New Patients Now

Operational Lessons From a $15 Million Practice

31 min · 28. touko 2026
jakson Operational Lessons From a $15 Million Practice kansikuva

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In this episode, Flint Geier sits down with Danielle Haase, Call Center Team Leader at a thriving multi-specialty dental practice in Terre Haute, Indiana, to pull back the curtain on what a $15 million practice is actually built on.  What makes Danielle's story remarkable is where it started. She was hired as a chart puller, literally pulling paper files off the wall, and grew into leading a six-person call center team that serves three practices simultaneously. Today, her team converts 96.4% of new patient calls into patients in the chair!  This episode is a masterclass in what consistency, ownership, and a culture of feedback produce over time, and a direct challenge to every doctor and team member who wonders what's really possible inside their practice.    In this episode, you'll hear:  * How one team member went from pulling paper charts to leading a 6-person call center across three practices  * What it actually takes to hit a 96.4% new patient call-to-show conversion rate  * Why most practices are losing new patients at the phone and don't know it  * The operational shift that happens when one person truly owns the new patient statistic  * What a real accountability and feedback culture looks like inside a high-performing team  * The one piece of advice Danielle would give any doctor or team member who wants results like this

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35 jaksot

jakson Operational Lessons From a $15 Million Practice kansikuva

Operational Lessons From a $15 Million Practice

In this episode, Flint Geier sits down with Danielle Haase, Call Center Team Leader at a thriving multi-specialty dental practice in Terre Haute, Indiana, to pull back the curtain on what a $15 million practice is actually built on.  What makes Danielle's story remarkable is where it started. She was hired as a chart puller, literally pulling paper files off the wall, and grew into leading a six-person call center team that serves three practices simultaneously. Today, her team converts 96.4% of new patient calls into patients in the chair!  This episode is a masterclass in what consistency, ownership, and a culture of feedback produce over time, and a direct challenge to every doctor and team member who wonders what's really possible inside their practice.    In this episode, you'll hear:  * How one team member went from pulling paper charts to leading a 6-person call center across three practices  * What it actually takes to hit a 96.4% new patient call-to-show conversion rate  * Why most practices are losing new patients at the phone and don't know it  * The operational shift that happens when one person truly owns the new patient statistic  * What a real accountability and feedback culture looks like inside a high-performing team  * The one piece of advice Danielle would give any doctor or team member who wants results like this

28. touko 202631 min
jakson Building a Practice on People, Standards, and No Excuses kansikuva

Building a Practice on People, Standards, and No Excuses

In this episode, Flint sits down with Dr. Brad Hughes, owner of Vision Dental Partners and a Scheduling Institute alumni, to talk about what it actually takes to grow from a single-chair practice in Leo, Indiana to ten locations and what most doctors get wrong before they ever get started.    Brad is a great example of what happens when a doctor doesn't just go through the program but actually executes on it.  The new patient experience, case acceptance, and team standards.  He took each piece, ran it at a high level, and built Vision Dental Partners into what it is today.     In this episode, you’ll hear:  * What it looks like when a doctor fully commits to the program and executes on the fundamentals at a high level, and what that compounds into over time  * The self-awareness shift that changed his trajectory in 2013 and why he says it took six years to get there  * The hard truth about team members who won’t get on board and why keeping them is actually the bigger risk

21. touko 202647 min