Thursday, March 22, 2007

What Does Your Future Look Like?


Some say that tomorrow's dental industry will become more polarized, with the more successful practices working, acting, and looking radically different from the less successful ones. This is pretty important in light of a 2004 CNN study that found that only 43% of American workers were happy with their employer.

Leadership is often the quality that separates the great practices from the good ones, where are your going with yours? To advance into the future with confidence create a business vision by involving your entire team in the process. Please note that ultimately, handling stress, teamwork, working in a professional manor towards patient satisfaction and service is our goal, the higher purpose to which we serve. Yet, we have to arrive in the future financially sound and to provide dentistry of the highest quality, the dentists themselves have to be financially fit. What to do?

Did you know that in 2010, demographically speaking, there will be more baby boomer dentists selling there practices than is any time in history before or sense. It will be a peak year in supply; it will be a buyers demand market placing downward pressure on the value of dental offices. What else do we know? We know some good news and we know some bad news. Let’s take a look at some good news first. According to a study on ‘The Economics of Dental Practice – Present and Future’ by H. Barry Waldman and Steven P. Pealman released late last year in CDA Journal, the good news is “The combination of increased practitioner income, increases in proportion of the population reporting visits for dental services, decreases in the number of dental school graduates, decreases in the dentist-to-population ratio, and increases in the numbers of female students and practitioners (many of whom report significantly fewer work hours than their male counterparts), portends favorable economics for the dental practice.”

The bad news is that “the cost of dental care is “felt” in a greater extent than for other health services. Current and future funding arrangements for dental services could be vulnerable to economic downturns, efforts to control business overhead costs and continued minimal government support… Compared to other health services the reliance on 1) out-of-pocket funding for a major share of dental expenditures, and 2) limited government support of dental services raise questions regarding the infrastructure of dental economics.” The details of these findings are in the report, November 2006, Vol. 34. No. 11, CDA, Journal.