2,000 Budget
  • Boost Google Reviews to Grow Your Practice
  • The Best Marketing Strategy With a $1,500 to $2,000 Budget
  • Marketing Is More Than Just Ads or SEO
  • What If Getting More New Patients Was Never a Problem Again?

The Best Dental Marketing Strategies, According to Dentists Who Tried Them

  • Nick Fotache Headshot
    Nick Fotache
    Updated June 10, 2026 01:18 pm

Key Takeaways

  • Google Reviews are your cheapest and most effective growth tool. Build a system, make it a team priority, and treat it like a competition. It costs nothing and it works.
  • The patients you need are already in your system. A simple recall campaign targeting inactive patients will almost always outperform any new paid strategy you try.
  • Google Ads gets you patients fast, but the moment you stop paying, you stop existing. It works best when you have the budget to compete properly in your market.
  • SEO takes time but builds something you actually own. The dentists who saw real results committed to it for 12 months or more and didn't quit early.
  • Radio, social media, and direct mail were the biggest money wasters. Dentists tried them, spent a lot, and most said they'd never do it again.

If you’re a dentist who wants to grow your dental practice, marketing is something you’ve had to think about from day one. You open the doors, you’ve got the clinical skills, you’ve got the team, but at the end of the day you still need new patients walking in to be successful.

So you start looking around. What can you do for marketing? What should you try? What are other practices doing? And once you start looking into it, you realize there are a lot of marketing companies out there telling you they have the solution to your problem.

And if you sit down and talk to them, every single one will confidently tell you the same thing: what they sell is the thing that will bring you more new patients. The SEO company says SEO is the answer. The Google Ads expert says paid traffic is the fastest way to grow. The website design agency says your website is holding you back.

And if you’re a dentist who’s been practicing for a few years, you’ve probably tested a few marketing strategies. Some might have worked really well. But most were probably just a big waste of time and money.

Now imagine this. Wouldn’t it be much easier if you could just go to other dentists across the country and ask them straight up: what brought you the most new patients? What actually worked for you in marketing? And what would you never do again because it was a total waste of money?

That’s exactly what we wanted to find out. We created a survey dentists could answer anonymously, and asked them what they’ve actually tried over the past ten years to grow their practice.

Survey dentists could answer anonymously media

And then for every strategy they said they tried, we asked them:

  • How much did you spend on it?
  • How long did you try it?
  • How many and what kind of patients did it bring in?
Rate the quality media

We wanted to understand what really happened when they tried it. So let’s break down what dentists actually tried, what worked, what didn’t, and where they saw the best return.

The Best Free Dental Marketing Strategies

Let’s start with some good news. There are a few marketing strategies that are completely free. And when we looked at the data, some of these free strategies actually outperformed the paid ones.

So which ones came out on top? Let’s look at the top three.

1. Google Reviews

89% of dentists in our survey had actively worked on getting more reviews. And when you think about it, it makes sense. When a patient needs a dentist, they go to Google and type in “dentist near me,” they see a few clinics, and they pick based on who looks the most trustworthy.

Image Google Reviews

And for dentists, Google reviews are a big part of building that trust. If the practice down the street from you has 400 reviews and a 4.9 rating and you have 30 with a 4.8 rating, patients will pick your competitor down the street.

Also, Google reviews brought in good quality patients too. 48% of the dentists that tried Google reviews rated the patients they got a 5 out of 5.

Now, when we asked dentists what they did to collect reviews, most of them weren’t doing anything complicated. Some used automated tools like Weave or BirdEye or Trustpilot to send follow up messages after appointments. Others just asked patients directly. The dentists who got the most reviews just had a consistent system for tracking and asking for them.

But here’s something one dentist pointed out that really highlights the main issue most practices have with collecting reviews: “Getting reviews depends heavily on your staff. If your front desk isn’t asking, it doesn’t happen.”

As a dentist, you’re in the operatory most of the day. You don’t really see how your staff interacts with patients at the front desk. You don’t know if they’re actually asking for reviews, or if they’re just telling you they are.

And here’s something we’ve been telling our clients for years. If you actually want to grow and beat your competitors on Google reviews, the easiest thing you can do is get a whiteboard.

Write your practice name on it, then add the names of your top five competitors. Every week or month, track how many new reviews each practice gets.

Image Whiteboard

Now suddenly everyone in the office can see the score. Your team sees if you’re falling behind. They see when a competitor is pulling ahead. And when your number goes up, they see that too.

It turns reviews into something visible and measurable. And once it’s on the board, it becomes something the whole team starts paying attention to.

Here’s a funny story. A couple of years ago, one of our clients kept hearing the same thing from his staff for months. They told him they ask patients for reviews every day, but nobody wants to leave reviews. Patients are busy. They just want to get out the door.

So he decided to try something new. He told his team that if they managed to become the most reviewed dental practice in their very competitive area, he would close the practice for a few days and take the entire staff on an all inclusive vacation to the Dominican Republic. He needed about 350 reviews to become the top rated practice.

350 reviews

Guess what happened? They got there in 3 weeks. They collected more reviews in 3 weeks than they had in nearly 3 years.

Now to most of you this may feel extreme. That vacation probably cost him $10,000 or more. However, because he became the most reviewed dental practice in the city, they brought in so many new patients that the investment paid for itself many times over. They generated an additional $1.2 million in production the following year. So was it worth it? Yeah, definitely.

So set a clear goal for your team and put a prize on the table. Because when your team can actually see the scoreboard and the prize, they start caring about the score, and suddenly asking patients for reviews goes from something that happens now and then to something that happens after every appointment.

2. Referrals

77% of dentists in our survey said they had actively worked on getting more referrals. And out of every strategy we looked at, referrals produced the highest quality patients.

In fact, 59% of dentists who received referrals rated those patients a 5 out of 5 in quality. Higher than any other marketing channel in the entire survey.

Bring in like minded people media

And it makes total sense. A referred patient was sent to you by someone they already trust, like a close friend or a family member. So they walk in already confident in you. They’re not comparing you to three other practices down the street. In their mind, the decision has already been made.

And when it comes to generating referrals, most dentists in our survey weren’t running complicated reward programs or anything like that. They said referrals were simply happening naturally.

One interesting comment a dentist left in the survey was that referrals tend to bring in like minded people. Your best patients send you more people just like them. So if you already have great patients and they refer someone, there’s a very good chance that new patient will also be a great fit for your practice.

