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

Article Title: 
Is Your Dental Practice Controlling Costs Effectively? Profitability Benchmarks 
for Dentists

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Article Description:
Overhead is taking a bigger bite out of a doctor's
compensation. According to the ADA, the average practice has
a profitability of 32.7%. That falls short of what it can
be. At many dental practices, high overhead is a persistent
problem that goes undiagnosed and unresolved.


Additional Article Information:
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664 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2009-12-01 14:15:00

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



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Is Your Dental Practice Controlling Costs Effectively? Profitability Benchmarks 
for Dentists
Copyright (c) 2009 Peter Gopal, Ph.D.
Visionary Management
http://www.visionary-management.com/



Overhead is taking a bigger bite out of a doctor's compensation.
According to the ADA, the average practice has a profitability of
32.7%. That falls short of what it can be. At many dental
practices, high overhead is a persistent problem that goes
undiagnosed and unresolved. Often, doctors don't become aware of
their overhead numbers until the year is over and the accountant
provides a historical review of the data.

With average profitability of 32.7%, overhead is consuming a
whopping 67.3% of all the revenue a dental practice is bringing
in. Based on our experience, however, an optimized dental
practice is able to achieve and sustain profitability of 45% or
more, with overhead just 55% or less. This is after allowing for
continuing education and investment in new equipment.

It is important to know the primary sources of costs in a dental
practice as well as benchmark figures for these categories. This
allows you to compare your practice with figures from some of the
best practices.

Facility costs such as rent or mortgage are fixed. Once a lease
is negotiated or an office building is purchased, there is not
much that can be done to alter that. Therefore, we focus on
variable costs. Here are some benchmarks to help you figure out
where you may be overspending.

Overhead Benchmarks for Dentists

Assuming you did not make any big equipment purchases (Section
179 items), here are the three biggest contributors to variable
costs:

1. Payroll and benefits. This is the single biggest cost in
dental practices. Here are some benchmark figures for a practice
located in the Northeast U.S.

Without considering FICA/Medicare or benefits, gross staff
payroll should be less than 22% of revenue.

All-inclusive total staff compensation (including FICA/Medicare,
bonuses, and benefits) should be less than 26% of revenue.

Each hygienist should produce three times her gross pay. Normally
this means that each hygienist should generate revenue of at
least $150/hour. Optimally, it should be $172/hour. These are
figures for year 2009. From what I've observed, only 30% of
hygienists deliver on this benchmark. The rest are
underperforming.

2. Dental Supplies. This should be less than 5% of revenues.

3. Dental Labs. Lab costs should be less than 8% of revenue. Use
a quality lab that you are comfortable with and do not make the
mistake of going with a cheaper lab without confirming the
quality of their work.

Three Other Causes of Low Profitability

1. Case Acceptance. If you meet those benchmarks, the practice
still may not be as profitable as it could be because of low case
acceptance. If that factor applies, consider improvement in these
areas:

 * Relationship Building Skills

 * Non-Aggressive Case Presentation

 * Verbal Skills for Case Presentation

 * Hygienist Pre-Diagnosis

 * Financial Presentation at Front Desk

 * Use of Intra-Oral Camera so the patient can see what the
dentist sees

 * Study Models

2. Facility. If you have space, consider adding an extra chair.
It is one of the best investments you can make.

Let's assume it costs $25,000 to install a chair and the
necessary equipment for a new treatment room. That's about
$425/month on a 5-year loan. On a 16-day month, it only takes
increased production of $30.00 per day to justify and cover the
cost of this additional chair.

The extra chair allows you to seat emergency patients, or start
an impulsive procedure like tooth whitening. It also gives you
options if you are running behind. This chair may be used only
10% of the time, but will boost your production 3-5%, most of
which will fall to your bottom line.

3. Fees. Low fees can contribute significantly to reduced
profitability. Rebalance your fees every year, and periodically
evaluate your participation in PPOs. Wrong decisions in this
arena have a tendency to keep profitability significantly short
of where it could be.

After you consider these benchmarks and other profitability
busters, you should have a clear idea of where the potential lies
for reducing costs and raising the profitability of your dental
practice.






---------------------------------------------------------------------
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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