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Lessons from McDonald’s and Chick-fil-A for Dental Success

by PracticeCFO | November 14, 2025
A bald man with a beard speaks into a microphone on stage, gesturing with one hand. Logos of McDonald's and Chick-fil-A appear in the background.

Dentistry, at its core, is about service, systems, and people. Every successful dental practice shares these traits with thriving restaurant brands like McDonald’s and Chick-fil-A. Dr. Howard Farran often uses these two giants as examples to show how structure, leadership, and attention to detail can shape a dental practice into a lasting success story.

These companies do not succeed by chance; they succeed because they build predictable, repeatable, and people-centered systems that deliver quality experiences every single day. The same approach can help any dentist strengthen operations, develop team culture, and achieve consistent growth.

The Value of Systems: McDonald’s as a Blueprint

Predictability Builds Confidence

McDonald’s is one of the most recognizable brands in the world because it promises the same experience everywhere. Whether you walk into a branch in Tokyo or Texas, you know what the menu looks like, how long you will wait, and what the food will taste like. That consistency builds trust.

In dentistry, consistency creates patient confidence. A well-organized practice ensures that every visit feels reliable, efficient, and professional.

How dentists can apply this concept:

  • Establish written standard operating procedures (SOPs) for all workflows, sterilization, scheduling, charting, and billing.
  • Train every team member to follow these systems until they become second nature.
  • Audit processes regularly to maintain consistency across the team.

Patients who experience predictability are more likely to return, refer others, and follow through with recommended treatments.

Simplicity Strengthens Systems

Ray Kroc, the visionary behind McDonald’s, believed in simplifying operations. He knew that a complicated process increased mistakes and slowed down growth. His mantra was to make every system so clear that a new employee could master it in days.

For dental practices, simplicity is equally powerful. Complicated workflows confuse teams and create bottlenecks. Simplifying procedures allows your staff to focus on what matters most: patients.

Actionable steps:

  • Focus your practice on the procedures you do best and eliminate services that cause inefficiency.
  • Use checklists for each appointment type to ensure every step is done the same way every time.
  • Streamline communication between front-desk, assistants, and hygienists to reduce missed details or duplication of effort.

Cleanliness and Presentation Matter

Ray Kroc once said that customers decide whether to trust a restaurant the moment they step inside and look at the floor and restroom. Cleanliness, to him, reflected discipline and pride.

The same logic applies to a dental practice. A tidy reception area, spotless restroom, and organized operatory create silent reassurance for patients. They subconsciously associate cleanliness with quality care.

A simple habit like checking the lobby every hour or maintaining a strict end-of-day cleaning checklist helps protect that image.

Chick-fil-A: The Power of People and Culture

Hiring the Right People

Truett Cathy, Chick-fil-A’s founder, built his empire by hiring people for their attitude, not just their skills. His team believed in serving guests with kindness and integrity. Their famous phrase, “My pleasure,” became a symbol of genuine hospitality.

Dentistry is no different. A skilled but indifferent team member can damage patient relationships faster than any clinical error. Hiring people with warmth, empathy, and teamwork makes a bigger impact than hiring for credentials alone.

Ways to strengthen hiring practices:

  • During interviews, ask personality-driven questions that reveal attitude and motivation.
  • Evaluate emotional intelligence, how candidates respond to stress or handle difficult patients.
  • Build a positive onboarding experience that teaches both procedures and culture.

Culture is a Competitive Advantage

Chick-fil-A’s leadership invests in its people, offering scholarships, leadership programs, and mentoring. As a result, employees feel valued, and that pride reflects in every customer interaction.

Dentists can foster the same environment by creating a culture that recognizes effort, encourages learning, and celebrates success.

Culture-building ideas:

  • Begin each day with a quick huddle to set goals and acknowledge wins.
  • Create mentorship opportunities where experienced team members train newer staff.
  • Offer continuing education or sponsor certifications that improve staff confidence.

When people feel appreciated, they care more about patient experiences, which strengthens loyalty on both sides of the chair.

