Orthodontics Consultation Close — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
The Orthodontics Consultation Close is a 60-minute training for treatment coordinators (TCs) and front-office leads at orthodontic practices who convert new-patient consults into started cases (metal braces, ceramic, or clear aligners). It replaces the rushed "here's the price, call us back" handoff with a disciplined four-part ritual: a pre-consult brief built from the doctor's exam, a needs-first presentation that ties treatment to what the parent actually said, a verbatim financial-options script, and a same-day-start ask backed by transparent financing.
Built on the American Association of Orthodontists (AAO) patient-communication standards, the case-acceptance methodology popularized by OrthoFi, and the ethical-influence principles of Robert Cialdini's "Influence," this session teaches the TC to lead with the patient's words, never the price — and to make starting today the easy, honest choice.
Section 1 — Why Consults Stall (5 min)
Open with the number that stings. The average orthodontic practice converts roughly 65-70% of comprehensive consults, and the high performers tracked by OrthoFi clear 85%+ — the gap is almost never clinical skill, it's the consultation handoff. When a parent leaves "to think about it," the practice did not lose on price; it lost because the TC presented a fee instead of a plan.
Set the frame on the whiteboard:
- The broken consult: Doctor finishes the exam, says "Sarah will go over the cost," TC reads a number off a printout, parent freezes, books no appointment.
- The repaired consult: TC repeats back the parent's *own* concern, ties the treatment to it, presents monthly before total, and asks for a same-day start.
- Conversion target: 80%+ same-visit case acceptance on comprehensive consults — calendared, tracked, reviewed weekly.
End by reading the AAO patient-relations principle aloud: *"Informed patients accept care; pressured patients defer it."* The TC's job is to inform completely, then make the yes simple — never to push.
Section 2 — The Pre-Consult Brief (15 min)
The brief is a one-page document the TC builds from the doctor's exam notes and the new-patient call *before* walking into the consult room. No brief, no consult. Have each TC fill one out for a real upcoming consult right now.
Verbatim Pre-Consult Brief Template (TC fills out before the consult):
- Patient: [Name] — [Age] — [Recommended treatment: braces / ceramic / aligners] — [Est. Months]
- The decision-makers: [Who is in the room] — [Is the second parent reachable today by phone?]
- The ONE thing they told us they care about: [e.g., "wedding photos in 18 months" or "kid is self-conscious smiling"]
- Likely financial path: Insurance ortho benefit / FSA-HSA / in-house monthly / third-party financing
- My pre-consult hypothesis: [What I think the real hesitation will be — money, timing, or trust]
- My same-day ask: Records and first appointment booked before they leave. Plan A and Plan B financing ready.
Coach the "one thing they care about" rule — the AAO's communication guidance is blunt: patients accept treatment that solves a problem *they named*, not one the doctor named. If the brief is blank on that line, the TC isn't ready to present.
Show the bad example: *"Treatment is $5,800, do you want to start?"* That's a quote, not a consult. Replace it with the diagram flow.
Section 3 — Presenting Treatment, Not Price (10 min)
The hardest habit to break. Drill it.
- Lead with their words. Open with *"You told us [their concern] — here's exactly how this fixes that."*
- Show, don't tell. Use the digital treatment simulation (smile preview) before any number. Parents accept what they can see.
- Monthly before total. Say *"$199 a month"* before *"$5,800"* — both are honest, but the brain hears affordability first.
- Name the financing menu out loud. Insurance ortho lifetime max, FSA/HSA dollars, in-house 0%-interest, third-party (CareCredit / OrthoFi). Transparency builds trust.
- Both parents, one conversation. If a second decision-maker is absent, get them on speakerphone before you present — never after.
What to NEVER say in an orthodontic consult (read these aloud, slowly):
- "It's expensive, but..." (you just made the price the headline; lead with the outcome instead)
- "This deal is only good today" (false urgency — AAO ethics forbid it and it destroys trust)
- "Most people just put it on CareCredit" (assumes their finances; insulting and presumptuous)
- "I'll knock off $500 if you start now" (training a parent that your fee is fake erodes every future case)
- "You don't really need the premium aligners" (undercuts the doctor's clinical recommendation)
- "Why don't you go home and think about it" (you just talked yourself out of an 80% close — offer a held slot instead)
The AAO standard is plain: present the doctor's recommended plan completely and honestly, make every payment path visible, and let the value — not pressure — close it.
Section 4 — The Financial-Options Conversation (10 min)
Run the money talk *only* after the patient sees the simulation and hears the plan. Use the verbatim script.
Verbatim Financial-Options Script (TC delivers these exact words):
TC: "Dr. Lee recommends comprehensive treatment, about 18 months, to fix the crowding you pointed out. Let me show you how families make this work, because I want you focused on the result, not the math."
[Pull up the payment screen. Show monthly first.]
TC: "Most families here invest about $199 a month. Your insurance has a $1,500 lifetime ortho benefit, and if you have an FSA or HSA, those dollars are pre-tax — that's real savings."
[Pause. Let them react. Do not fill the silence.]
