Oral Surgery Admin's Time Out: Practice Management Success Tips

Society of OMS Administrators

Take a TIME OUT from your busy life as an oral and maxillofacial surgery practice administrator for practice management success tips from experts and other admins.

  1. Feb 6

    The Administrator's Secret: Automating Busy Work to Humanize the Patient Journey

    In this episode, we sit down with Daniel Boyce from Digimatiq Marketing to talk about future-proofing your oral surgery practice. The digital landscape is shifting fast, but the goal isn't to replace your team with robots—it's to use artificial intelligence to handle the mundane, repetitive tasks that drain your energy. Daniel explains how to bridge the gap between technical efficiency and authentic patient care. Key Concepts for the Modern Practice Agile Practice Management: Building a workflow that can adapt to digital changes within 24 to 48 hours is the best way to "future-proof." AI for Busy Work, Humans for Moments: Use LLMs (Large Language Models) like ChatGPT and Gemini for drafting, transcribing, and routing. This frees your staff to focus on "empathy moments"—like high-stakes treatment plan conversations or direct patient support. Generative Engine Optimization (GEO): Search is moving away from simple keywords. Patients are asking complex, natural-language questions, and your practice needs to provide "clusters" of expert information to be quoted by AI search engines. Personifying the Surgeon: Learn how a simple two-minute voice memo from your doctor can be transformed into a blog or FAQ that showcases their bedside manner before the patient even walks in the door. Referral Relationship Management: Discover how to use AI to track and summarize CE events, allowing for hyper-personalized follow-ups that turn "C" level referrers into "A" level partners. Reclaiming Your Time Whether it's saving an hour on meeting recaps or automating clinical notes and SOAP notes, the secret lies in finding the right tool for the specific job. By letting AI act as a "brilliant mime" for your admin tasks, you can lead with the authenticity and innovation that define SOMSA's core values.

    1h 5m
  2. 08/06/2025

    The People Part, Continued: Hard Conversations, Letting Go, and Leading with Clarity

    This SOMSA podcast episode, part of our New Admin Series, features a candid conversation between host Lucy and HR consultant Adrienne Twigg of Bent Ericksen & Associates, focused on managing difficult employee conversations and termination procedures within oral surgery practices. They dive into how OMS practice administrators can approach performance issues, interpersonal conflict, and behavior problems with confidence, empathy, and clarity. Adrienne emphasizes the value of preparation, documentation, and emotional regulation before any HR conversation.   Lucy shares a specific, real-life situation involving clinic cleanliness and front desk accountability, providing listeners with an actionable example of how to address workplace issues using daily checklists, verbal warnings, and written follow-ups. Adrienne outlines the necessary steps before terminating an employee—from understanding your state's laws and ensuring fair processes to protecting patient safety and team morale.   Key takeaways include how to structure feedback, encourage team collaboration, maintain professionalism during termination, and whether and when to conduct exit interviews. It's essential listening for any OMS administrator aiming to create a culture of trust, accountability, and clear communication.   Topic Outline Purpose of Difficult Conversations Building trust and improving communication Aligning conversations with broader cultural goals Preparation Steps Identifying the core issue (performance vs. behavior) Gathering documentation and facts Setting time, place, and emotional readiness Real-Life Scenario: Bathroom Cleanliness Issue Lucy's 48-hour rule for addressing issues Use of checklists, photo documentation, and assistant manager delegation Verbal warning and follow-up strategy Common Pitfalls Avoiding the issue Letting emotions dictate timing or tone Overlooking accountability Team Guidelines for Emotional Regulation Discussing 24–48 hour cool-off expectations Encouraging managers to tailor approaches to their emotional makeup Collaborative Solutions Team brainstorming to prevent repeat issues Empowering staff to ask for help Transition to Termination Ensuring all support options are exhausted Legal considerations and documentation Termination Process Guidelines Who should be in the meeting Having materials (final check, COBRA forms, key returns) ready Keeping the tone respectful and the meeting brief Voluntary Resignation as an Option Offering space for employees to choose resignation How to document and follow up Post-Termination Communication Sending a professional team email Preventing gossip and maintaining morale Exit Interviews When and how they are useful How to structure and apply feedback

    1 hr
  3. 08/06/2025

    The People Part: Culture, Mentorship, and Making Great Hires

    This SOMSA podcast episode, part of our New Admin Series, features a candid conversation between host Lucy and HR consultant Adrienne Twigg of Bent Ericksen & Associates, focused on managing difficult employee conversations and termination procedures within oral surgery practices. They dive into how OMS practice administrators can approach performance issues, interpersonal conflict, and behavior problems with confidence, empathy, and clarity. Adrienne emphasizes the value of preparation, documentation, and emotional regulation before any HR conversation.   Lucy shares a specific, real-life situation involving clinic cleanliness and front desk accountability, providing listeners with an actionable example of how to address workplace issues using daily checklists, verbal warnings, and written follow-ups. Adrienne outlines the necessary steps before terminating an employee—from understanding your state's laws and ensuring fair processes to protecting patient safety and team morale.   Key takeaways include how to structure feedback, encourage team collaboration, maintain professionalism during termination, and whether and when to conduct exit interviews. It's essential listening for any OMS administrator aiming to create a culture of trust, accountability, and clear communication.   Topic Outline Purpose of Difficult Conversations Building trust and improving communication Aligning conversations with broader cultural goals Preparation Steps Identifying the core issue (performance vs. behavior) Gathering documentation and facts Setting time, place, and emotional readiness Real-Life Scenario: Bathroom Cleanliness Issue Lucy's 48-hour rule for addressing issues Use of checklists, photo documentation, and assistant manager delegation Verbal warning and follow-up strategy Common Pitfalls Avoiding the issue Letting emotions dictate timing or tone Overlooking accountability Team Guidelines for Emotional Regulation Discussing 24–48 hour cool-off expectations Encouraging managers to tailor approaches to their emotional makeup Collaborative Solutions Team brainstorming to prevent repeat issues Empowering staff to ask for help Transition to Termination Ensuring all support options are exhausted Legal considerations and documentation Termination Process Guidelines Who should be in the meeting Having materials (final check, COBRA forms, key returns) ready Keeping the tone respectful and the meeting brief Voluntary Resignation as an Option Offering space for employees to choose resignation How to document and follow up Post-Termination Communication Sending a professional team email Preventing gossip and maintaining morale Exit Interviews When and how they are useful How to structure and apply feedback

    1h 8m

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2 Ratings

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Take a TIME OUT from your busy life as an oral and maxillofacial surgery practice administrator for practice management success tips from experts and other admins.