Issue No. 1 · Practice Growth & Management · 2026 Denté
The Playbook

The things nobody
taught you. Finally.

A subscribers-only intelligence brief for dentists and practice owners. Four experts. One theme. Every article closes with action points you can use the same week you read them.

In this issue

01

How I Built Integrity Dental Billing to Provide the Services Dental School Never Taught

Michelle Repash · Revenue & Billing

02

Solving the Front Office Crunch: How Hybrid Teams are Shaping the Modern Dental Office

Christine Sison, BA, MA · Operations & Workforce

03

Why I Bought Three Small 4-Chair Practices — And Why It Was One of the Best Decisions of My Career

Dr. Kartik Antani, DMD, FICOI · Acquisition & Strategy

04

Real Estate Decisions That Shape Your Practice Future: Lessons From My Conversation With Colin Carr

Dr. Marc Liechtung · Real Estate & Financial Strategy

Editor's Note

A Note From the Editor

Dentistry has no shortage of opinions. What it has always lacked is a dedicated space for the kind of operational intelligence that actually changes the way a practice runs — the knowledge that gets passed between trusted colleagues at conferences, in parking lots after study club, in the quiet margins of a career built by trial and error.

That is what The Denté Playbook is for.

Each week, we bring you four voices — practitioners, operators, founders, and strategists — who have earned the right to speak plainly about what works. No filler. No generic advice. Just the real mechanisms behind growth, sustainability, and a practice built to last.

This first issue is focused entirely on Practice Growth and Management — where most dental careers are won or lost. Not in the operatory, but in the decisions surrounding it. The lease you signed without reading. The front office stretched past its limits. The small practice everyone overlooked. The billing system quietly leaking revenue no one tracked.

These are the conversations that needed a home. You are holding issue one.

Carl Demadema

Editor-in-Chief, Denté

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01 of 04 Practice Management Revenue & Billing

How I Built Integrity Dental Billing to Provide the Services Dental School Never Taught

By Michelle Repash

When people meet me today, they often see the seasoned revenue specialist, the person who lives in the world of claims, coding and compliance. But my journey into this work didn't begin with a business idea. It began more than 30 years ago inside a dental operatory, where I worked as a chairside assistant helping restore smiles and relieve pain.

My career has always been shaped by a simple belief: dentists deserve the same clarity and support on the business side that they strive to give their patients clinically. The work I do today grew from witnessing what happens when that support isn't there.

I started in dentistry as an assistant and loved the patient interaction and clinical teamwork. But very early on, I realized something many professionals don't see until much later. Behind every beautiful restoration and every well-run appointment was a business system full of confusion. Insurance processes. Claims. Narratives. AR. Fee schedules. Documentation requirements. None of it was taught in dental school, yet every bit of it affected a practice's stability.

When I moved into administrative roles, I became the person everyone came to when something wasn't adding up. I learned how claims were lost, why denials happened, how revenue leaked quietly, and where practices unknowingly put themselves at risk.

Dentists weren't losing revenue because they weren't doing excellent dentistry. They were losing revenue because no one had ever shown them how the financial side of the profession really works. That realization has guided me ever since.

In 2017, I moved to Florida with the intention of slowing down. I took a part-time position with a billing company, expecting a light workload. Instead, I found practices that weren't getting the support they thought they were paying for. Claims weren't being followed up on. Posting lacked accuracy. Systems were loosely held together. Dentists assumed someone was managing their billing, but revenue was slipping through the cracks.

As I stepped in to fix accounts and bring structure, the same pattern emerged again and again: dentists were carrying the consequences of problems they never caused and were never trained to prevent. The moment that stayed with me was watching a dentist lose tens of thousands of dollars to preventable billing errors. It wasn't malicious. It was simply a system issue. But it changed the trajectory of my career. I knew I needed to create a better way — something grounded in transparency, clarity and education.