Referrals

From a marketing standpoint, referrals have one big limitation. They’re not very scalable.

You can’t just throw more money at referrals and suddenly double the number of patients coming in next month. Sure, you can try things like referral rewards or incentives, but those only work if the patient experience is already great.

Because at the end of the day, the real engine behind referrals is the experience patients have in your practice. If someone has a great visit, they might tell their friends or family. If they don’t, they won’t.

Referrals have one big limitation

And the challenge is that you can’t really “turn up the dial” on that. If you’re already providing a great patient experience, there’s only so much more you can do. Referrals either come in, or they don’t, and you don’t have all that much control over them.

That’s why referrals tend to be inconsistent. Some months you get a lot of them. Other months you barely get any. They’re incredibly valuable when they happen, but from a marketing perspective they’re not something you can reliably scale or depend on to consistently grow your practice.

3. Recall Campaigns

This is something many dentists have probably thought about at some point. Inside your patient management system, you already have a huge list of patients who came to your practice, had a good experience, but never booked another appointment.

Maybe they got busy. Life got in the way. They meant to call back and never did.

In our survey, about 20% of dentists said they had tried recall campaigns. And the way they reached out was through a mix of SMS, email, and phone calls. They weren’t relying on just one channel. Reaching out in multiple ways increases the chances that the patient actually responds.

Reaching out in multiple ways

When it came to managing the campaigns, 86% relied on their own staff to handle it. No agency, no outside help. Just their existing team using their patient management system.

The remaining 14% used dedicated third party tools to automate the process. The platforms that came up most often were Weave, Solutionreach, NexHealth, and Dental Intelligence.

And dentists who tried recall campaigns didn’t just run them once and move on. Most kept them running for 12 months or longer. Which makes sense, because this isn’t a one time effort. Every month, new patients become inactive. So the campaign just runs in the background and continues bringing people back.

When we looked at the results, most dentists rated the quality of returning patients a 4 or 5 out of 5. And that makes total sense. These people already know you. They’ve already visited your practice and had a good experience. You’re not trying to convince them to choose you. You’re simply reminding them it’s time to come back.

So before you spend money trying to attract brand new patients, it’s worth looking at the ones already sitting in your system. They’re the low hanging fruit.

The Best Paid Strategies That Bring Patients

Now let’s move on to paid strategies. When most dentists think about marketing, they usually think about spending money. Running ads, doing SEO, sending flyers, or investing in something that will bring in more new patients.

But not all marketing strategies are created equal. You could spend one dollar on one strategy and get two dollars back. Spend that same dollar somewhere else and get ten dollars back. Every marketing channel has a different return on investment.

Image ROI

1. Google Ads

It’s no surprise this is the most popular paid marketing strategy we found in the survey. When a patient in your area searches for a dentist, Google Ads puts your practice right at the top of the search results. You’re not waiting to show up organically with SEO, which could take 6 to 12 months or more. Ads are instant and you can show up at the top of the page right away.

And for many dentists, that’s incredibly appealing. If you’re starting a new practice or you simply need more new patients right away, Google Ads gives you immediate visibility. That’s why so many dentists rely on it.

Image Google Ads

Google Ads can work very well, but it’s not cheap. To actually generate new patients, you need to be willing to invest a meaningful amount each month. In our survey, most dentists who reported good results with Google Ads were spending between $1,000 and $2,000 per month.

But that number can vary quite a bit depending on where your practice is located. If you’re in a smaller market where not many other practices are running ads, clicks can actually be pretty affordable. You might get away with $500 to $1,000 in ad spend and pay a marketing company another $500 to $1,000 to manage it. In that kind of market, Google Ads can absolutely work within a $1,500 to $2,000 total budget.

But here’s the reality for most dentists in North America. Dozens of practices in your area are probably already running Google Ads, because it’s one of the fastest ways to get new patients. And when a lot of people are bidding on the same keywords, the cost goes up.

Image Keywords

In most competitive markets, you’d need at least $1,500 in ad spend alone just to have a real shot, and then you’re paying your agency on top of that.

Another thing dentists need to understand about Google Ads is that it usually takes time to really start working well. You might get some results in the first month. But if you want to get the most out of your campaigns, Google Ads usually needs to run for several months. That’s because the system is constantly learning. It’s figuring out which keywords bring the right patients, which ads people actually click on, and which searches lead to phone calls or appointment requests.

Over time, the campaigns become more optimized and the results usually improve. In our survey, dentists who ran Google Ads for 12 months or longer were much more likely to say it brought them a steady flow of new patients compared to dentists who only tried it for a few months and then stopped.

When it came to patient quality, 78% of dentists in our survey rated the quality of patients they got through Google Ads a 4 or 5 out of 5. When someone searches on Google for things like “dentist near me,” “emergency dentist,” or “family dentist,” they’re usually looking for care right now. 

They already have a clear intent to book an appointment. So by the time they click on your ad and call your practice, they’re not just casually browsing. They’re actively looking for a dentist.

And when it comes to how dentists actually run their Google Ads, 91% aren’t doing it themselves. Google Ads is a complex system and if you don’t have experience with the platform, it’s very easy to burn through your budget without getting the results you’re hoping for. That’s why most dentists rely on an expert to manage it.

2. SEO

When it comes to SEO, dentists usually have one of two experiences.

Some dentists understand that SEO takes time. They know it’s a long term investment, so they commit to it and give it the time and budget it needs to work. Others go into it hoping for quick results. When they don’t see a big improvement in the first month or two, they assume it isn’t working and they stop.

From there, the receptionist can ask a few discovery questions to understand the patient’s situation:

Image SEO progress

And our survey data showed a very clear pattern. The dentists who actually saw results were the ones who committed to SEO long term. Most of them ran SEO for 12 months or more and invested somewhere between $1,000 and $2,000 per month. On the other hand, dentists who spent less and stopped after just a few months usually saw very little return and thought SEO was a waste of money.

A proper dental SEO strategy usually involves several things working together. Optimizing your website, improving your Google Business Profile, building backlinks, and publishing content regularly.

And that’s exactly what we saw in the survey:

  • Over 90% of dentists focused on website optimization
  • About 70% were working on Google Business Profile and local SEO
  • Around 60% were building backlinks and publishing articles

The key takeaway here is that none of these things work very well in isolation. Optimizing your website alone usually isn’t enough to rank. Working on your Google Business Profile alone usually isn’t enough either. SEO works when all of these elements are happening together and consistently over time. That’s why dentists who only tried one or two things and stopped early rarely saw much progress.

