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The DIY Trap: Why Doing Everything Yourself Is the Most Expensive Decision in Your Dental Practice

by PracticeCFO | May 20, 2026

There is a story most dentists tell themselves about why they do everything themselves.

It sounds like this: "I have high standards. I know how I want things done. If I hand it off, it won't be done the way I'd do it."

That's not a character flaw. That's the same drive that built a great clinical practice, earned patient trust, and kept a business alive through every hard year. It's a real strength.

And at a certain point — almost always sooner than the doctor expects — it becomes the single biggest constraint on everything they're trying to build.

"The belief that if you want something done right, you have to do it yourself gets us pretty far," says Megan Shelton, founder of Shelton Solutions and a fractional COO for dental practices. "It builds the practice. It generates some cash flow. But at a certain point, it becomes the ceiling. It becomes the bottleneck."

Here's what that bottleneck actually costs.

The DIY Dentist Is Not Leading. They're Executing.

There's a critical distinction between leadership and execution that gets blurred in dental practice ownership.

Execution is doing the work. Leadership is building the systems and people who do the work. Both matter. But only one of them scales.

When a doctor answers every operational question, approves every decision, reviews every order, handles every conflict, and manages every exception — they're not leading. They're executing at scale, across every function in the business, simultaneously, while also trying to be the primary producer of clinical revenue.

The team, meanwhile, learns a simple lesson: bring everything to the doctor. Not because they're lazy or incompetent — because that's what the environment has trained them to do.

"The owner interprets it when the team is asking questions as 'I can't trust them,'" says Megan Shelton. "And I say: look in the mirror. They have to ask you every question because you haven't trained them what good looks like. And you're keeping everything so tight that the mentality of 'I have to do it myself' is pouring into the practice."

The loop accelerates. Questions increase. Trust erodes. Burnout follows.

And through all of it, the P&L quietly tells the story — if anyone is reading it.

The Financial Fingerprint of a DIY Practice

Pull up any dental practice P&L where the owner is doing too much, and the same fingerprint appears across five specific lines.

1. Payroll creeping past target — without production growth to match.

For a general practice, total payroll costs — excluding the doctor's compensation, and excluding any spouse or family member on payroll for tax purposes — should run between 26% and 28% of collections. That's the healthy range. Every 1% over that target is money that isn't going to overhead efficiency, to the doctor's pocket, or to the next phase of growth.

At $1.5 million in collections, 26% payroll is $390,000. At 33% — a number that's not unusual in practices where delegation has broken down — it's $495,000. That's $105,000 in excess labor costs. Almost a third of the practice's potential profit, dissolved into positions that are covering work the doctor should have delegated, or into overtime from a team that's carrying tasks no one owns properly.

"If every year that's going up by 1% to 2%," says Wes, host of the Dental Boardroom podcast, "within five years you're up around 32% to 33%. Sometimes I see it up to 35% without associates. If you're paying 6% more on your labor costs — let's say you're doing $1.5 million, that's $90,000. If your profit was $300,000, $90,000 is almost a third of your profit going as excess labor cost."

2. Supplies and labs drifting past their targets.

Dental supplies and lab costs should sit around 5% to 6% of collections. In practices with no controls around ordering — where vendors restock at will, where there's no approval process, where no one owns purchasing — it's common to see that drift to 8% or 9%.

On a $1.5 million practice, that's the difference between $75,000 in supply costs and $135,000. A $60,000 swing that shows up nowhere on a surface-level review, but lands directly on the bottom line.

3. Doctor distributions quietly shrinking.

This one is the most revealing — and the most ignored. The W2 salary looks the same year to year. Collections look fine. But when you look at what the doctor actually takes home in distributions — the second channel through which owner compensation flows — the number has been declining for years.

In the worst cases, the doctor is writing checks back into the business account to cover payroll. They're funding the practice out of their personal finances because the overhead has grown faster than their systems to manage it.

"The financial fingerprint of undefined leadership is this," says Wes. "Revenue looks fine, overhead is quietly bleeding, and the owner is the hardest working, lowest paid per hour person in the business. The P&L doesn't lie. It just takes someone who reads it to connect the dots."

The Real Cost Per Hour

Dentists are among the highest-compensated professionals per hour when they're doing the work they trained to do. A general dentist billing $400 to $600 per hour in the chair. A specialist — an oral surgeon, a periodontist, an orthodontist — billing significantly more than that.

Now account for every hour that dentist spends on something that isn't clinical dentistry.

