Understand Phone Calls Are High-Intent
A patient who picks up the phone and calls your practice is showing high intent. They are not just browsing your website or scrolling Instagram. They have decided to take action right now. This is your highest-converting lead source. A phone caller should convert to an appointment 80% of the time if your front desk is trained. If your conversion rate is 50% or lower, you are losing money on every inbound phone call.
Most practices treat phone calls as an afterthought. Front desk staff are juggling calls while checking patients in and managing the schedule. The caller reaches a rushed, distracted person. This kills conversion. You need to treat every phone call like a sales call, because it is. The caller is shopping for a dentist. If your practice sounds disorganized or dismissive, they will call another practice.
Create a Simple Phone Script
Your front desk needs a script so they do not sound robotic, but they also do not forget important information. A script gives confidence and consistency. Here is a simple template:
"Thank you for calling [practice name]. This is [name] speaking. How can I help you?" Listen to the caller's needs. Then: "Great. We can definitely help with that. Are you a current patient or new to us?" For new patients: "Wonderful. Let me get you in for a cleaning and consultation. What days work best for you?" For current patients: "Let me check our schedule. What are your preferred times?"
The key is: greet warmly, listen, confirm you can help, and offer appointments. Do not oversell or push too hard. If a caller wants a quote before booking, give them a ballpark figure and invite them in. "A cleaning and exam is usually $150-200, plus X-rays if it is your first visit. Would you like to schedule a time to come in?"
Pro tip
Print the script and laminate it so it sits by every phone. Review it monthly in team meetings. Test your front desk by calling in as a mystery shopper and seeing if they follow the script.
Train on Objection Handling
Callers will have objections. "I do not have insurance," "Your office is too far," "I am nervous about dentists," "I need to think about it." Your front desk needs to handle these without sounding defensive or dismissive.
"I do not have insurance" - "That is okay. We work with patients without insurance and offer payment plans. Many of our patients pay monthly. Let me get you scheduled and we can discuss options when you come in." Do not let lack of insurance prevent them from booking. Address it later.
"Your office is too far" - "I understand. Our location works well for patients in [area]. We are open until 7 PM on Tuesday and Thursday if that helps. Would one of those times work for you?" Address the real objection, which is convenience, not distance.
"I am nervous about dentists" - "Many of our patients felt the same way. We take time to explain everything before we do it, and we can go at your pace. Dr. [name] is great with anxious patients. Would you like to schedule a consultation first?" Normalize their concern and offer reassurance.
Answer the Phone Quickly
The phone should be answered by a human within three rings. If you have a high call volume and cannot answer in three rings, hire a virtual receptionist or phone answering service. Callers who reach voicemail often hang up and call a competitor instead. A missed call is a lost patient.
If you do use voicemail, return all calls within one hour during business hours. "Hi, thanks for calling [practice]. We are with patients right now but will return your call within an hour. If this is an emergency, press [number]." When you call back, answer their concern immediately: "Hi Sarah, thanks for calling earlier. What can I help you with?"
Listen More Than You Talk
The best phone converters talk about 30% of the time and listen 70% of the time. They ask questions and let the caller explain their needs. A common mistake is talking too much. Your front desk launches into a description of the practice, services, hours, and location before they know what the caller wants. By then, the caller is frustrated and ready to hang up.
Instead: answer warmly, ask what brings them in, listen, ask a follow-up question if needed, then offer solutions. "You mentioned you have a cracked tooth. That must be uncomfortable. When did that happen?" Asking questions makes the caller feel heard and gives you information to address their specific concern.
Track Your Conversion Rate
Your practice management software should track every inbound phone call and whether it resulted in a booked appointment. Track your conversion rate monthly. Of 100 phone calls, how many book an appointment? If it is 60%, that is good. If it is 40%, you have a training problem. Your staff are losing money on every call.
Also track call length and caller satisfaction. A call that lasts 3 minutes probably did not convert. A call that lasts 7-10 minutes probably did. Train your staff to invest time in calls. Do not rush. A 10-minute call that converts is more valuable than 10 one-minute calls that do not.
- •Track: Total calls, booked appointments, no-shows, conversion rate
- •Review: Monthly reports with your front desk team
- •Celebrate: If conversion rate goes up 10%, recognize the team
- •Train: Identify which staff convert best and teach others their approach
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I reduce no-shows without being pushy?
The best approach is multi-touch confirmation: email when the appointment is booked, SMS reminder 24 hours before, phone call reminder on the morning of (if you have staff capacity). Offer easy rescheduling options. Set a clear cancellation policy and enforce it gently. Most practices see 30-50 percent reduction in no-shows with a solid reminder system.
What should be included in an online patient intake form?
Essential fields: name, contact info, insurance info, medical history, allergies, reason for visit, emergency contact. For HIPAA compliance, use a HIPAA-compliant form platform that encrypts data and stores it securely. Keep the form under 10 minutes for new patients. Offer the option to start online and finish in-office to reduce friction.
How do I turn a first visit into lifetime loyalty?
First impressions are critical. Before the visit, send a welcome email with directions and what to expect. At the visit, spend time understanding the patient's concerns, not just treating their teeth. After the visit, follow up within 24 hours with a thank-you message and ask for feedback. Convert them into a regular patient with recall reminders and special offers for their next visit.
Can a referral program really generate new patients?
Yes, if done right. Referrals are the highest-quality patients you will acquire because they arrive pre-sold. But healthcare referral rewards implicate the federal Anti-Kickback Statute whenever any patient touches Medicare or Medicaid, and California Business and Professions Code 650 restricts paying patients for referrals more broadly. The safer path is a modest service credit on the referrer's next cleaning or whitening, not cash or gift cards, and exclude any referral involving a patient who uses federal healthcare benefits. Mature practices still generate 20 to 40 percent of new patients from a clean, service-based program.
What should I do when a patient leaves a negative review?
Respond publicly within 24 to 48 hours. Thank the reviewer for the feedback, acknowledge the concern in general terms without confirming or denying any treatment relationship (HIPAA bars you from identifying someone as a patient in a public response), and invite them to contact the office manager directly by phone or email to resolve the matter privately. Do not offer refunds, free services, or any other benefit in exchange for removing or editing the review. The FTC's 16 CFR Part 465 treats incentives conditioned on review content as deceptive, and Google and Yelp prohibit the practice under their own review policies. Resolve the underlying issue on its merits. If the patient later chooses to update the review on their own, that is fine. The best prevention is catching service failures in the operatory before they become public complaints.
Is text messaging HIPAA-compliant?
Standard SMS is not HIPAA-compliant for protected health information because carrier messages are not encrypted in transit or at rest and you cannot obtain a business associate agreement with the mobile carrier. For any message that contains treatment details, diagnoses, financial account detail, or other PHI, use a HIPAA-compliant patient communication platform that encrypts end to end and will sign a BAA. HHS guidance does allow basic appointment reminders by standard SMS if the patient gave the number for healthcare communications and was advised of the risk of unencrypted texting, and the TCPA separately requires prior express consent for any marketing or promotional text messages. Document the consent, keep appointment-reminder content minimal (date, time, practice name, callback number), and never send treatment plans, test results, balances, or clinical discussion over unsecured SMS.