TC: "We offer in-house, zero-interest financing — no third party, no hard credit pull. If you'd rather stretch it longer, we partner with CareCredit. Which feels more comfortable for your family?"
[Parent chooses a path. TC confirms the number.]
TC: "Perfect. We can take records today and have [Patient] in the chair within two weeks — or hold a spot while you confirm with [absent parent]. Which would you like to do?"
Do NOT:
- Quote the total before the monthly. The order of the numbers is the whole game.
- Improvise a discount. The fee is the fee; flexibility lives in the *terms*, not the *price*.
- Let a parent leave without either a booked start or a held slot and a scheduled 48-hour follow-up.
Robert Cialdini calls transparent, choice-rich presentation *"the ethics of influence"* — give people honest options and a clear path, and the right yes follows.
Section 5 — The Same-Day-Start Cadence (15 min)
Build the practice's case-acceptance operating rhythm on a whiteboard. This is the part offices skip — and why "thinkers" never come back.
The math (for a practice seeing 40 comprehensive consults a month):
- 40 consults × 70% (current) = 28 starts/month
- 40 consults × 82% (target) = 33 starts/month — 5 additional starts
- 5 starts × $5,800 average case fee = $29,000/month in new production, ~$348,000/year, from coordination alone — zero new marketing spend.
OrthoFi's data is clear: the single biggest lever on the curve is same-visit decisions. Every consult that walks out "to think" converts at less than half the rate of a held-slot follow-up.
Common consult objections (rehearse the comebacks):
- *"We need to talk to my husband/wife."* — "Let's get them on speaker right now — I'd rather they hear it from the source than secondhand." (Offer a held slot if truly unreachable.)
- *"It's a lot of money."* — "It is an investment — that's why we made it $199 a month and pre-tax through your FSA. Let me show you the monthly again."
- *"Can we get a discount?"* — "Our fee is the fee for everyone, which is the fair part. What I *can* flex is the terms — longer plan, smaller monthly. Want me to show you?"
- *"What if the aligners don't work?"* — "Dr. Lee includes [X] refinement sets and monitors progress at every visit. The plan adjusts to you."
Have every TC commit to a same-day-start ask on every comprehensive consult this week before they leave the room.
Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)
Each treatment coordinator leaves with three written commitments, taped to their monitor:
- I build a pre-consult brief for every comprehensive consult, starting Monday.
- I present monthly before total, and I never quote a price before the patient sees the simulation.
- I ask for a same-day start on every consult — and if a family defers, they leave with a held slot and a 48-hour call, never empty-handed.
Close by reading the AAO principle aloud: *"The orthodontist diagnoses; the coordinator removes every barrier between the patient and the care they already want."*
Then pin the consult charter in the team channel and tape the financial-options script inside every TC's consult folder.
FAQ
Q1: Isn't asking for a same-day start pushy? A: Not when the patient already wants the result and you've removed the barriers. Pushy is hiding terms or inventing fake urgency. The same-day ask is simply *"shall we begin?"* after a transparent, needs-first presentation — fully within AAO ethics.
Q2: What if only one parent is at the consult? A: Get the second decision-maker on speakerphone before you present, not after. A price relayed secondhand by a nervous spouse converts at half the rate. If they're truly unreachable, hold a slot and schedule a three-way call within 48 hours.
Q3: Should I ever discount the case fee? A: No. A discounted fee teaches families your price is negotiable and punishes the patients who paid full. Flex the *terms* — longer plan, lower monthly, FSA timing — never the *price*.
Q4: How do I handle a parent who says "we'll call you"? A: Replace the open-ended exit with a structure: a held appointment slot plus a scheduled decision call within 48 hours. "We'll call you" converts under 30%; a held slot with a callback more than doubles it.
Q5: Do clear aligners and braces get presented differently? A: The *structure* is identical — needs first, simulation, monthly before total. The doctor decides clinical fit; the TC never talks a patient out of the recommended appliance to save money. Present what Dr. Lee prescribed.
Q6: How is this different from general dental case acceptance? A: Ortho is a single large multi-month commitment with its own insurance lifetime max, frequent two-parent decisions, and FSA/HSA timing — so the TC role centers on financing architecture and the same-day start, not on sequencing many small restorative procedures.
Sources
- American Association of Orthodontists (AAO), *Patient Communication and Practice Standards*, aaoinfo.org, 2024-2025.
- Robert Cialdini, *Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion*, Harper Business, revised edition 2021.
- OrthoFi, *Orthodontic Case Acceptance and Financial Solutions Benchmarks*, orthofi.com, 2024-2025.
- American Dental Association (ADA), *Principles of Ethics and Code of Professional Conduct*, ada.org, 2024.
- Robert Cialdini, *Pre-Suasion: A Revolutionary Way to Influence and Persuade*, Simon & Schuster, 2016.
- American Association of Orthodontists, *Consumer Awareness and Treatment-Decision Research*, 2023-2024.
- CareCredit, *Patient Financing in Specialty Dental Practices: Practice Guide*, carecredit.com, 2024.
- Roger Levin, *Levin Group Dental Business Study: Case Acceptance Systems*, Levin Group, 2023.