Published on September 5, 2018
By: Trude Henderson Picking up from last week: in our blog appearing in August, we discussed the first 2 of 4 approaches designed to help your multiple-location dental practice provide a consistent brand and better customer experience. Below we offer simple High Reliability Organizational (HRO) strategies designed to address these challenges (see #3 and 4) confronting such dental practices, as reported in our pilot study.
Works CitedBabcock & Wilcox Technical Services LLC. (2008). High Reliability Operations: A Practical Guide to Avoid the System Accident. Amarillo: U.S. Department of Energy. Farran, Howard. (2017, August 29). dentaltown. The 7 Deadly Sins of Dentistry. Retrieved from http://dentaltown.com/dentistry Hogan Assessments. (2016, May 3). Retrieved from http://www.hoganassessments.com/ Kouzes, J., & Posner, B. (2007). The Leadership Challenge. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Rochlin, Gene. (1996). Reliable Organizations: Present Research and Future Directions. Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management. Shingo Institute. (2016, Jan). Leading a New Era of Enterprise Excellence. Retrieved from http://archive-org-2014.com/org/s/2014-10-26_4813234 For more information about High Reliability Organizational concepts, read our previous blogs: Read Part 1 of this blog here Ten Steps You Can Take Right Away to Improve the Reliability of Your Dental Practice High Reliability Concepts: Insights of Value to any organization. Visit Howard Farran DDS, Dentaltown.com Trude Henderson is the co-founder of ToothFairy, a startup elective dental and medical practice improvement software company which delivers an unparalleled customer experience that inspires delight, loyalty and positive emotional connections to improve the lives of patients and the practices they visit. In 2016, she was the first to introduce High-Reliability Organizational Concepts to the dental industry. For questions, contact her directly at Trude@GetToothFairy.com. Follow Trude on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/trudehenderson/ (no email required). Go to ToothFairy's website: www.ToothFairySoftware.com.
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Published on September 2, 2018
(This is the first of two articles, by Trude Henderson, on the lessons regarding performance learned for multi-location dental practices. Please stay tuned for the second half of this article and more on managing CX in multiple offices at once. – Ed.) One of the takeaways of ToothFairy’s pilot study regarded inconsistencies in performance between the offices of multiple-location dental practices. Operating multiple satellite offices in addition to a main office is becoming increasingly attractive, especially among orthodontists. They see opportunities to minister to a geographic location that was previously under-served, as well as to boost their bottom line. The example set by High Reliability Organizations (HRO’s) tells us that, if we wish to improve performance, including the customer experience, and maximize reliability, we must reduce system variability, including the variation that exists between locations. Careful thought, planning and accountability are needed to ensure that all your offices function with minimal system variability (e.g., procedures, communication, guiding principles and training,) because otherwise, you might face unwanted consequences, like higher overhead, an increase in employee turnover and the loss of patients. During a baseline assessment prior to our 3-year pilot study, we conducted both employee engagement and customer experience feedback surveys of dental practices in the Western United States. The baseline provided invaluable insights and established a basis for comparing the situation before and after our operational excellence intervention. We would like to share with you 4 key lessons learned in the process, in addition to High Reliability Organizational tools and techniques we implanted, all of which helped reduce variability and promote the improvement of the overall brand. They are as follows:
Works CitedBabcock & Wilcox Technical Services LLC. (2008). High Reliability Operations; A Practical Guide to Avoid the System Accident. Amarillo: U.S. Department of Energy. Fleming, J. H. (2007). Human Sigma: Managing the Employee Customer Experience. Gallup Press. Fleming, J. H. (2017, August 25). Gallup.com. Retrieved from Business Journal: http://www.gallup.com/businessjournal/23953/why-consistency-key-profitable-customer-service.aspx Jon M. Huntsman School of Business. (2012). The Shingo Prize for Operational Excellence: Model & Application Guidelines. Logan: Jon M. Huntsman School of Business. For more information about High Reliability Organizational concepts, read our previous blogs Ten Steps You Can Take Right Away to Improve the Reliability of Your Dental Practice High Reliability Concepts: Insights of Value to any organization. Trude Henderson is the co-founder of ToothFairy, a startup elective dental and medical practice improvement software company which delivers an unparalleled customer experience that inspires delight, loyalty and positive emotional connections to improve the lives of patients and the practices they visit. In 2016, she was the first to introduce High-Reliability Organizational Concepts to the dental industry. For questions, contact her directly at Trude@GetToothFairy.com. Follow Trude on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/trudehenderson/ (no email required). Go to ToothFairy's website: www.ToothFairySoftware.com. August 20, 2018