When it came to patient quality, 70% of dentists rated the quality of patients a 4 or 5 out of 5. When patients search on Google, they can clearly see which results are ads. Google labels them as sponsored, so people know those placements are paid for.

Image Search results

Organic results tend to carry more trust because they feel earned rather than bought. People who call you because they found your practice organically on Google have this perception that you’re showing up because you must be a good practice. They are generally very high quality patients who are easy to book.

Part 3: Where Dentists Set Their Money on Fire

Now let’s talk about the marketing strategies dentists tried that ultimately turned out to be money down the drain.

Where Dentists Set Their Money on Fire

In our survey, dentists had a lot of different marketing strategies to choose from. But a few of them kept coming back with the same story: a lot of money spent and very little to show for it. And what’s interesting is that some of these strategies are still being used by dentists today, and in many cases they’re still being actively pushed by marketing agencies.

Radio Ads

On the surface, it sounds like it should work. Your practice name gets broadcast across the city, thousands of people hear about your clinic, and it feels like you’re getting your name out there.

RadioRadio Ads Ads

But when we looked at what dentists in our survey actually got back from radio advertising, the story was very different. Most dentists who tried radio ads were spending $3,000 or more per month on these campaigns. And despite that level of investment, not a single dentist said it brought them a significant number of new patients.

One dentist even shared that the only reason they tried radio was because they won a free campaign. They said they got very few patients from it and wouldn’t recommend it.

And the reason radio ads struggle for dentists is actually pretty simple. When your ad plays on the radio, most of the people listening aren’t looking for a dentist. They’re driving to work, cooking dinner, or just going about their day. So you’re paying to reach a massive audience, hoping that one of those listeners happens to need a dentist at that exact moment and then remembers your practice later when they decide to book. That’s a very expensive gamble.

Social Media

Once the patient feels heard and understood, promoting the practice stops feeling like a sales pitch. It just flows naturally from the conversation.

By this point the receptionist knows enough about the patient to make it personal. They’ve asked the right questions and listened carefully. So instead of just saying a generic list of services, they can highlight exactly what makes the practice a good fit for that specific person.

Social Media Post Screenshot

So let’s look at what the dentists in our survey actually experienced.

About 60% of dentists said they had tried social media marketing in some form. Most of them focused on organic posting. Things like sharing photos from the clinic, before and after pictures, team updates, or educational content. About half of the dentists said they only posted organically and didn’t run any paid ads at all.

Some dentists did experiment with paid ads on top of their posts. But most of them were spending less than $500 per month. And the dentists who spent money on social media ads reported almost the exact same results as the ones who were only posting organically. In other words, adding paid ads on top of social media posting barely moved the needle when it came to bringing in new patients.

Overall, the results from social media were not very strong. Not a single dentist in our survey said social media brought them a lot of new patients. Most said it brought them only a few. And many said they weren’t even sure if it brought them any patients at all.

When it came to patient quality, the ratings were also lower than any other strategy we looked at. On average, dentists rated social media patients 3 out of 5. And that probably explains why many dentists didn’t stick with it. About half of the dentists who tried social media stopped within six months. What’s interesting is that even the dentists who continued for 12 months or longer didn’t report much better results.

So why doesn’t it work? The answer is that social media is an entertainment platform. People open Instagram or Facebook to see what their friends are doing, watch funny videos, kill time. They’re not looking for a dentist. So unless your content stops them mid-scroll and makes them genuinely interested, the algorithm starts to hide it. People don’t find dental content on social media interesting. It’s not sexy. It’s not funny.

A lot of the content dentists post simply isn’t very interesting. You often see stock photos, generic dental tips, or captions that feel very corporate and boring. Things like “Don’t forget to floss” or “Your smile is important.” Content like that usually doesn’t grab anyone’s attention.

You often see stock photos media

That said, there are dentists who get a lot of engagement online without going viral. Their posts get shared, and patients in their community actually pay attention to what they post. We put everything we learned from those dentists into a free social media guide that we update every year with new examples and strategies. You can find the link at the bottom of this article.

2026 Social Media Guide

As a dentist, you may often see your competitors actively posting on social media and wonder what you’re missing out on. You might question whether investing time and effort into social media is truly worthwhile.

Download the Guide

Direct Mail

26% of dentists in our survey tried it. Most got back only a few new patients. When it came to patient quality, the ratings were also very low, 1 or 2 out of 5, making it one of the lowest rated strategies in the entire survey.

Some of the comments from dentists were pretty telling. One dentist said they tried it once and it wasn’t worth it. Another said they experimented with it years ago and the return on investment just wasn’t there.

Direct Mail Flayer Media

And it’s not hard to understand why. Direct mail lands in a pile of other mail that most people flip through for about three seconds before most of it goes straight in the bin.

The people who do respond are usually responding to the offer: a free consultation, a discounted exam, a whitening special. So you’re attracting deal hunters, coupon clippers, and price shoppers. Patients who came in because of a discount are less likely to stay long term, less likely to accept bigger treatment plans, and more likely to leave the moment another practice offers them a better deal.

So in the end, many dentists reported spending a lot of money to acquire patients who weren’t very loyal and didn’t generate much long term value.

The Best Marketing Strategy With a $1,500 to $2,000 Budget

So let’s say you’re a dentist in a competitive market. You’ve decided to invest in marketing, and you have a monthly budget of about $1,500 to $2,000. The question is: how should you spend that money to bring in the most new patients?

First, focus on Google Reviews.

They’re completely free, they’re relatively easy to get, and you don’t need an agency to help you with this. Most practices can handle it in house with their own staff.

You can ask patients directly for a review, set up automated messages that go out after appointments, track how many reviews you’re getting every month, and make it a real priority for your team.

Image Google Reviews 2

Reviews also have a compounding effect. The more reviews you have, the more trust you build online. And the more trust you build, the easier it becomes for new patients to choose your practice.

If you want a structured system for getting more Google reviews consistently, we created a Google Reviews course for dentists that covers exactly how to do this.

Course image

Boost Google Reviews to Grow Your Practice

Become the most reviewed and trusted dental practice in your area by building a constant stream of five star Google reviews.