Answering emails: $0 per hour in production. Resolving team conflicts: $0. Reviewing a supply order because no one else has the authority to approve it: $0. Fielding calls from the front desk because the scheduling question needed the doctor's input: $0. Sitting with the accountant once a quarter because they don't fully trust that everything is being handled: $0.

"Don't be doing $15 an hour work. Don't be doing $25 an hour work. Don't be doing $35 an hour work," says Wes. "You should be doing work that is $400 to $600 an hour. That's your greatest work."

Five hours a week on administrative tasks the doctor shouldn't own is 260 hours a year. At $400 an hour, that's $104,000 in foregone production — every single year — from tasks that a trained, empowered team could be handling.

The math is not complicated. The willingness to act on it is the harder part.

Why Dentists Hold On — And When to Let Go

The DIY instinct doesn't come from nowhere. It comes from necessity and from genuine skill.

"I'm a big fan of DIYers," says Michael Anderson, founder of Wonderous and a dental marketing expert. "I encourage people to be DIYers. To manage anyone well, you have to have a baseline understanding. So I'd say: do your taxes your first year in business. Build your own leadership protocols. Try to do marketing. Go and do it."

That first-hand experience matters. It creates appreciation, genuine understanding, and the ability to be a real partner with whoever eventually takes the work over. A doctor who has never tried to build a morning huddle protocol has no feel for what makes a good one. A doctor who has never looked at their own P&L is at the mercy of whoever presents it to them.

The problem isn't DIY. It's holding on past the point where the experience has any more learning value — and where the holding on is actively costing money.

"Our best clients are clients that have that DIY gene," says Michael Anderson, "but they're also clients who don't hold on for too long. That's where it can go really south. You think you have to do everything. And then that B word — burnout — comes in really quick."

The healthy version of this is what might be called leveraged DIY. The doctor understands their P&L but doesn't do the bookkeeping. They know what their marketing strategy should accomplish but don't write the ads. They understand their payroll structure but aren't the one running the payroll.

Engaged without being the bottleneck. Informed without being the one doing the $25-an-hour work.

The $0 Investment That Has the Highest ROI

Here's the paradox that trips up most dental owners trying to escape the DIY trap.

Building systems — writing SOPs, defining roles, documenting processes, running proper meetings, training team members on how to make decisions — produces zero revenue in the short term. It takes time. It requires the doctor's attention. It may require bringing in an external consultant or coach. It feels like a cost.

It isn't.

"Sometimes it feels like two or three steps back for a lot of steps forward," says Wes. "And it costs money to pay a company to help develop our SOPs. But do I have time not to do this? Do I have time to keep fielding a million things that keep surfacing to me because I don't have a clear SOP in that area?"

That reframe — from "this is expensive" to "not doing this is more expensive" — is the mental shift that separates practices stuck at $1.5 million from practices that break through to $2.5 million, $3 million, and beyond.

"It's like investing in a stock that's going to triple in size over the next 10 years," says Wes. "That's a good use of time. It may produce zero now — but it produces everything later."

The Roster Problem

None of the systemic fixes work if the wrong people are in the seats.

A practice with perfect SOPs and a doctor who has genuinely let go still fails if the people executing those SOPs aren't capable of independent thought — or aren't committed enough to the practice's mission to hold the line without constant supervision.

"If somebody isn't playing their role, you can't let that drag on for a year or two years," says Wes. "If they're not correctable, you need to let them go. I don't care how hard that conversation is. Then hire. Interview 20, 30 people if you need to. Take the time to get that person."

The right hire — someone who believes in the vision, can think independently, and doesn't need the doctor's hand in every decision — doesn't just solve a problem. They compound. Every month they're in the practice, they're freeing the doctor to spend more time doing the highest-value work, which funds the next hire, which frees more time, which builds more scale.

The wrong hire does the opposite. Every month they stay, they're creating friction, absorbing attention, and quietly increasing the cost of the doctor's time.

The One Question to Ask This Week

Before any new marketing strategy. Before any new technology. Before any expansion plan.

Answer this honestly: what is the $15-an-hour work that is still sitting in your calendar this week?

That's the starting point. That's the list of things that, one by one, need to be documented, systematized, and handed to the right person at the right level in the right role.

The dentist who figures that out isn't just building a more profitable practice. They're building a practice that can survive a vacation, scale to a second location, and eventually operate in a way that earns them back the thing most dental owners lost somewhere along the way. Their time.

Listen to Episode 154 of The Dental Boardroom Podcasthttps://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/154-the-hidden-ceiling-how-doctors-cap-their-own/id1518344747?i=1000763308370

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