When I began outlining the solutions I believed dentists deserved, it wasn't in an office. It was at my kitchen table. I wrote workflows. I mapped out processes. I sketched out systems one small Post-It at a time. I didn't see it as building a company. I saw it as answering a need in the profession. Those early notes became the blueprint for everything that came next. As more dentists asked for help, I slowly built a team of individuals who valued accuracy, professionalism and ethical standards as much as I did. Together, we created structured, consistent workflows that practices could rely on — nothing flashy, just solid systems that protect revenue and reduce stress.

One thing has become increasingly clear throughout my career: even the most talented clinicians can struggle financially if the administrative systems around them aren't strong. Dentists receive extensive training in dentistry but almost none in claims processes, coding fundamentals, documentation requirements, AR workflows, avoiding preventable denials, understanding insurance limitations, preventing revenue leakage, or compliance and audit risks. All of these elements affect the health of a practice as much as clinical skill.

As my work expanded, I became intentional about the kind of team I built. I wanted individuals who valued integrity, careful documentation and professionalism — people who understood that the details matter, because behind every claim is a clinician, a patient and a practice depending on accuracy. One of the most meaningful things dentists tell me is, "This is the first time I've really understood how my billing works." That clarity is what I aim for every day.

Faith plays an important role in how I lead and how I serve. I've always believed that the practices and people who come into my life are placed there for a reason. My team and I strive to approach our work with humility, discernment and a genuine desire to help. Integrity is not just in our name. It's the standard we hold ourselves to, the way we communicate and the foundation for every system we build.

After three decades in dentistry, I've seen the same story repeat itself countless times: a dentist can provide exceptional care and still lose significant revenue due to preventable administrative issues. My work exists to change that. I believe dentists deserve clarity. They deserve systems that protect them. They deserve support that helps them thrive — not just survive. And they deserve to understand what's happening behind the scenes of their own business. When dentists have that clarity, everything changes: their confidence, their culture, their revenue and even the way they practice dentistry.

What began on a kitchen table is now a structured, collaborative RCM operation supporting practices across the country. But the mission remains the same as it was on the very first Post-It note: bring order to the business side of dentistry, protect practices from preventable loss, and help teams gain the clarity and confidence they've long deserved.

Your Action Points

01

Audit your AR aging report this week. If anything is sitting past 90 days without active follow-up, that is your first revenue leak to close.

02

Review your top ten most-billed codes and confirm the narratives attached to each are current, accurate, and aligned with your documentation. Outdated narratives are a leading cause of avoidable denials.

03

Ask your billing team or vendor — clearly and directly — what their follow-up protocol is on denied claims. If they cannot answer specifically, that is a system problem, not just a communication one.

04

Schedule a fee schedule review. If yours has not been updated in the last twelve months, you are likely leaving money on the table every single day.

05

Treat the business side of your practice as a discipline, not a department. Revenue cycle management is a clinical-level responsibility. Own it accordingly.

About the Author

Michelle Repash is the founder of Integrity Dental Billing & Consulting LLC and has spent more than 30 years working across every corner of dentistry — from chairside assisting to front desk administration to revenue cycle management. Her career has been dedicated to helping practices gain clarity, accuracy and confidence in the business side of dentistry. Guided by faith and a commitment to ethical operations, she continues to educate, support and advocate for dental teams seeking transparency and stability in their billing systems.

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02 of 04 Practice Growth Operations & Workforce

Solving the Front Office Crunch: How Hybrid Teams are Shaping the Modern Dental Office

By Christine Sison, BA, MA

Dentistry is changing faster than most people realize. If you're a young dentist, hygienist, or new office manager stepping into leadership, you're walking into a profession that looks very different from the one your mentors entered. The traditional front office model — one onsite team handling everything from phones to insurance to patient flow — simply doesn't match today's realities. Staffing is unpredictable. Administrative complexity has exploded. And patient expectations continue to rise, not gradually, but rapidly.

You may already feel that tension. Phones ringing at the same time patients are checking in. Insurance payments and treatment plans needing follow-up while your schedule is changing by the hour. It's not just "busy." It's fundamentally different. And it's not your imagination.

