Everything you touch should turn into progress, not piles of unfinished work.
By: Dawn Patrick, Director of Operations and Business Development Coach, IgniteDDS
In every dental practice, things move quickly. There’s always a patient to see, a call to answer, a tray to flip, or a chart to review. It’s no wonder that phrases like:
- “I don’t have time for that right now.”
- “That takes too long.”
- “I’m just too busy today.”
…come up often throughout the day. And when they do, it’s important to pause, not to judge, but to reflect and realign.
We all have felt pressed for time. But in many cases, the challenge isn’t the lack of time, it’s how that time is being used. With the right systems, structure, and support, we can shift from feeling overwhelmed to feeling in control.
Understanding the Real Issue
It’s easy to think that time is the problem. But more often, the root cause is one of the following:
- Prioritization: Not everything is equally urgent or important.
- Systems: If we don’t have a clear, repeatable process, things take longer than they should.
- Clarity: Without direction, we may end up bouncing between tasks or putting out fires all day.
The good news? These are all things we can work on, together.
Let’s Rethink “Busy”
There’s a difference between being busy and being productive. Shuffling papers, revisiting the same task multiple times, or holding off on things we could finish in the moment can make us feel like we’re working hard, but we may not be moving forward.
A helpful mindset shift is:
- “How can I simplify this?”
- “What can I do now that I won’t have to circle back to later?”
A Simple Habit: The “Touch It Once” Principle
One of the most helpful tools for managing tasks and time is the “Touch It Once” principle.
It’s simple, but powerful: When you pick something up, whether it’s a chart, a patient question, a phone call, or a piece of paper, aim to handle it fully the first time rather than putting it off or partially completing it.
Here’s what it looks like in action:
- Emails or messages: If you open it, take the next action, respond, file, delegate, or add it to your task list with a due date.
- Charts: If you’re reviewing a patient’s chart, address any follow-up items right then, don’t make a mental note and hope to circle back later.
- Supply needs: If something is running low, write it down or log it into your ordering system now, avoid last-minute stress.
- Treatment plans: Complete notes and attach scans before moving on. It keeps the flow going for everyone.
This habit takes practice, but it can truly reduce that feeling of “never catching up.”
Tips by Role: Creating Breathing Room in the Day
For Hygienists:
- Build perio charting into your appointment flow, partner with an assistant or use technology when possible.
- Try scheduling patients before dismissing them, just a 30-second step that reduces missed opportunities later.
- Use a weekly “admin block” to review charts, rather than rushing the morning of.
For Assistants:
- Make a habit of restocking or turning over rooms as part of your end-of-procedure wrap-up.
- Use templates or voice-to-text to make writing clinical notes faster and more consistent.
- Keep a shared running list of supply needs, update it as soon as you notice something.
For Dentists:
- Carve out time for chart reviews and treatment planning, consistency reduces stress for the whole team.
- Stay intentional with hygiene checks, walk in with purpose, and save longer chats for scheduled consults.
- Delegate follow-ups and training tasks by equipping your team with clear systems.
For Business/Admin Team:
- Group treatment follow-up calls into power hours—batching saves time and keeps energy focused.
- Schedule insurance verification one or two days ahead to avoid morning bottlenecks.
- Create checklists for daily, weekly, and monthly duties—systems reduce decision fatigue.
Structure Helps Everyone Breathe Easier
When tasks happen the same way every time, they take less effort. Systems reduce stress, eliminate the need to “figure it out again,” and allow every team member to shine.
Consider building in:
- A short daily huddle to align the team.
- Weekly time blocks for follow-up calls, ordering, or chart audits.
- Clear end-of-day checklists to ensure nothing lingers overnight.
These small shifts create a culture where everyone knows what to expect—and where “I didn’t have time” becomes “That’s already taken care of.”
Final Thoughts
If you or your team find yourselves saying “I don’t have time” often, it’s okay. It’s a signal that it may be time to step back, realign priorities, and revisit the systems that support your success.
With compassion, intention, and the right tools, it is possible to turn time from a stressor into a strength.
Photo by olia danilevich