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	<title>Wiltrace In Office CEREC training</title>
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	<description>CEREC CAD CAM in office training, integration, education</description>
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		<title>Wiltrace In Office CEREC training</title>
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		<title>Sales is a Team Effort</title>
		<link>http://wiltrace.wordpress.com/2010/10/06/sales-is-a-team-effort/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 22:28:30 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[This coming year we will celebrate the 25th anniversary of CEREC. The technology has been studied, debated, and ultimately proven successful. In 25 years thousands of doctors have placed millions of CEREC restorations worldwide. However, in just the last 5 &#8230; <a href="http://wiltrace.wordpress.com/2010/10/06/sales-is-a-team-effort/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=wiltrace.wordpress.com&amp;blog=14840746&amp;post=9&amp;subd=wiltrace&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This coming year we will celebrate the 25th anniversary of CEREC.   The technology has been studied, debated, and ultimately proven  successful.  In 25 years thousands of doctors have placed millions of  CEREC restorations worldwide.  However, in just the last 5 years CEREC  technology has begun to penetrate the mainstream market and capture the  attention of the consumer public.  Improved marketing efforts, software  developments, stronger materials, and superior esthetics have increased  the awareness and popularity of CEREC technology.  We are now  experiencing the most exciting advancements in CAD CAM systems and  restorative options.  Complimenting technologies are now able to offer  dentists more accurate and convenient procedure options.</p>
<p>Most doctors identify chairside CAD/CAM systems as a way to decrease  lab costs.  However, further examination of the technology reveals  multiple benefits beyond lab savings.  CEREC allows dentists to  treatment plan a wide array of options for patients while streamlining  their practice and marketing a significant convenience option.</p>
<p>Bonded ceramics give doctors the ability to produce conservative  partial coverage restorations while yielding a higher fee for service.   Multi-surface resins are not ideal long-term solutions.  They can be a  challenge to fabricate, produce inconsistent occlusal relationships, and  generate nominal revenue.  CEREC inlays and onlays allow the doctor to  offer superior restorative options while easily fabricating and  controlling the final product.  An equal amount of doctor time is  required for both procedures if the dentist can delegate a portion of  the CEREC procedure to his support team.  However, CEREC inlays and  onlays produce 2 to 5 times the amount of revenue over composite  fillings.</p>
<p>Patient acceptance of the prescribed treatment plan begins well  before the doctor ever enters the operatory.  Diagnosis should be  initially made by your hygiene team.  After the initial diagnosis, your  hygienist should inform the patient using a high resolution intra-oral  camera like Digital Doc in combination with a patient education system  like the materials found in the Computer Assisted Dentistry Marketing  Package.  Upon completion of proper patient education your hygienist  should present CEREC as an exciting option with superior results.  The  dentist’s role is to support the findings of your qualified hygiene  department at this point.  You should always educate your patients using  terms that start with, “Our goal is to save as much of your tooth as  possible.  CEREC is the best option for the most permanent result.”  The  rest of your team should be reinforcing this language throughout the  office.  Your patient should always be escorted to the front and a  proper hand-off executed from your assistant or hygienist to the front  office team.  “Mr. Jones needs a CEREC restoration on tooth #19.  Can  you please help him schedule this appointment.  Mr. Jones, Rebecca will  help you with any further questions.  I look forward to seeing you again  during your next appointment.”  Now your front office team should  always stand up during this hand-off and confirm that the patient has  made a wonderful decision and they will love their new CEREC  restoration.  If the patient is left to see themselves to the front then  they will not value the prescribed treatment plan and not follow  through.  Medical procedures are not presented as optional and neither  should dental care.</p>
<p>Effective scheduling should be a focus of every dental practice.  No  shows, late patients, and gaps in the schedule are all a form of  overhead and help to decrease profit potential.  CEREC not only allows  you to market a significant difference in your practice but also  eliminates most of the aforementioned revenue decreasing issues.  Single  visit dentistry with CEREC allows doctors to clean up scheduling and  capitalize immediately on procedures that maybe forced to wait under  traditional restorative dentistry.  Educated patients make educated  decisions, but the longer they are forced to wait the more likely they  are to devalue the procedure and put off the prescribed treatment plan.</p>
