Byte Sized
Most dental practices assume a membership plan is the key to dropping insurance. But launching one without the right strategy can actually shrink your practice, hurt your valuation, and frustrate your team. EPISODE OVERVIEW In this episode, Adrian Lefler sits down with Paul Lowry of Dental Menu to unpack why most practices misfire when they drop insurance and add a membership program. Paul shares data from a 250,000-patient study showing 88% of cash pay patients leave within five years, and explains why retention is the real driver of long-term profitability. You'll learn the three things every practice needs before dropping a single insurance plan, why your hygiene department is your "farm," and why the way most software records membership payments is quietly damaging your books, your provider pay, and your practice valuation. ABOUT PAUL LOWRY PAUL LOWRY is the founder of Dental Menu, one of the most operationally sophisticated dental membership plan platforms in dentistry. Paul spent years doing external marketing for practices starting in 2008, tracking what actually happened to cash pay versus insurance patients over time. That research led him to build a platform that helps practices launch, manage, and financially optimize in-house membership plans with full software integration, team training, and incentive systems. DENTAL AND TECH COMPANIES MENTIONED * Dental Menu - https://dentalmenu.comhttps://dentalmenu.com [https://dentalmenu.com] * My Social Practice - https://mysocialpractice.comhttps://mysocialpractice.com [https://mysocialpractice.com] * TeamCare - https://teamcaredental.comhttps://teamcaredental.com [https://teamcaredental.com] CONTACT INFO Guest: Paul Lowry | Dental Menu | https://dentalmenu.comhttps://dentalmenu.com [https://dentalmenu.com] Host: Adrian Lefler | https://mysocialpractice.comhttps://mysocialpractice.com [https://mysocialpractice.com] | 877-316-7516 👍 Subscribe for more on dental marketing, AI in dentistry, and practice growth. #DentalMembershipPlan #DentalMarketing #GoOutOfNetwork #DentalPracticeGrowth #Dentistry #DentalBusiness #FeeForService TERMS & TRANSLATIONS (For Show Notes) Membership Plan A subscription program a practice offers uninsured patients covering preventive care for a flat monthly fee. The practice sets its own terms and keeps all the revenue. In-Network vs. Out-of-Network In-network means accepting reduced insurance reimbursement rates. Out-of-network means dropping those contracts to collect closer to full fees, with the tradeoff of potential patient loss. Recurring Revenue Income that arrives on a predictable schedule regardless of whether a patient comes in that month. Unlike fee-for-service dentistry, membership revenue kept coming in even during COVID shutdowns. Breakage Revenue the practice keeps when a membership patient pays their subscription but doesn't use all included benefits. Insurance companies profit from this constantly. A membership plan gives that same advantage to the practice. Cash Pay Patient A patient with no insurance who pays out of pocket. Data in this episode shows only 12% remain active after five years without a membership plan. PPO A dental insurance arrangement where the practice accepts reduced fees in exchange for being listed as a preferred provider. UCR Fees A practice's published full-price rates before insurance adjustments. Out-of-network practices collect closer to UCR per patient. Hygiene-Driven Restorative Regular hygiene visits generate restorative treatment discovery. If hygiene is all PPO patients, restorative revenue will be too. Production vs. Collection Production is services delivered; collection is what is actually received. Membership plan payments can throw these out of alignment, skewing provider compensation and analytics. Write-Off An accounting entry reducing what a patient owes. Incorrectly recorded membership benefits appear as write-offs, distorting KPIs and provider bonuses. Practice Valuation What a practice is worth at sale. Membership plan accounting errors can create hidden liabilities that hurt the final number. DSO A company managing or owning multiple dental practices, referenced here in the context of competitive pricing pressure on independent practices.
45 episodios
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