Learn More

The Best Marketing Strategy With a $1,500 to $2,000 Budget

Google reviews help you build trust. But trust only matters once patients actually know your practice exists. You could be the best dentist in the city, but if nobody knows about your practice, you’re basically the best kept secret.

Now if you want to get visible and in front of patients who are actively searching for a dentist, you really have two options with a solid return on investment. Google Ads or SEO.

With Google Ads, the cost really depends on where you’re located. If you’re in a smaller market where not many other practices are running ads, clicks can actually be pretty cheap. You might get away with $500 to $1,000 in ad spend and pay a marketing company another $500 to $1,000 to manage it. In that scenario, Google Ads could absolutely work within this budget.

But here’s the reality for most dentists in North America. Dozens of practices in your area are probably already running Google Ads because of how effective they are and how quickly they can get results. And when a lot of people are bidding on the same keywords, the cost goes up. In most competitive markets, you’d need at least $1,500 in ad spend alone to have a real shot, and then you’re paying your agency on top of that.

And there’s another thing to understand about Google Ads. It’s like a tap. The second you turn it off, the water stops flowing. You stop paying Google, you stop showing up. You don’t exist.

Patient Flow

That’s why with a budget of $1,500 to $2,000, you’re usually better off putting that into SEO.

Think of it like the difference between renting and owning a house. With Google Ads, you’re renting your visibility. Sure, the monthly cost might feel manageable, but the moment you stop paying, you’re out. With SEO, you’re building something you actually own. You’re earning rankings and building a reputation online that doesn’t just vanish when you stop writing checks.

Now just like a house, it takes upkeep. If you stop maintaining a house, it doesn’t fall apart the next day. But slowly, over time, things start to deteriorate. It’s the same thing with SEO. If you reach the first page on Google and then stop all work completely, your rankings aren’t going to disappear overnight. But without any ongoing effort, you will slowly start to slide down. It takes a while, but it happens.

The point is, with SEO you’re building an asset. With Google Ads, you’re renting one. And when your budget is limited, owning beats renting every time.

Marketing Is More Than Just Ads or SEO

At the end of the day, getting a new patient in your chair isn’t just about running ads or getting more reviews. It’s a whole system working together.

You need visibility so patients find you. You need trust so they choose you over the practice down the street. Your staff needs to make a great first impression and actually convert that phone call into a booked appointment. And you need to track all of it, so you always know what’s working, what isn’t, and where you’re losing patients you should be keeping.

That’s exactly what we do at RevUp Dental. We handle dental marketing end to end, which means we take care of every piece of that system for you. And unlike most marketing companies that will run your ads and call it a day, we don’t stop there. If patients are finding you but not booking, that’s still our problem. We focus on the whole patient journey, from the moment someone searches for a dentist to the moment they sit down in your chair, and everything in between.

Course image

What If Getting More New Patients Was Never a Problem Again?

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Related Articles

How to Get More Google Reviews for Your Dental Practice

Nick Fotache Filed Under: Google Reviews October 7, 2025

Table of Contents

  • Key Takeaways
  • Why Google Reviews Matter More Than Ever for Dentists
  • Step-by-Step System for Getting More Reviews
  • What Doesn’t Work When Trying to Get Google Reviews
  • Train Your Staff on How to Get Google Reviews

How to Get More Google Reviews for Your Dental Practice

Key Takeaways

  • Reviews are the new word of mouth. 88% of people trust online reviews like personal recommendations and they heavily influence which dentist patients choose.
  • Quantity and freshness matter. Google favors practices with lots of recent reviews, not just a big number from years ago.
  • Timing is everything. The best moment to ask is right after a positive treatment experience, especially post-cleaning or when patients express gratitude.
  • Make it simple. Send a direct Google review link via text or email immediately with no extra steps and no waiting until later.

Ever wonder how that practice down the street has 300+ Google reviews and climbing… while yours barely moves?

You’ve tried a few things. Maybe you put up a QR code at the front desk. Maybe you even invested in an automated system to request reviews after appointments.

But the results? Meh. Meanwhile, your competitor across town is racking up positive reviews week after week. And you’re left wondering what they know that you don’t.

Here’s the truth: most dentists are overwhelmed by conflicting advice on how to get Google reviews. One blog says to automate the process. Another says to hand out review cards. You’ve heard of dentists that had success buying reviews, which is a surefire way to get penalized by Google.

But the top 10% of dental offices? They do things differently. They don’t rely on gimmicks or shortcuts. Instead, they use a simple, personalized system that works every time. And we know this because we work directly with those top-performing practices across North America.

We’ve seen firsthand what actually works when it comes to getting more Google reviews.

Why Google Reviews Matter More Than Ever for Dentists

In today’s digital-first world, your Google reviews are your first impression, often before a patient ever clicks your site or calls your office. Here’s how it plays out: a patient searches “dentist near me.”

They see a list of practices in Google Maps. Before they even notice your address or your website link, their eyes go straight to the stars and the review count.

Dentist near me Google search

Patients Trust Reviews Like They Trust Friends

Over 88% of consumers trust online reviews as much as personal recommendations. And 90% read online reviews before visiting a business, including dentists.

That means your star rating and review count are no longer just “nice to have.” They are the deciding factor in whether a patient picks up the phone and calls you… or the practice down the street.

Think about it from a patient’s perspective. They search “dentist near me” and see two options:

  • One office has 4.8 stars and 12 reviews

  • Another has 4.9 stars and 324 reviews

Which one do you think they’re clicking?

Patients equate more reviews with more trust, stability, and quality care. It’s the difference between looking like a hidden gem and looking like the obvious, safe choice. For dentists, that translates directly into more phone calls, more bookings, and more new patients.

In fact, practices with 300+ reviews consistently get far more calls than those with fewer than 100, and even a small jump in star rating can dramatically change patient behavior.

How Google Reviews Impact New Patient Flow for Dentists

Related Article

How Google Reviews Impact New Patient Flow for Dentists →

Explore how the quantity and quality of Google reviews directly affect patient trust and new patient acquisition.

Reviews Are a Key Signal in Google’s AI

Google is leaning heavily on AI, like Gemini, to decide which businesses show up first in local search. These systems don’t just look at your website — they scan for trust signals, and reviews are at the top of the list.

