『10 Training Mistakes Ruining Your Orthodontic Practice』のカバーアート

10 Training Mistakes Ruining Your Orthodontic Practice

10 Training Mistakes Ruining Your Orthodontic Practice

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

このコンテンツについて

Your new hire shadows for a few days. You walk them through a checklist. They learn the software. Then what? Everyone hopes they “figure it out.” A month later, the doctor is frustrated. The team is stressed. The new hire feels like they’re failing. The problem isn’t effort. The problem is this: you’re treating training like a checkbox instead of a culture. Why One Time Training Kills Growth When training is an event, your practice stays stuck in reaction mode. You only coach after mistakes, complaints, or resignations. By then, you’re cleaning up fires instead of building people. Here’s the pattern that plays out in most practices. A new hire gets paired with your “strongest” team member. That leader is already buried in their own workload, so they show shortcuts instead of deep explanations. The new person picks up just enough to stay afloat. Everyone assumes the job is done. But orthodontic practices don’t stay still. Systems change. Software updates. Patient expectations rise. Insurance rules shift. If your team never gets space and structure for continuous learning, they’ll keep doing what they’ve always done. Even when you need something completely different. The emotional toll is real too. Without clear expectations for days 30, 60, and 90, a new hire never knows if they’re winning. They catch feedback only when something breaks. They sense the doctor’s frustration but not the reason. That builds anxiety fast. High performers burn out because they’re constantly training others on the fly. Low performers coast because nobody defined what success actually looks like. Patient experience becomes a coin flip. One family gets a red carpet welcome. The next one gets a rushed check-in from someone who can’t answer basic questions. That’s how training problems quietly become culture problems. Then turnover problems. Then growth hits a ceiling. The Shift — Training As Intentional Culture Flip the switch with one decision. Training isn’t something you check off. It’s something you build into how your practice breathes every single day. Stop playing defense. Start playing offense. Instead of coaching around fires, set a rhythm. Define what someone should know and do at 30, 60, and 90 days. Block time for one on ones, coaching, and questions. Make it clear that learning isn’t just for new hires. It’s for everyone, all the time. This doesn’t require a massive time commitment. Everyone has the same hours in a day. The difference is what leaders choose to prioritize. A 15-minute check-in each week with a key team member can prevent dozens of hours of upset patients, staff gossip, and repeated mistakes. When training becomes your culture, you stop expecting people to just know. You start expecting them to grow. Design Training For Real Humans Here’s another trap. The assumption that everyone learns the same way. Shadowing is valuable. It’s not enough on its own. Some people need hands-on practice with guidance. Others need to talk it through and ask questions. Others need written steps they can review later. When training is generic and rushed, it drains both trainer and trainee. Neither one walks into the next session excited. Mix observation with hands-on work. Break complex processes into smaller wins and celebrate progress along the way. Make room for questions and curiosity, not just lectures. Draw a parallel to continuing education for doctors. Clinicians don’t take one course early in their career and call it done. They keep learning because standards of care change. Your team needs the same commitment. Front Desk staff, Clinical Assistants, and Treatment Coordinators need ongoing growth to stay aligned with what patients expect today, not five years ago. When your entire team is engaged in learning, the practice feels alive. People aren’t just clocking in. They’re getting better. One Role, One Story, Real Transformation Redefining a single role can transform both a person and your whole practice. Picture this. A Front Desk team member has been parked in a corner with an unspoken message: just sit there, answer phones, check people in. Her title reflects it. Her daily experience reflects it. Over time, she internalized the message and operated at that level. Instead of replacing her, reframe the role. Change her title to something like “Patient Satisfaction Specialist” or “First Impression Expert.” Train her on how to stand and greet, how to introduce herself by name, how to guide families through your lobby, and how to create warm, personal phone calls. The shift was immediate. She owned the lobby experience. Patients got greeted with eye contact and genuine care. New callers heard enthusiasm. The Front Desk stopped being a transactional checkpoint. It became a hospitality station that set the tone for everything else. Better greetings and more thoughtful calls helped with retention and reviews. Clinical teams faced less friction because...
まだレビューはありません