By: Trude Henderson Here we continue our discussion of Colin Shaw’s account of the four emotion clusters that can make or break an organization. In this blog we will talk about the Destroying Cluster – Irritated, Hurried, Neglected, Unhappy, Unsatisfied, Stressed, Disappointed and Frustrated – the emotions that you want to circumvent, as they can, as Shaw points out, “cost you money, lost opportunities, and higher costs fixing the problems that result.” The good customer experiences really do benefit your dental practice and poor ones leave thousands of dollars on the table, damaging your brand. We at ToothFairy would like to help you identify these emotions as they arise, as well as to offer you some tips that can help you, the dental practice leader, mitigate them. At ToothFairy, we believe that dental practices can effectively identify and address emotions in the destroying cluster by utilizing a reputable, real-time, e-survey platform designed to measure the customer experience ‘locally’ at each office, all year long. Be sure to examine the results locally rather than across the organization, and then take immediate action to remedy problems associated with the destroying cluster emotions. Marketing expert John H. Fleming, the author of Human Sigma: Managing the Employee-Customer Experience, has said, “This is critical because customers experience variation, not averages. The variability within a company easily dwarfs the differences between competitors” (from “Why Consistency is the Key to Profitable Customer Service,” Gallup, August 10, 2006). This scenario is diametrically opposed to what you want to attain. Our 3-year pilot study revealed that dental practices impacted by destructive emotions tended to attract a greater number of low-value patients, the ones shopping around thinking of price rather than value, and the first ones to demand a full refund when the slightest thing goes awry. At no surprise, Shaw notes (see image above) that these emotions are associated with “short-term spending.” We’d like to point out that short-term spending is the kind that’s often characterized by risk and uncertainty and ultimately results in the shuttering of many dental practices. We recommend implementing the following strategies for your dental practice: first, identify the “destroying emotions.” Then empower and coach your staff to resolve as many of them as possible, and as quickly as possible, via increased communication with patients. Identify stress triggers and do everything in your power to reduce stress to a healthy manageable level. Next, discuss customer experience gaps in daily huddles and seek input from staff on how to improve. In addition to a daily discussion about your customer experience, we at ToothFairy recommend the implementation of a fully automated e-survey platform. From our experience, most patients won’t confront you with their concerns but many, particularly millennial patients, are happy to provide your practice with information through such a platform. The alternative to not providing patients with a private venue where they can feel comfortable voicing their concerns, is them taking their grievances to social media, for the world to hear! To conclude: quickly resolving patients’ concerns can help overcome or lessen the impact of the threat the destroying cluster of emotions pose to your dental practice. Please wait for Part 3 of this series to learn more about this topic. Read our other articles on topics such as Operational Excellence and High-Reliability Concepts: Read Part 1 of this article High-Reliability Concepts: Insights of Value to any organization. Ten Steps You Can Take Right Now to Improve the Reliability of Your Dental Practice Trude Henderson is the co-founder of ToothFairy, a startup elective dental and medical practice improvement software company which delivers an unparalleled customer experience that inspires delight, loyalty and positive emotional connections to improve the lives of patients and the practices they visit. In 2016, she was the first to introduce High-Reliability Organizational Concepts to the dental industry. For questions, contact her directly at Trude@GetToothFairy.com. Follow Trude on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/trudehenderson/ (no email required). |
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