Blog
Blog
Blog
IDOC actively shares industry-focused articles, blog posts, podcasts, videos and other thought leadership with our members and other optometric practitioners. Below, you will find links to our growing library of educational materials and multi-media assets written and created by IDOC's team of seasoned industry experts.
Nathan Hayes | 6/18/2018
OPTOMETRY PRACTICES - IS IT BETTER TO CUT COST OR GROW?

Here’s a not-too-controversial observation: everyone would like to earn more income. As practice owners, your income is a function of the revenues your businesses bring in and the expenses you have to pay.

So, if you want to increase your income, should you be going over your expenses with a fine-toothed comb?  Or should you focus on growing your patient base and revenues?

Cutting Costs

In the short run, it’s obviously easier to cut costs from the practice.  But what costs can you cut?  Let’s consider the 7 Key Expense Areas and how easily they can be lowered.

  • Cost of Goods – Easy. You can negotiate for better deals with your vendors.  Some will lower your pricing; other’s wont.
  • Non-OD Staff – Hard. You could cut hours or let someone go, but payroll is not easily changed.  Payroll is managed when you make hires, set salaries, decide on raises and – possibly – put incentives in place.
  • Occupancy Costs – Hard. Chances are, you can do very little to lower your space costs.  It’s not as though you can fire 1/3 of your space.
  • Marketing – Easy? You can cut this, but would you want to?  Besides, most practices only spend 2%-3% of their revenues on marketing.
  • Equipment – Hard. You need it, and your vendors or distributors aren’t generally going to just take it back.
  • General Office Overhead – Moderate. There’s usually some potential here, but it tends to be small things.  Things that might pay for your next trip to Disney but won’t buy you a new BMW.
  • Practice Net – Occasionally, practice have more associate ODs than they need, or pay too much for their associates.  This won’t apply to solo-OD practices.
  • Having reviewed several thousand P&Ls and having worked with nearly 750 unique practices, there’s usually not a lot of fat to cut.  Keep an eye on your expenses, but there’s typically very little low-hanging fruit if you’re looking to increase profitability by cutting costs.

Grow Your Revenue

Having said that cutting cost is easy but perhaps not as fruitful as people think, let’s discuss why focusing your energy on growing your revenues is the better way to go.  Consider the impact of reducing one expense area by 5% versus growing your revenues by 5%.  And when we talk about reducing expenses,  Cost of Goods is the most obvious, as it’s the largest and easiest to affect.

Consider a $1M spending 27% of its revenues on materials.  Reduce that by 5% and congratulations!  You’ve increased profits by 1.35%, or $13,500 for the year.  To do that, you may have simply clamped down on excess buying in the optical, but it probably also involved a series of contentious meetings with your vendors to fight for better deals.

Now, what if you had put your energy into growing your revenues 5%?  5% growth on $1M in revenue is an additional $50,000 in revenue.  And what are the costs tied to that revenue growth?  Did rents go up?  Your software licenses?  Utilities?  Equipment costs?  You may not even need to increase the patient care hours in your practice.

Probably only cost of goods increased, which we’ve said is about 27% of revenues.  So for modest growth, you’ll see 73% of the revenue growth fall to the bottom line, before paying any ODs.  That’s $36,500!

Even if you had to increase your non-OD staff to generate the growth, Cost of Goods combined with non-OD staff tend to consume 50% of a practice’s revenues, so that’s a $25,000 increase in profits, before paying an OD.

And it should be said that for practices with high cost of goods, the first solution we recommend is not to work on discounts but to review your markups and pricing strategies.

If Revenue Growth Was Easy…

So, now you’re probably thinking: that’s great, but I would have grown my revenues already if it was easy! And fair enough.  Let’s consider the two ways revenues grow: more patients and more revenue per patient.  Fundamentally, this is how any business grows.

This is where you should put your attention and energy.  First and foremost, patients are the foundation and lifeblood of your practice.  You and your staff must put effort into having systems and attitudes that are oriented towards your patients’ wants and needs.

In all my conversations with multimillion-dollar practices that have sustained double-digit growth rates for years, a focus on patient experience is the first reason they give for their success.

Other things to focus on include your recall process (keep the schedule full!), your practice brand, your internet and social media presence and your practice marketing.

For revenue per exam, the think I can’t recommend enough is that every practice needs to have a ‘standard of care’ that defines the suite of products the average patient needs for optimal eye health.