Attention to Detail: Small Things Make a Big Difference

The Power of First Impressions

A patient’s perception of a dental office forms in the first 60 seconds. How they are greeted, how the office smells, and how organized the reception looks all influence their comfort level.

Ray Kroc paid attention to every detail, from the temperature of the fries to the brightness of the lighting, because he knew customers judged quality by what they could see and feel.

Translating that mindset to dentistry:

  • Keep front-desk communication warm and clear; a smile matters more than you think.
  • Refresh decor periodically so the office feels modern and cared for.
  • Maintain consistent uniforms and name tags to project professionalism.

Going Beyond Expectations

Chick-fil-A employees are known for doing small, unexpected acts of kindness: carrying trays, refilling drinks, or walking customers to their cars. These gestures turn ordinary transactions into memorable experiences.

Dentists can take similar steps:

  • Follow up after major procedures with a personal call to check how the patient is doing.
  • Offer comfort touches such as headphones, warm towels, or blankets during treatment.
  • Train staff to remember patient preferences, like favorite flavors of fluoride or music choice.

These extra touches make patients feel cared for rather than processed.

Systemization Brings Freedom

Dentists often believe that structure limits creativity, but in truth, structure creates freedom. McDonald’s and Chick-fil-A succeed because their systems handle the routine, allowing leaders to focus on innovation and relationships.

A dental office with clear protocols and checklists operates more smoothly, even when the owner is not present. Consistency creates predictability, and predictability builds profit.

Core systems every dental practice should perfect:

  1. Scheduling System: Balance productivity with patient flow by tracking chair time and provider efficiency.
  2. Financial System: Use clear payment policies and automated reminders to maintain healthy cash flow.
  3. Team System: Set defined roles, regular evaluations, and measurable goals for every team member.
  4. Patient Retention System: Track recalls, cancellations, and reactivation rates to ensure steady growth.

Strong systems are the backbone of both great franchises and great dental offices.

Leadership Lessons from Two Icons

Be Involved, Not Detached

Both Ray Kroc and Truett Cathy spent time on the ground, observing their businesses firsthand. They knew names, faces, and daily challenges. A dentist should do the same, walk through the office regularly, listen to staff feedback, and take ownership of both successes and problems.

Lead by Example

If the leader cuts corners, so will the team. A dentist who values punctuality, transparency, and excellence inspires others to do the same. Your behavior sets the tone for your entire practice.

Measure What Matters

McDonald’s managers track service time down to the second. Chick-fil-A tracks customer satisfaction and order accuracy relentlessly. Dental leaders should also measure key metrics such as production, collections, new patient numbers, and case acceptance rates. What gets measured gets managed.

Customer Experience: Dentistry’s Greatest Marketing Tool

Marketing can bring patients through the door, but service keeps them coming back. Chick-fil-A rarely relies on aggressive advertising because its loyal fans do the talking.

Similarly, a dental practice that consistently provides kind, reliable, and comfortable experiences will generate word-of-mouth referrals stronger than any ad campaign.

Strategies for a memorable patient journey:

  • Personalize communication with names, notes, and small gestures.
  • Use patient feedback forms to identify areas for improvement.
  • Send regular newsletters or educational tips to stay connected between visits.

Happy patients are your most persuasive marketers.

Profitability Rooted in Purpose

Both McDonald’s and Chick-fil-A prove that discipline and values can coexist. McDonald’s built its success on operational precision; Chick-fil-A built its success on human kindness. Dentistry sits at the intersection of both.

Dr. Farran often says that dentistry thrives when systems support the science and people define the culture. Profit follows when a team genuinely cares about doing the right thing for patients and runs operations with business discipline.

In summary:

  • Build systems that protect quality and efficiency.
  • Develop a culture rooted in respect, gratitude, and learning.
  • Never underestimate the power of small gestures that make patients feel valued.

These principles create not only profitable practices but workplaces that inspire pride.

Watch the Full Conversation

To hear Dr. Howard Farran share more insights about applying business lessons from McDonald’s and Chick-fil-A to dental practice management, watch the full episode of The Dental Boardroom Podcast. The discussion offers practical advice for dentists who want to grow with purpose, lead with integrity, and build teams that love what they do.

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