Starting any type of dental practice is hard, and starting a dental surgery practice can be even harder if you don’t do it right at the beginning. Thankfully, a lot of the things you need to know about starting a dental surgery practice are the same as starting any other practice, so there are some steps you can take.
But first, why is starting a dental surgery practice so hard? What makes it different from other practices?
Dental Surgery Is Complicated
Dental surgery requires a lot of extra schooling and training before you can be properly licensed to take on patients. This can include two to four years undergraduate study, four years of dental study, and four to six years residency training, and there can even be more courses if you are looking to specialize even further.
So not only are you and your staff going to spend a lot of time in the classroom, but you also need to do all of this before you can even open your business! That’s a lot of time and money that you are spending upfront, so it’s even more important that you get your business off the ground.
Additionally, it can be very hard to break into an established area with a dental surgeon option, instead of a general practice. You’ll need to get referrals from other dentists offices if you hope to become the surgeon for them, and you also need to get patients who need a dental surgeon, which can be much harder than simply marketing to those who need a dentist.
Building those relationships and trust can take a lot of time, and sometimes for a business time is the one thing you don’t have enough of. So, here are some of the things you can do to give your business a bit of a head start.
Come Up With The Business Plan While You Are In School
It can save you some time to kill two birds with one stone, and you might even find like minded people who want to enter into the dental surgery business themselves, or some resources related to opening a business. Don’t be afraid to talk to the people around you as well as your teachers about building your business, especially if you want to build your business anywhere in the local area.
They’ll be able to give you the best advice around and can also help you tweak and refine your business plan, and you can also find people who will want to do it with you. Having a team around you when you open your business is only going to increase your chances of success.
Look For A Prime Location
Just like with any other business, location, location, and location matters when setting up a dental surgery practice. Look for a place that doesn’t have a lot of dental surgery practices, but a lot of dentists. This either means that the dentists’ offices themselves are performing the surgery, or that the patients are needing to go out of town for their surgeries. You could be a professional option that is much closer to home.
Or look for a place that has some dental surgery practices. As much as they are your competition, you might be able to set up your practice and then learn from them. It’s worth a shot, although for your practice it might not be worth the risk.
Still, wherever your dental surgery office ends up, make sure that you have a dental supplier that you can buy dental handpieces from. You don’t want to be running out of equipment or having shipping problems on some of the essential dental surgery equipment, because that can cause your business to really slow down.
That loses you both money and time, and when it comes to performing dental surgery, even the slightest delay can cause a lot of problems. So make sure to vet your suppliers and have a backup plan in case things go wrong.
Don’t Give Up
If you’ve gone through the various schooling required to be a dentist, and then a dental surgeon, likely you’ve put everything on the line to become a dentist. So don’t give up even when you encounter some of the challenges that come with opening a new dental surgery practice. You’ll have to work hard and pour blood, sweat, and tears into the business, but you will get something out of it.