<p>Many doctors have discovered the full capabilities of CEREC.   Scheduled effectively and delegated appropriately, practices can reach  new levels of production.  Wiltrace has shown offices around the country  how to realize a 10 unit CEREC day.  Creating systems that provide  consistent results and establishing defined roles for each team member  is the key to achieving these record production numbers.  CEREC can  create a model of efficiency and convenience for every dental practice.</p>
<p>Scheduling like procedures in a single day is a very effective way  to control your time and maximize your efficiency.  By doing so, you are  always comfortable with the scheduling blocks and your team can  identify specific times related to “doctor time”, “assistant time” and  “milling / down time.”  You can now begin to identify where you can  replace “down time” for “doctor time.”  You have to associate values to  these times.  Doctors should be scheduling the most profitable blocks  and delegating the other blocks of time to assistants.  This is a system  that can be quickly adapted and manipulated to your advantage.  Once  understood, you can easily have your CEREC machine milling uninterrupted  all day.  Remember, you are in control of your schedule and NOT the  patient.</p>
<p>Never underestimate your patients’ desire for the best options in the market nor your own capabilities to achieve your dreams.</p>
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		<title>Same Day Crowns  CEREC restorations</title>
		<link>http://wiltrace.wordpress.com/2010/07/23/same-day-crowns-cerec-restorations/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Jul 2010 21:35:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>wiltrace</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Breaking through to the ‘Crown of the Year” Club member If your practice is like mine, you see a lot of crowns in December and January. I call them the “Crown of the Year” club members. These are the patients &#8230; <a href="http://wiltrace.wordpress.com/2010/07/23/same-day-crowns-cerec-restorations/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=wiltrace.wordpress.com&amp;blog=14840746&amp;post=5&amp;subd=wiltrace&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-size:large;">Breaking through to the ‘Crown of the Year” Club member </span></p>
<p><span style="color:#ff0000;font-size:large;"> </span></p>
<p><span style="color:#ff0000;font-size:large;"> </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size:large;"></p>
<div>If your practice is like mine, you see a lot of crowns in December  and January. I call them the “Crown of the Year” club members. These are  the patients in your practice that no matter what Doctor tells them, or  how many MODBLQRS alloys they have, still refuse to get more than one  crown a year due to insurance annual benefit levels. December members  typically consists of two subgroups: “I’ve got flex spending money I’ve  got to use” and those that say “I’ve paid into this plan all year and I  can’t let the insurance company keep my money”. The second subgroup  knows that they must “use it or lose it,” because their benefits don’t  roll over. The January members are a little different. They’ve seen the  need for their crown for a long time, but wait until their benefits roll  over for maximum coverage. Sometimes January club members even risk  losing their tooth to gain the full 80% their plan covers.</div>
<div>So how can you sign up these members to comprehensive care in February, July or October?</div>
<div>In order to move your patient from the “patch me up” mentality,  they first need to be tied to your practice. Developing a relationship  with your patient is key to crown acceptance. The hardest person to  convince will be the patient that walked in or just made that emergency  broken tooth appointment today by using the yellow pages. Unless a  patient trusts you, has been referred to you, or you make them feel like  family, it’s hard to get them to agree to anything but “the patch.”</div>
<div>There should be no selling in dentistry. If you want it more than  they do, you’re selling it. Don’t come across as a car salesman in tough  economic times with heavy surplus on the lot. All patients deserve to  be told what the optimal treatment for them is. No judgment from you  based on what you think they make annually, how they dress, how many  kids they have in college or what they drive. Just tell them what they  need. Crown is optimal and it is what that tooth really needs. Don’t  start with the patch quote. Don’t mention you can patch it, until you  get a definite “No” on the crown. When you see that sheared lingual wall  off #30, it needs a crown&#8211;no question, no debate. If you have an intra  oral camera take a picture. Patients understand photos better then  xrays. Hey, it’s dark in there. They can feel with their tongue it’s  bad&#8211;but can they see it well? Maybe the cusp hasn’t fractured yet, but  they are experiencing sensitivity. Your camera easily shows them the  crack.</div>