It is no longer just about having a profile. Google’s AI is analyzing:

  • How many reviews you have compared to nearby practices

  • How recent those reviews are

  • The quality and tone of what patients are saying

Gemini AI recommendation

And patients are starting to see the results of this shift. Instead of just a list of dentists, Google’s AI may now say: “Here’s ABC Dental, the clinic with the most reviews and highest rating in your area.”

That means your reviews have become your reputation — not only for patients, but also for Google’s algorithm. The more consistent, positive, and fresh your reviews are, the more likely you are to dominate local search and get the call before your competitors do.

Step-by-Step System for Getting More Reviews

Most dentists hope for reviews instead of building a process. The best practices turn it into a repeatable system that happens naturally, every day.

Here’s exactly how to do it:

Step 1: Choose the Right Moment

The best time to ask for a review is when the patient is genuinely happy with their experience. Patients are far more likely to leave a positive review if you catch them in that moment of satisfaction — not days later through a generic email.

Think about it this way: if you send a review request two days after the appointment, life has already moved on. The excitement is gone, and your message feels like another piece of spam in their inbox.

Instead, focus on asking right after simple, positive procedures where patients feel good:

  • Dental cleanings

  • Teeth whitening

  • Routine checkups or minor treatments

These are moments when patients are comfortable, smiling, and grateful. On the other hand, avoid asking after major or invasive procedures where the patient may be in pain, swollen, or stressed.

patient and dental hygienist

Step 2: Choose Who Should Ask for Dental Reviews

If everyone is responsible for getting reviews, then no one is responsible. You can’t just tell your staff, “We need more Google reviews” and hope for the best. Without clear ownership, the task will get forgotten or awkwardly skipped.

In most practices, there are two natural options:

  • The dentist: Great after major treatments. If a patient just completed an implant, crown, or cosmetic procedure, the follow-up appointment or checkup is the perfect moment. The patient has seen results, trust is high, and a direct ask from the dentist carries weight.
  • The staff: Great for consistency. Hygienists can ask after cleanings or whitening, and the front desk can follow through by sending the link before the patient leaves. Staff interactions happen every day, so this keeps reviews flowing regularly.

The key is to nominate specific people and make review requests part of their role. Many practices assign a “Review Manager” — one staff member who tracks how many reviews come in, reminds others to ask, and ensures the process doesn’t slip through the cracks.

When everyone knows their part, asking for reviews becomes a natural habit instead of a forgotten afterthought.

Step 3: Use Simple, Natural Scripts

The worst thing you can do is either make every staff member guess what to say, or have them repeat the same stiff line over and over. Patients can tell when it sounds forced.

The solution is to give your team short, natural scripts that fit the situation. Scripts remove the awkwardness, keep the message consistent, and make patients more likely to say yes.

Here are three examples you can use right away:

For the dentist: “I’m so glad you’re happy with the results, it’s great to see you smiling. If you feel comfortable, would you please share your experience in a quick Google review? It helps other patients, just like you, feel confident choosing us, and it would mean a lot to our team.”

For the hygienist or dental assistant: “I’m glad your cleaning went well, your smile looks fantastic. If you wouldn’t mind, could you share your experience in a quick Google review? It really helps people who are looking for a dentist they can trust, and it means a lot to us when patients like you share their feedback. I can text you the link so it’s easy.”

For the front desk: “How was everything with Dr. Smith today?”
(Wait for the patient’s positive response.)
“That’s great to hear! Dr. Smith really goes above and beyond for every patient, so we love hearing that kind of feedback. If you’re open to it, would you be willing to share your feedback about our office in a Google review? I can text you the link right now, and it’ll take you less than a minute. We’d love to get more amazing patients like you, and your review would help a lot!

The goal is not to memorize a script word for word, but to give your team a comfortable framework. That way, no one is guessing, no one feels pushy, and patients feel like they’re just having a normal conversation.

Side view portrait of pretty young woman sitting in dental chair and smiling at doctor during consultation in clinic, copy space

Step 4: Send the Review Link on the Spot

When a patient agrees to leave a review, timing is everything. If they walk out the door without the “Write a Review” link, most will never follow through.

The practices that succeed with reviews keep it simple: ask, get the yes, and send the link right away — often while the patient is still in the chair.

Why? Because patients check texts instantly. An SMS with the review link has the highest chance of being opened and acted on. Email can work, but it often gets buried. The winning combo is a personal ask, followed by an immediate text.

How to get your review link:

  1. Search your practice name on Google

  2. Click “Write a review”

  3. Copy the full URL

  4. Save it as a template in your SMS and email system so staff can send it with two taps

Or, if you want to save some time, you can use a free tool that generates the link for you automatically. Here’s one you can try: Google Review Link Generator

SMS example

“Thanks for your visit today! Here’s the link to leave us a quick Google review: [link]. Your feedback helps other patients find us.”

Email example

Subject: Quick favor from today’s visit
“Thank you for choosing us! If you have a minute, would you mind sharing your experience in a quick Google review? Here’s the link: [link]. We’d be so grateful.”

Step 5: Track and Improve Your Google Reviews

Top dental practices know that reviews are a business metric — not a side project. They treat review collection with the same seriousness as production or case acceptance.

The first step is setting a clear weekly or monthly goal. For example, “We want 20 new reviews this month.” A number that is specific and measurable gives the entire team something concrete to work toward.

But here’s the critical part: they don’t just track their own reviews. They also track their competitors. Why? Because without context, you don’t know if you’re winning or losing.

On a whiteboard in the staff room they write down:

  • How many reviews the practice has right now

  • How many reviews the top five competitors have

  • How many new reviews each office gained this month

whiteboard for Google reviews

This creates a clear picture of the local “race.” If your competitors are adding 10 new reviews a month and you’re only adding 3, you’re falling behind, no matter how good you feel about your progress.

Not every practice wants to rely on whiteboards or spreadsheets. That’s where reputation management tools come in. Platforms like BrightLocal, Podium, or our own Scorecard software take the same system of accountability and automate it.

Step 6: Incentivize Your Staff

Some dentists push back on the idea of rewarding staff for reviews. They think, “Why should I give bonuses or gift cards? Isn’t this part of their job already?”

Here’s the truth: reviews are not just another box to tick. They are one of the most powerful drivers of new patients your practice can get. If spending $100 on gift cards or a team lunch leads to even a handful of new patients, the return is massive.