Across the country, practices are experiencing the same pattern. The pool of experienced onsite front office talent is shrinking. Many professionals prefer flexible or remote-friendly roles. And turnover — especially on the administrative side — has increased enough that nearly a third of practices say it affects how many patients they can see. Meanwhile, the daily administrative workload inside a modern practice is significantly more complex than it was even five years ago.

And then there's the financial pressure. Reimbursement hasn't kept pace with operating costs. Wages have risen 20–40% in many regions. For many practices, the margin is getting tighter. Efficiency used to be helpful; now it's essential. That is the backdrop behind one of the most important shifts in dentistry today: the move toward hybrid front office models, where onsite teams work closely with remote professionals and technology to support a more stable, scalable, patient-centered practice.

For decades, remote teams have powered industries like healthcare billing, insurance, tech, customer support, and finance. Dentistry is only now catching up — and doing so out of necessity. What has become increasingly clear is that a significant portion of front office responsibilities do not require physical presence in the building. Insurance verification, claims follow-up, recare, unscheduled treatment outreach, pre-appointment readiness, new patient intake, patient communication, and scheduling can all be handled virtually with equal — and often better — consistency.

Remote professionals aren't replacing your onsite team — they're complementing and stabilizing them. Remote support, when done correctly, doesn't fragment the patient experience. It protects it.

The front office challenge today is less about staffing and more about how the work is organized. Even strong team members can struggle when they're expected to handle insurance, patient messages, recare, follow-up, scheduling changes, and in-person check-in all at the same time. It's hard to do each task well when so many things compete for attention. When practices shift certain responsibilities to a remote professional, it creates more consistency and allows the onsite team to focus on what they do best — taking great care of patients.

Remote support fills in the structural gaps. It keeps the important-but-not-immediate tasks moving forward so the onsite team isn't forced to choose between being efficient and being present. In the new dental environment, presence is a competitive advantage.

Alongside remote staffing, technology is rapidly shifting how much work can get done in a single hour. Tools that pull eligibility data, summarize patient calls, surface priority tasks, or automate follow-up reminders help both onsite and remote team members complete more work with greater accuracy. This doesn't replace people — it amplifies them. And in a world where reimbursement isn't growing, efficiency truly matters. When remote workflows and technology are combined thoughtfully, practices suddenly have a modern operating system they didn't have before: more consistency, fewer gaps, faster follow-up, and far less pressure on the onsite team.

"After years refining hybrid operations across practices of all sizes, we've learned that teams need flexible access to skilled front-office talent and workflow tools to keep up with daily front-desk fluidity — while preserving what makes their practice unique."

Remote support isn't one-size-fits-all. Practices can use it in whatever way fits their season, size, and needs — from short-term project-based help (recare cleanup, insurance aging, new-patient onboarding overflow) to part-time fractional support, full-time dedicated help, or a fully remote administrative team. Because practices change over time — adding providers, expanding hours, adopting new tech — the ability to adjust support up or down is one of the biggest advantages of this model.

Young dentists, hygienists, assistants, and office managers stepping into leadership today are entering a more complex, more digital, more fluid practice environment than previous generations ever encountered. The front office of the future will not be defined by more people; it will be defined by the right people working within the right system supported by the right tools. Reimbursement may not rise. Staffing may remain challenging. Patient expectations will continue to grow. But practices that embrace a hybrid model — onsite excellence, remote consistency, and smart technology layered in — will be more sustainable, more profitable, and more enjoyable places to work.

Remote work isn't a shortcut, nor is it a temporary fix. It represents a broader shift in how dental practices can operate — and it benefits every role in the practice when done well. As the industry continues to evolve, tomorrow's most successful practices will be those that rethink how work gets done and stay open to new models that support both the team and the patient experience.

Your Action Points

01

Map your current front office task load by category — patient-facing, insurance-related, scheduling, follow-up. Identify which categories require physical presence and which do not. That second list is your hybrid opportunity.

02

Track your administrative turnover over the last two years. If it is high, the instinct to hire again is understandable — but the problem may be structural, not personnel. Solve the structure first.

