By: Garrett Wilson
Let’s face it. One of your core responsibilities as a leader is navigating people and business challenges at the same time. When the same problems show up month after month, the issue is no longer external. It is internal. This is not a workforce crisis. It is an operating model problem.
Dentistry is evolving. Reimbursements remain tight. Labor costs continue to rise. None of that is new. Yet some practices continue to grow, stabilize their teams, and improve performance, while others stay stuck. The difference is not the hand they were dealt. It is how they choose to play it.
Staffing Issues vs. System Failures
Most dentists describe their struggles as staffing issues. In reality, the symptoms show up in people, but the root cause lives in how the practice is run.
- Production swings.
- Labor costs rise without corresponding results.
- Reactive hiring versus having a talent pipeline.
These are business system failures, not attitude problems.
Lack of Clarity and Accountability
In many practices, team members are unclear on how their role contributes to revenue, efficiency, or patient experience. How do you expect a business to thrive if your team can’t measure results of their work? Accountability becomes subjective. Performance conversations feel personal instead of objective.
Compensation Without Strategy
Have you heard of the issue of rising wages? Of course you have. Pay decisions are often made reactively to stop turnover or reward longevity rather than to reinforce business priorities. The result is:
- Wage inflation without productivity gains
- Internal compression
- Growing resentment among high performers
Compensation without strategy creates instability, not retention.
Growth Without Redesign
Growth decisions introduce additional strain. Practices pursue higher production without redesigning workflows, staffing models, or leadership capacity. Burnout follows. Patient experience declines. The blame shifts back to staffing shortages, even though the real constraint is planning.
Breaking the Cycle Through Partnership
The practices that break this cycle do not solve these challenges alone. They rely on strong partners. Advisors, consultants, data providers, and peer communities help leaders see blind spots, pressure test decisions, and build systems that support long term success. These leaders are proactive, not reactive. They address issues while they are still manageable.
Strategy Over Circumstance
People can only play the cards they are dealt. Leaders do not get to choose the hand, but they do choose the strategy. The practices making progress are not waiting for conditions to improve. They are building better systems now and shaping outcomes instead of inheriting them.