Dentists by their nature are high achievers, and thus more likely to be micromanagers. They didn’t get through dental school by leaving the details to someone else. These doctors are accustomed to doing it all, and handing over responsibility for even those seemingly insignificant tasks can be a struggle.
Consequently, these micromanaging doctors are stressed out – working and working, yet never able to actually get ahead. Forget quality of life, forget balance, these docs are living their jobs. Like most micromanagers, they tend to confuse activity with accomplishment and consequently create bottlenecks of inefficiency. Even more frustrating for these dentists and their staff is the fact that they are quite capable of thinking strategically, but they simply cannot bring themselves to relinquish control. They will not allow others to problem solve, and they consistently second-guess decisions. However, if the practice is going to grow and truly succeed, the doctor simply must let go. But how do you bring your micromanaging dentists to relinquish a few of those tightly held responsibilities?
Number one: Don’t try to change them, only they can do that. Instead, work with what you have. One of the greatest needs your micromanager has, outside the need to feel needed, is the need to know. Perhaps your micromanaging dentist really wants more time for treatment planning to encourage greater case acceptance, but at the same time insists on giving all patients their post-op instructions, which only puts everyone behind schedule. Develop a detailed step-by-step plan that outlines how you could help the doctor with this duty. Explain to the doctor that you would like to handle this for her/him in a way that s/he will be completely comfortable and confident that patients receive the post-op information they need.