<div>Chances are, the last time they had their prophy, Doctor told them  that a crown was needed. If your patient has cracked-tooth syndrome ,it  is the perfect time to remind them that there is “no such thing as a  convenient flat tire.” You don’t have a crystal ball, but this baby is  going to break and you can not predict when. You have been in dentistry  long enough to know that it can happen the day before their daughter  gets married, the hour before they are to go on vacation, and sometimes  during their class reunion. Find your own analogy. Something that people  can relate to that doesn’t sound dental or technical.</div>
<div>Naturally, we all know that assistants are not allowed to  “diagnose,” but we all know patients ask us what we think. “Joe, you  know this tooth is broken. I’m hoping it can still be saved. Doctor will  tells us for sure. But if it can be saved, the best way to restore its  strength and stability is with a crown.” Hopefully, your office lets you  do case presentation. Tell your patient about the crown. Show them one  off your lab shelf that you are delivering this week. Recommend the  optimal treatment. Ask if they have questions and then close your mouth  and listen. “Yes” doesn’t always come fast. Don’t force them to make a  commitment today. If they say they need to think it over, or talk it  over with their spouse, then say “No problem.” Make sure they have a  print-out of their treatment plan, a brochure for Care Credit, a photo  if possible, and thank them for coming in today and walk them out.</div>
<div>If you attempt to give them more information after they have just  indirectly told you that they are not deciding right now, you only risk  confusing them or make them feel controlled. You have now moved to what  they will perceive as “selling.”</div>
<div>They have all the information they now need. We know what is best,  but they have to get there on their own. It’s still their choice, and we  work for them.</div>
<div>I bet you have all heard the three reasons why people choose not to invest in a crown. 1) <strong>no perceived need</strong>. “It’s not broke yet” or “I can still patch it” 2) <strong>Time</strong>.  “I can’t get time off”. Talk to your Doctor. If your office closes at  5pm, I have found many dentists are willing to stay “after hours” or  work a different lunch hour to do a crown prep. Another option is the  Cerec restoration. If your office has CAD/CAM technology, make sure your  patient knows this. Show them the machine, show them a finished  restoration on the screen. It’s impressive. No temporary, no fluctuating  price of gold, no return visit. Sign me up! 3) <strong>Money</strong>. “That’s a  lot of money.” I, too, used to think that a patient would say no to a  crown based on money. To be honest with you, now I think they say that  as an excuse they believe we will accept. Think about it. When you truly  believe you or your family needs something, you make it work. Sure,  money is a factor, but is it not what stops you from getting what you  need or really want. Your husband found money for the boat, right? You  found money for your son’s ortho, your daughter’s over-priced prom  dress, and that Coach bag  you’re carrying. People spend money when they believe in the value. I  think the TIME and the MONEY excuse all relate back to the <em>No Perceived Need</em> excuse.</div>
<div>Remember, if they don’t believe or trust in your office, they may  never get that crown&#8211;even the One-a-Year their insurance will largely  provide for. If they don’t “see it,” by clearly showing them dental  damage (the larger your monitor the better), they might not believe it.  And by having various office financial options in place in your office,  like Care Credit or automatic checking withdraw, you’ll make it easier  for them to say <em>Yes</em>.</div>
<div>Hopefully, these few tips will help you get your Crown of the Year members to invest in their dental health anytime of the year.</div>
<p></span></p>
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		<title>Hello world!</title>
		<link>http://wiltrace.wordpress.com/2010/07/23/hello-world/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Jul 2010 20:58:39 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Welcome to WordPress.com. This is your first post. Edit or delete it and start blogging!<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=wiltrace.wordpress.com&amp;blog=14840746&amp;post=1&amp;subd=wiltrace&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to <a href="http://wordpress.com/">WordPress.com</a>. This is your first post. Edit or delete it and start blogging!</p>
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