Think of it this way — one new patient could easily spend $1,000 or more in your practice over the year. Compare that to the cost of a Starbucks card or lunch for the team. The math is obvious.

One of our clients in a competitive area told their staff: “If we become the most-reviewed dental practice in the city this year, I’ll close the office for a week and take everyone on a fully paid vacation to the Dominican Republic.”

Sounds extreme, right? But here’s what happened: in just three months, the team hit the goal. They became the most-reviewed practice in their area. The dentist followed through on the trip, and the payoff was incredible: they nearly doubled production over the next 12 months because patients were choosing them over competitors.

The takeaway? Incentives work. They create buy-in. They make the whole team feel invested in the outcome.

A collection of gift cards in a store.

Ideas for incentivizing staff:

  • Starbucks or Amazon gift cards

  • A nice team dinner at a fancy restaurant

  • Extra paid time off for hitting a big goal

  • Bigger rewards for major milestones (like becoming the #1 most-reviewed practice in your city)

Step 7: Respond to Every Google Review

Google favors businesses that are active and engaged. When you reply to reviews, even with short, simple responses, it signals that your practice is real, reliable, and involved with patient feedback. That activity can give you an edge in your dental SEO rankings.

How to respond:

  • Positive reviews: Keep it warm and simple. “Thank you, Sarah! We’re so glad you had a great experience today.”

  • Negative reviews: Patients pay close attention here. A careless or defensive reply can do more damage than the review itself. The right way is to apologize, acknowledge room for improvement, and invite the patient to continue the conversation privately.

We actually created a full training video that shows dentists exactly how to handle negative Google reviews — step by step — without risking HIPAA violations or damaging their reputation. Patients don’t just look at what was said in a negative review, they look at how you respond. If you come across as defensive, you lose. If you come across as caring and professional, you win.

How to Respond to a Negative Google Review - YouTube Video

Watch on YouTube

How to Respond to a Negative Google Review →

Learn the right way to handle negative reviews so you protect your reputation and build trust with new patients.

What Doesn’t Work When Trying to Get Google Reviews

Most dentists and their teams already know how important Google reviews are. The problem is not awareness — it is execution. Over the years, we have seen the same mistakes repeated again and again by practices that want more reviews but never gain traction.

Here are the most common approaches that fail and why they do not deliver results:

QR Codes

Another popular request from staff is to “just put up a QR code” so patients can scan and leave reviews. While it sounds simple, it doesn’t work in practice. Posters on walls blend into the background—just like the cluttered bulletin boards you see at convenience stores. Patients rarely notice them, and even fewer actually scan and follow through.

QR code

The reality is that QR codes aren’t about making things easier for patients—they’re about making things easier for staff. It’s a passive strategy that avoids the discomfort of asking directly, but passive strategies won’t make you the top review practice in your area.

Automation Tools

Tools like BirdEye, Podium, Swell, and countless others promise to make review collection easy by automating the process. Years ago, this approach gave some practices an edge, but today everyone is using them. If you’re just sending out automated texts or emails, you’ll only see a tiny percentage of patients actually leave reviews—often as low as 2–5%.

At best, you’ll keep up with the herd, but you won’t pull ahead of your competitors. The practices that dominate Google reviews today are the ones that personalize the process, not the ones relying on cookie-cutter automation.

There is also risk. If a patient had a poor experience and your system auto-prompts them, they are more likely to leave a negative review.

Review Gating (Filtering Out Bad Reviews)

Some software tools claim to be “smart” enough to hide negative reviews and only post positive ones. This is called review gating—and it’s against Google’s policies. In 2018, Google explicitly banned it, and by 2022 they began cracking down harder, even penalizing SEO rankings when patterns of unnatural reviews were detected.

It’s not just Google either. In one well-known case, the FTC fined Fashion Nova $4.2 million for suppressing negative reviews, even though they were a small retail chain with just a handful of locations. Dental practices are not immune. If you’re caught gating, you could lose reviews, lose visibility, or even lose your entire Google Business Profile.

Generic Automation / No Human Interaction

At its core, a review request is about the patient experience. If you rely solely on automation or impersonal reminders, you’re treating reviews like a vending machine transaction. Patients don’t feel appreciated, and they don’t feel a personal connection to your practice.

Think about it: Starbucks isn’t successful because of coffee vending machines—they’re successful because they deliver an experience. The same applies here. Reviews grow when your staff builds real relationships and personally asks for feedback, not when the process is completely automated and detached.

Train Your Staff on How to Get Google Reviews

This training course shows your team exactly how to ask patients at the right time, what to say, and how to use the RevUp tool to collect reviews effortlessly. More reviews mean higher rankings and more new patients.

  • ✔ How to consistently get more Google reviews
  • ✔ The best timing and scripts for asking patients
  • ✔ How reviews influence your rankings and patient trust
  • ✔ How to use RevUp’s tool to automate review requests
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Related Articles

AI Dental Receptionists – The Latest Grift

Nick Fotache Filed Under: Dental Marketing, Operations April 4, 2025

AI Dental Receptionists – The Latest Grift

Key Takeaways

  • AI Receptionists are the latest "grift." Despite impressive initial demos, the technology fails in real-world practice, often becoming a hassle that patients dislike.
  • The core issue is technical limitation. AI models have a limited "context window" (short-term memory), causing them to forget details in longer conversations and deliver inaccurate results.
  • Making AI smarter makes it unusable. Training AI on enough detail to be competent makes it too slow (5–10 second response lag) and too expensive to be profitable.
  • The AI gold rush is driven by profit, not innovation. Many companies are just reselling cheap, off-the-shelf AI tools at a premium, without the ability to truly fix the underlying technical issues.
  • Human staff and training remain superior. No AI can yet replace the necessary human connection, depth of context, and speed required for successful patient interactions.

Dental AI receptionists are everywhere right now. If you’re a dentist, I can almost guarantee that you’ve been hit up by multiple companies through email, phone calls, or ads, pitching their “revolutionary” AI receptionist that’s supposedly going to change your practice forever.

And it’s not just dentistry. AI phone agents are the hot new thing in every industry right now. A million companies have popped up in the last year offering some version of this tech, and they’re all scrambling to convince you that it’s the future. If you’ve ever taken a demo of one of these systems, you probably had the same first reaction that a lot of dentists do:

“Wow, this thing is pretty good and actually sounds like a real person.”

