A Free-Reprint Article Written by: Peter Gopal, Ph.D. 

Article Title: 
Dental Practice Staff Management -- Turning a Difficult Employee into a Star

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Article Description:
It takes both courage and management skill to deal with a
difficult employee in your dental practice. It is never easy
to confront an employee with regard to performance issues.
Yet, by developing this vital management skill, you can
potentially add upwards of $40,000 to the gross receipts of
your practice. That's for a solo practitioner with 3-6
employees.


Additional Article Information:
===============================

552 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2009-10-22 10:12:00

Written By:     Peter Gopal, Ph.D.
Copyright:      2009
Contact Email:  mailto:[email protected]



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Dental Practice Staff Management -- Turning a Difficult Employee into a Star
Copyright (c) 2009 Peter Gopal, Ph.D.
Visionary Management
http://www.visionary-management.com/



It takes both courage and management skill to deal with a
difficult employee in your dental practice. It is never easy to
confront an employee with regard to performance issues.

Yet, by developing this vital management skill, you can
potentially add upwards of $40,000 to the gross receipts of your
practice. That's for a solo practitioner with 3-6 employees. If
you have a larger practice, the gains could be even more
significant. And you can do this without spending money on
expensive equipment (more debt) or marketing (which is risky) and
without increasing your overhead - simply by turning around one
or more poorly performing staff members.

Warning Signs of Sub-Standard Employee Performance

Here are ten common warning signs of poor or unacceptable staff
performance.

1. Too many absences or tardy arrivals.

2. Does not follow through without reminders.

3. Unprofessional behavior, such as rudeness, use of cell phone
at work or excessive gossip.

4. Personal problems interfering with work duties.

5. Sloppy or incomplete work.

6. Complaints from patients or co-workers.

7. Undermining behavior at staff meetings, such as sarcastic
comments or rolling eyes.

8. A negative, it-will-never-work attitude.

9. Disrespect to co-workers or management.

10. Little or no initiative.

How to Intervene When an Employee Performs Poorly

Avoidance is not an option. As an owner/manager, the longer you
wait to address a performance problem, the harder it is to deal
with constructively, and the worse the problem becomes. When most
employers contemplate confronting an employee about poor
performance, they are apprehensive about how to proceed.

You have to start out assuming that most people want to do a good
job. Most employees desire and intend to do a good job, and would
like to improve when they are not performing well. However,
limitations of personality, knowledge, experience, or other
barriers, may interfere with the employee's ability to be
productive. Your task is to remove these barriers.

Identify a time when speaking to the employee will bring the best
results. When the employee is greatly stressed, it is difficult
to have a meaningful conversation. Then proceed with the
following five steps.

1. Identify and define the performance problem. Be specific.
Provide supporting evidence. Use "I" messages such as "I have
noticed" or "I have observed" to give constructive feedback.

2. Explain the impact of the performance problem on patients,
other employees, productivity, and customer service.

3. Work with the employee to figure out the reasons for the
performance problem. Sometimes what gets in the way is they
don't know how to do a good job, or there are obstacles beyond
their control.

4. Explore ideas for a solution. Have ideas of your own about
what the employee can do to improve, but be sure to involve the
staff member in coming up with solutions.

5. Write a plan for improvement. You should write this plan
describing the area needing correction, the plan for corrective
action, a date to check progress and the consequences for lack of
improvement. You should have the employee read it and sign it.

Work toward building a staff-driven practice where the staff
share responsibility for running your practice and serving your
patients. When implemented correctly, a good system for
performance feedback and early management intervention raises the
caliber of your staff and the profitability of your practice.






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Peter Gopal, PhD, together with his wife, Hema Gopal, M.B.A. and 
D.M.D., consults with dentists who are intent on building a more 
profitable practice.  Whether you are leaving money on the table 
due to broken patient appointments, improper scheduling, poor 
case acceptance, low hygienist productivity, excessive overhead, 
or unnecessary reliance on PPOs, they can pinpoint your 
weaknesses and prescribe remedies.  Receive a free, realistic 
assessment of the earning potential of your dental practice by 
going to: http://www.visionary-management.com/assessment.php


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