For revenue per patient, the low hanging fruit is to be sure and review your fees and markups every year.  Vision plans aren’t raising their reimbursements, but you can at least capture more overages if you keep your pricing up and make up some ground with your private pay patients.

I know I’m pushing the bounds of that term, but while I think most OD practice owners really believe every contact lens patient NEEDS a pair of plain sunglasses and a backup pair of spectacles, I’m confident almost no staff really believes it.  If they did, capture rates would be much higher.

Buy your staff the cheap stuff some they can ‘taste and see’ the difference.  Make sure the know – in their bones – that your practice offers superior products and care.

Grow your revenues.  Watch your costs.  And your income will increase.

Nathan Hayes
Director, Financial Services
Nathan Hayes joined IDOC with a solid background in the eye care industry and serves as IDOC’s Practice Finance Consultant. Before Prima launched in 2011, he spent five years in business development for Red Tray and HMI Buying Group. Nathan graduated from Vanderbilt University in three years, with a degree in Spanish and a minor in mathematics.

After graduating, he spent a year working abroad. During that time, he worked for two firms in San Jose, Costa Rica. He interned with Grupo Juridico de San Jose, working in environmental policy to protect a threatened parcel of land, then he worked as a project manager for a US-owned precision machining shop. Nathan then spent 6 months working with street children and orphans in Mexico.

Before getting into the healthcare industry, he was an Assistant Store Manager and completed the Corporate Training Program with Haverty’s Furniture Company in Atlanta, GA. Nathan and his wife Heather have a son, Daniel, and a daughter, Hannah. In his spare time, Nathan enjoys reading and outdoors activities - especially cycling and hiking.
 LinkedIn
Trending Blogs
 
 

12/2/2022 | Author: IDOC

Hayley Stewart, IDOC Financial Services Manager

The end of the year is quickly approaching, which means you are probably thinking about your practice’s bookkeeping and all the many year-end deadlines that are going to be here before you know it. One of those deadlines you... Read more


11/4/2022 | Author: Nathan Hayes

IDOC is excited to announce the first benchmark report for our new Books & Benchmark; Financial Statement Benchmarks are live.  With over 30 practices connected to the database, we’re now able to run benchmarks.  Let us share a couple of aspects of how we do benchmarks that... Read more


9/9/2022 | Author: Maddie Langston

 

If you are looking to increase the number of new patients at your practice, then your marketing strategy should include working on how to get noticed in local online search results. One powerful way to increase your visibility in local search is to optimize and maintain the... Read more


8/22/2022 | Author: Kelsey Garcia

So you created a Facebook and Instagram account for your practice, but now what? Coming up with post ideas can be overwhelming and can quickly leave your creative “well” feeling dry. By categorizing your posts into three main buckets, you can easily streamline the brainstorming... Read more


8/5/2022 | Author: Dr. Steve Vargo

As I type this, the news is dominated by concerns over the economy, including unease around inflation and a looming recession. This has practice owners understandably concerned and asking, “What should I expect, and how can I prepare?”

I’m not an economist, and I... Read more


7/22/2022 | Author: Nathan Hayes

Do you worry that your staff aren’t consistently doing the little things in your practice? Do you lose sleep because you just ‘don’t know’ what’s happening outside your lane?  Do you struggle to find the time to oversee things?

Let me suggest that... Read more


7/15/2022 | Author: Amy Alvarez

I think I would be hard pressed to find an independent practice owner who doesn’t understand the power that marketing has on their ability to attract patients to their practice. Keeping patients, new and existing, visiting the practice is an important part of a successful... Read more


7/8/2022 | Author: Lana Greene

I have never spoken to a practice with a zero patient-owned-frame (POF) percentage. I encourage practices to strive for less than 25% POF percentage at a minimum, and less than 15% for the best-in-class. You may see a slight increase year-over-year, which will happen when you sell quality... Read more


5/19/2022 | Author: Dr. Steve Vargo

As research for launching a new service called IDOC Specialty Services, I interviewed several industry experts of various specialties. At the end of each call, I asked everyone the same question: “What prevents more ODs from succeeding with a specialty?”

Their answers were insightful.... Read more


5/3/2022 | Author: Amy Alvarez

The pandemic has caused many changes in private practice, affecting everything from the way we see our patients to what we expect from our employees. Although some of these changes serve us well, others may feel like a barrier. While attendance issues are not new... Read more