It responds quickly. It seems knowledgeable and professional. It doesn’t get flustered. You can interrupt it mid-sentence, and it still keeps up. And at first glance, it might even seem like it does a better job than a human receptionist. Plus, it works 24/7 and costs way less than a salary. What’s not to love?

A lot of dentists get excited and jump on board, thinking they’re getting in on the ground floor of some huge industry shift. Sure, there are some bugs here and there, but the company assures them it’s just part of the setup process—nothing they can’t fine-tune with a little tweaking.

They're Terrible In Practice

A few months go by, and that initial excitement starts to wear off. Instead of transforming the front desk, the AI starts to feel more like a hassle. You start seeing posts pop up on Dental Town like THIS, essentially saying:

“At first, I was impressed. There were some minor issues, but I figured it just needed time to improve. The company was responsive and promised updates. But after a few months… yeah, this isn’t working. I told my office manager to scrap it and go back to the old-school answering machine.”

AIReceptonst

Or like THIS, where the gist of it is:

“Same experience here. At first, I thought it had potential, but patients HATED it. They got frustrated having to repeat their names and birthdates over and over. The AI just didn’t understand them well enough. Honestly, the tech just isn’t there yet. Buyer beware.”

AIReceptonst2

And these stories? They’re everywhere.

Dentists who try these AI receptionists usually end up disappointed once the honeymoon phase is over. I want to break exactly why these systems seem so impressive at first—but end up being more trouble than they’re worth.

The AI Receptionist Gold Rush

So what’s actually wrong with these AI receptionists?

First off, they’re ridiculously easy to build. That’s why you’re seeing so many of these companies pop up overnight. In reality, they’re all using the same white-label software under the hood. They slap on their logo, tweak a few settings, and start selling it to dentists for hundreds of dollars a month—even though it only costs them $10–$20 a month to run.

The reason so many companies are jumping on this bandwagon isn’t because they’re passionate about AI or improving your practice. It’s because it’s a ridiculously profitable business. Most dentists will stick with an AI receptionist for at least three to six months or more to give it a fair shot, hoping it’ll get better. That’s plenty of time for these companies to make their money—even if the dentists eventually get frustrated and leave.

I actually made two videos showing just how easy it is to create one of these AI receptionists. In the first video, I spent five minutes writing out basic instructions, and the AI would probably impress most dentists and feel like it’s a high-tech solution.

In the second video, I spent 15 minutes tweaking it to handle follow-up calls and appointment confirmations. That’s it, no coding experience required.

And here’s the kicker—my coding knowledge is very basic. We employ a lot of talented developers at RevUp Dental, some with PHDs in machine learning from top universities… but my skill level is about a quarter of what an entry-level college student could do. And yet, in 20 minutes, I had a functional and pretty impressive AI receptionist built.

These AI receptionist companies want you to think they’re building some groundbreaking technology. They’re not. Most of them are just cobbling together the same off-the-shelf tools, charging a premium for it, and calling it innovation.

Why These Systems Always Disappoint

Dentists who sign up for AI receptionists often start out excited—but within a few months, they realize the system isn’t improving, and they quit. And it’s not because the AI “needs more time to learn.”

The real issue? These companies didn’t actually build the tech—they’re just reselling it. They’re taking off-the-shelf AI tools, slapping their logo on them, and charging dentists a premium. Since they don’t own or control the core technology, they have no real way to fix the problems.

At their core, these AI receptionists are just two basic systems glued together. A language model like ChatGPT that generates text-based responses, and a voice model like Eleven Labs that converts that text into speech. As I showed in my videos, tools like Retell AI make it incredibly easy for anyone—even without coding knowledge—to build one of these systems. And that’s exactly what most of these companies are doing.

Why is that? AI models like ChatGPT have a limited context window.

Think of it like a computer with limited RAM. The more information you feed it, the slower it gets. Once it runs out of memory, it starts to forget earlier parts of the conversation. The ChatGPT 4o mode for example has a 128,000 token context window, which translates to around 85,000 – 100,000 words.

The biggest reason these AI receptionists fail? Context windows.

Think of a context window like a computer’s short-term memory—once it fills up, the AI forgets earlier parts of the conversation.

For example, ChatGPT-4o has a 128,000-token context window, which is roughly 85,000–100,000 words. Sounds like a lot, right? But in practice, it’s very limited for something as complex as managing patient calls.

When I built my example AI receptionist, I gave it about 500–1,000 words of instructions. That kept it fast and responsive—but also pretty dumb. It didn’t actually “understand” dentistry or how to be a great receptionist. It just followed some basic scripts and confidently made things up when it didn’t know the answer.

And in a real-world setting? The longer the conversation goes on, the worse it gets. The AI starts forgetting key details, losing track of what was said earlier, and making increasingly random or incorrect responses. Patients pick up on this quickly—and they hate it.

Why Can't AI Just Be “Trained” to Be Smarter?

So, what if we just give the AI more instructions? What if we train it using a huge receptionist manual?

Let’s say we give it a 200-page training guide—about 50,000–60,000 words—with detailed instructions on handling every possible patient question. A manual for how to be a great dental receptionist. Wouldn’t that make it smarter? Not really, and here’s why:

1. It slows down dramatically. When the AI only has 1,000 words of instructions, it can answer almost instantly. But when it has to process 50,000+ words before every response, it takes 5-10 seconds to reply. No patient is going to wait that long for a simple answer. Would you talk to an AI receptionist that remained silent for 10 seconds every time you asked a question? I doubt it.

2. It gets way more expensive. AI pricing is based on how much data (input and output tokens) the model processes. With just 1,000 words of instructions, it might cost 1 cent to start the model. But with 50,000+ words of instruction, that startup cost jumps to maybe 50 cents per session, plus additional charges for every question the patient asks and every response the model gives. That means AI receptionist companies either have to jack up their prices, or keep the AI dumb to stay profitable.

And that’s exactly what happens. These companies can’t make the AI as smart as a human receptionist, because if they did, the response times would be too slow and the costs would be too high. So instead, they keep it “good enough” to look impressive in a short demo—but not good enough for real patient interactions. No amount of tweaking is going to fix this.

When AI receptionist companies tell you to “stick with it” while they “work out the kinks,” they’re either clueless about how large language models actually work or they’re milking you for more money before you realize the system isn’t getting better.