03

Pilot a single remote function before building a full hybrid model. Recare outreach or insurance aging are strong starting points. Measure the result before expanding.

04

Review your current technology stack for redundancy and gap. Are your tools reducing administrative time or adding to it? If the team is working around a system instead of through it, that tool is not functioning as infrastructure.

05

Define what 'presence' means in your practice. Protecting the in-person patient experience is the goal — build every administrative decision around that outcome.

About the Author

Christine Sison, BA, MA, is the CEO and Founder of Swiss Monkey, a dental operations platform that helps practices modernize front-office workflows through structured systems, remote support models, and practical technology tools. She earned her bachelor's degree from the University of California, Berkeley, and her Master of Public Health in Health Policy & Management. Christine is a national speaker and thought leader on dental workforce evolution, hybrid staffing models, and the future of front-office operations. swissmonkey.io

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03 of 04 ✦ Subscribers Practice Growth Acquisition & Strategy

Why I Bought Three Small 4-Chair Practices — And Why It Was One of the Best Decisions of My Career

By Dr. Kartik Antani, DMD, FICOI

Most dental buyers avoid small practices. They look for six to eight operatories, multiple hygienists and room to expand. They want a production history already near or above $1 million. I chose a different path.

Over the course of my career, I bought three small practices, each with four chairs. None were turnkey. None were considered premium listings. None fit the profile most brokers promote. But those acquisitions became some of the most profitable and strategic decisions I've made. They allowed me to build efficient, high-output practices without paying for extra square footage or inflated potential. Here's what I learned — and why I'd buy a small practice again.

Most buyers see "four chairs" and assume a practice can't grow. They expect limited room, limited scalability and a cap on future production. That mindset is what creates opportunity. While others pursued eight-op offices with high price tags and heavy competition, I found practices where the seller's expectations were realistic and the cash flow worked from day one. The multiples were lower. The negotiations were cleaner. The value was obvious. I wasn't paying for future expansion. I was buying current cash flow at a discount.

Small practices aren't limited. They're focused. With four operatories, every system sits close to daily operations. Problems are easier to identify, and improvements take hold faster. In each of my acquisitions, we scaled quickly by tightening core systems.

With fewer moving parts, changes ripple through the team immediately. Efficiency grows fast, and consistency follows. The core systems we tightened: assisted hygiene, recall and reactivation, scheduling discipline, doctor flow and bottleneck reduction, financial tracking and accountability, and case acceptance training.

One of the biggest misconceptions in dentistry is that higher production requires more operatories. In reality, the true limitations are often internal: scheduling inefficiencies, doctor bottlenecks, weak hygiene utilization, and inconsistent handoffs. When we shifted to assisted hygiene, production increased without adding chairs. Hygienists were able to see more patients without burnout. Exams became predictable. Same-day dentistry became realistic, and recall stabilized. It required training and trust, but the results were significant.

One of our four-op practices grew to more than $1.2 million in production by focusing on fundamentals. The schedule became prime real estate — every block had intent, and every patient was placed accordingly. Clear perio protocols, consistent diagnostics and strong handoffs increased treatment acceptance. Rather than move faster, I worked smarter: sequencing improved, and delegation increased. Billing and collections were monitored closely. We didn't chase volume — we generated the right volume for our capacity. The result was a practice that performed like a much larger office without the overhead.

A smaller team creates a tighter culture. Accountability is immediate. Training sticks. Communication flows more easily. Team members feel essential to the practice's success. Larger offices often struggle with culture because there are too many layers. In a four-op practice, culture becomes a true competitive advantage.

Because small practices cost less and operational improvements take hold quickly, the return on investment was exceptional. Each practice reached profitability faster and required less debt service. Once optimized, each one increased significantly in value. Most importantly, they generated predictable income without the complexity of large, multi-op facilities.

Choosing small practices didn't limit my growth. It created it. These practices allowed me to buy intelligently, implement systems quickly and build reliable revenue without excess overhead. Small practices aren't weak. They're underutilized. With strong systems in place, they become powerful, efficient and highly profitable. Three acquisitions and more than $1.2 million of production later, I can say with confidence: it's not the number of chairs. It's the number of systems.

Your Action Points

01

If you are evaluating acquisitions, include small practices in your search. Run the numbers on a four-operatory listing before dismissing it on size. The multiple and cash flow may tell a different story than the footprint.

02

Audit your current practice for internal bottlenecks before assuming you need more space. Scheduling inefficiencies, doctor flow, and hygiene utilization are almost always the real ceiling — not operatory count.

03

Explore assisted hygiene as a production lever. Model the output difference before investing in expansion. The math often makes the case before the decision is even fully formed.

04

Build your schedule as prime real estate. Every block should have intent. Vague or flexible scheduling in a small practice is not flexibility — it is lost revenue.

05

Measure culture as a performance metric. In a small practice, team alignment compounds quickly. Prioritize it with the same rigor you bring to clinical systems.

About the Author

Dr. Kartik Antani, DMD, FICOI, is a Top 40 Under 40 dentist known for his expertise in sleep dentistry, TMJ, implants, and group practice operations. Blending clinical depth with strong systems insight, he writes and speaks on patient education, burnout, and leadership. He is passionate about helping dentists elevate care and build sustainable careers, and has advised both emerging group practices and dental software companies on growth and operations.

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04 of 04 ✦ Subscribers Practice Management Real Estate & Financial Strategy

Real Estate Decisions That Shape Your Practice Future: Lessons From My Conversation With Colin Carr

By Dr. Marc Liechtung

When you practice long enough, you start to realize something important. Dentistry may be the heart of what we do, but real estate is the spine that holds the entire body of a practice together. The operatories, the lease, the location, the walls, the co-tenants, the clauses that most doctors never even read. These shape your EBITDA, your exit, and your sanity far more than most people care to admit.

I learned this early in my career growing up in a family where real estate conversations were as normal as Sunday dinner. I was not destined for commercial brokerage. My mother made sure I became a doctor. But the exposure stayed with me. And today, after decades of practice ownership, acquisitions, and transitions, I have seen firsthand how a single lease term can make or break a career.

That is why my conversation on Dentistry Beyond the Numbers with someone who truly gets this world meant so much to me. I sat down with Colin Carr, the founder of Carr Realty and possibly the most knowledgeable healthcare real estate advocate I have met. The man has built an entire company around protecting doctors from predatory leases and bad deals. After talking with him, I can say with confidence that too many of us are practicing dentistry in spaces that are silently working against us.

Colin came into real estate by chance. He was a young kid managing apartment complexes in Michigan and later started brokering deals for landlords representing national brands like Wendy's and Blockbuster. But everything changed when he watched healthcare professionals get crushed in lease negotiations they did not even know they were losing. He told me stories that made my stomach turn. Doctors overpaying four hundred thousand or more on leases without representation. Missing out on free rent and build-out dollars. Signing clauses they did not understand. Agreeing to terms that destroyed the resale potential of their practice years later.

One doctor even sat across from him and said with total sincerity, "Please tell me if this is a good deal." And Colin could not respond because he was legally bound to the landlord. That moral tension was the spark that pushed him to create Carr Realty sixteen years ago. He made a choice. He stopped working for landlords and dedicated his entire company to serving doctors only. Buyers and tenants. Never landlords. Never both sides. In our world, that is the equivalent of choosing to drain an abscess instead of watching it blow up in someone else's hands. You know it is the right thing to do.

In my own career, I have seen it all. The young doctor who thinks he needs Fifth Avenue exposure when his production can barely support a second hygienist. The three-million-dollar practice strangled by a twenty-six-thousand-dollar monthly rent. The co-op rules that sound harmless until the day you try to sell your practice and the board blocks the buyer.

Real estate ego kills more practices than poor clinical skill ever will. Too many dentists want a Bugatti location when their business is still driving like a Chevy. There is nothing wrong with growth. There is something very wrong with drowning your EBITDA before you even scale.