Just look at the posts on DentalTown—dentists try these systems, hold out hope for months, and eventually give up when they realize it’s just not going to work. It’s honestly one big grift.

The Bottom Line

At the end of the day, AI receptionists aren’t actually thinking or understanding anything. They’re just really good at predicting what the next word in a sentence should be. They are in essence ‘next token prediction systems’. And because of their context window limitations, they either:

A. Sound decent in a short demo, but lack depth and accuracy for real world use.
B. Try to be smarter, but become too slow and expensive to run to be practical.

And that’s why, after a few months, most dentists end up scrapping them. No matter how impressive an AI receptionist might seem at first, the technical limitations mean it’s just not ready for real-world dental offices. And it won’t be for a long time.

So instead of chasing the AI receptionist hype, you’re far better off investing in great staff, training, and tools that actually work. Because no AI, no matter how fancy, can replace the human connection that makes a dental practice successful.

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Canadian Dental Care Plan: Success or Failure?

Nick Fotache Filed Under: Dental Marketing October 7, 2024

Canadian Dental Care Plan: Success or Failure?

Key Takeaways

  • About 75% of dentists are currently participating in the CDCP, but many patients wrongly assume their care is fully covered. Front desk staff need to be trained to explain co-pays and balance billing clearly before treatment begins.
  • The program currently reimburses around 85% of treatment fees, but reimbursement rates could change. Practices that build their model around full government coverage are taking on real financial risk.
  • Balance billing is what keeps the CDCP workable for most practices. If too many dentists stop using it, the government may remove the option entirely, which would hurt everyone.
  • If managed well, the CDCP could increase procedures performed by 10 to 20%. If reimbursement rates drop and balance billing disappears, practice revenues could fall by 45 to 50%.
  • Higher patient volume means more pressure on staffing. Practices should plan for increased demand on hygienists, assistants, and administrative staff before that pressure becomes a problem.

The Canada Dental Care Plan (CDCP) is making waves across the dental industry. By providing more affordable dental care to many Canadians, it aims to expand access to much-needed treatments. But the CDCP has left many dental professionals asking questions: Is this good for my practice? How will it impact our profitability and the value of our practice? And what does it mean for our patient relationships?

In a recent webinar, we spoke with industry experts Bill Henderson and Dr. Bernie Dolansky from Henry Schein Tier Three. They shared important insights and strategies to help dental practices adapt to the changing landscape.

Understanding the CDCP: Is It Working?

The CDCP was designed to make dental care more accessible by covering a significant portion of treatment costs for eligible Canadians. Approximately 75% of dentists are currently participating, and it’s seen as a positive step by many patients who previously struggled to afford care. For practices, it offers a chance to increase patient volume.

However, the program also brings challenges. The key to its success for many practices is balance billing, which allows dentists to charge patients the difference between what the government covers and the actual treatment costs. This enables practices to maintain profitability. But there are concerns about the long-term stability of this system. Over time, the government may change reimbursement rates, impacting how much a practice can charge. This uncertainty is something all dentists must keep an eye on.

The CDCP currently reimburses around 85% of treatment fees, which is a good starting point. However, patients often misunderstand the program, believing their dental care is “free.” In reality, many families—especially those with a household income between $80,000 and $90,000—end up paying a significant portion of the cost, sometimes up to two-thirds of the treatment fee.

Another aspect that may affect practices is the upcoming requirement for predetermination. This means dental offices will need approval before performing certain procedures, adding administrative time and effort to the process. Unlike private insurance predeterminations, the efficiency of the CDCP’s approval system is still in question, which could lead to delays and additional work for dental teams.

Effective Patient Communication Strategies

One critical area that practices must focus on is patient communication. Because many patients mistakenly believe that the CDCP covers all dental costs, it’s essential to educate them about their responsibilities, such as co-pays and balance billing. Properly setting expectations can help avoid confusion, build trust, and maintain a positive relationship with your patients.

Train your front desk staff to clearly explain the costs of treatment and how the CDCP works. A simple approach could be sharing a breakdown of the expected fees and what portion the patient is responsible for. This way, patients can make informed decisions and aren’t caught off guard by unexpected costs. Some practices have found success by proactively reaching out to patients who may qualify for the CDCP. By sending letters or emails explaining how the program works and what their financial responsibility will be, you can create transparency and reduce misunderstandings.

The Financial Impact on Practice Value

One of the biggest concerns with the CDCP is how it will affect the value of dental practices. The answer isn’t straightforward and depends on how the program develops and how practices choose to engage with it. If managed well, the CDCP could lead to a 10-20% rise in procedures performed across the country, increasing practice revenue. If balance billing is maintained and reimbursement rates are aligned with costs, the financial impact could be positive. However, if these rates decrease or if the ability to balance bill is taken away, practices could see a drop in profitability. Economic modeling suggests that practice revenues could drop by 45-50%, significantly reducing the value of practices if reimbursement rates fall behind the cost of care.

Why Balance Billing is Essential

Balance billing is crucial for practices to stay profitable and sustainable. Without it, practices risk losing income, especially if the CDCP reimbursement rates don’t keep up with increasing costs. Although some practices choose not to balance bill to attract more patients, this can be a short-term gain with long-term consequences. If a large number of dentists choose not to balance bill, the government may decide to remove the option entirely. Politicians could argue that practices are financially stable without it, leading to potential loss of an important revenue stream. Therefore, maintaining balance billing isn’t just about individual profitability—it’s a collective effort to ensure the program remains beneficial for all dental practices.

Staffing, Operations, and Growth

The CDCP will likely increase demand for dental care, requiring more hygienists, assistants, and administrative staff to handle the influx of patients. This increased demand can drive up wages and make hiring a challenge, especially in areas already experiencing staffing shortages. Practices must find ways to improve efficiency, streamline workflows, and manage operational costs to stay ahead. Many practices may already feel overwhelmed by day-to-day management, so adding more patients and the administrative load of the CDCP could make it difficult to keep up. Investing in staff training and technology can help offset the additional workload, ensuring that patient care remains efficient and profitable.

Looking Forward: Adapting to Change

The CDCP is here to stay, and it’s up to each practice to decide how to adapt and make the most of it. For many, balance billing will be the key to staying profitable. Clear patient communication is essential to help patients understand their costs and to maintain trust. Proactively reaching out to patients about the program can also build a positive narrative around it, helping patients understand how it benefits them.

Check the full interview on our YouTube channel.

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