We live in a world where patients find us on the internet, not by strolling past a storefront. So I asked Colin the question every modern doctor should be thinking about: do we still need ground floor retail exposure? His answer was nuanced. Many healthcare franchises want retail visibility. But for dentists, an office setting can often provide a better financial runway. Lower rent means more money for marketing, staffing, technology, and experience. And if your new patient flow is already strong, you might never need that retail premium in the first place. What you cannot do is fix a high rent once you sign it. You can slow down marketing. You can adjust scheduling. You cannot ratchet down a lease.

We covered so many topics that every practice owner should understand but almost none do: assignability clauses that ruin a sale; exclusive use clauses that block competitors; expansion rights that save you from relocating; free rent for build-out, free rent after opening, and what to do if your contractor delays the project; purchase options that can turn your practice into a retirement plan; and those infamous New York concepts like "good guy clauses" and co-op restrictions. I have seen multi-million dollar deals fall apart because a board refused to allow a non-operating doctor to buy a space. Imagine realizing at age sixty-five that your practice is now unsellable because of a rule you signed thirty years ago without reading it. That is not dental. That is financial heartbreak.

I asked Colin the question I get from every new dentist I mentor: should a young doctor buy a practice or start from scratch? The answer is not one size fits all. I have acquired practices that needed a year of cleanup — bad systems, bad habits, bad lease terms. Sometimes you spend more time fixing than growing. On the flip side, Colin has helped thousands of startups that became powerhouses because they launched with the right location, right layout, right brand, and right financing. His advice was simple: look at both. Evaluate both. Ignore the people who say you must buy or you must start up. Most of them have an agenda. What matters most is strategy, numbers, and long-term vision.

"No savvy business owner does their own taxes. No savvy business owner reviews their own legal contracts. And no doctor should negotiate their own lease. Just because you can email a landlord does not mean you should."

Colin's team goes to market with five or six locations at once. They negotiate all of them simultaneously. They create real leverage. They make landlords compete. They compare lease rates, build-out dollars, renewal options, exclusivity, assignability, purchase rights, and everything that makes or breaks a deal. Most doctors never even consider these terms. That is why so many of us leave hundreds of thousands of dollars on the table.

If I could rewind my career, I would still choose dentistry. I would still choose New York. But I would also choose to understand real estate much earlier. The space you choose shapes your growth. The lease you sign shapes your exit. And the team you hire shapes your financial future. What Colin and his company provide is not a broker service. It is a shield. It is education. It is a way for doctors to stop fighting battles they are not trained for and focus on the work that changes lives. Best of all, the fee is paid by the landlord. Not by the doctor. That is the part that still shocks people.

We fix teeth. We teach teeth. We mentor through teeth. But we are not real estate experts. And we should not pretend to be. If you are renewing a lease, relocating, expanding, opening a startup, or considering a purchase, get professional support — not from your cousin, not from your hygienist's husband who dabbles in commercial property, but from people who live and breathe healthcare real estate. Your practice is your livelihood. Protect it with the same care you give to your patients.

Your Action Points

01

Before signing or renewing any lease, engage a healthcare-specific real estate broker who works exclusively for tenants — never landlords. Verify that fiduciary commitment before the first conversation.

02

Read your current lease and identify four terms specifically: assignability, exclusive use rights, renewal options, and any purchase option. If you cannot find or define all four, that is your starting point.

03

When evaluating location, model the rent difference between retail ground-floor and second-floor office space over your full lease term. Then compare that number to your new patient acquisition budget. The math often makes the right answer clear.

04

If you are in a co-op or building with board approval requirements, confirm now — not at time of sale — whether a non-operating buyer can acquire your practice space. Surprises at exit are the most expensive kind.

05

Treat your lease renewal date as a strategic milestone, not an administrative task. Begin negotiations twelve to eighteen months before expiration. Leverage disappears when your back is against the deadline.

About the Author

Dr. Marc Liechtung is a practicing dentist, practice owner, and host of Dentistry Beyond the Numbers — a podcast exploring the business, strategy, and financial decisions that shape dental careers. He has spent decades at the intersection of clinical practice and practice ownership across New York.

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