The Four Elements of Vision

Build your relationships first….then your dentistry. ~ Bob Barkley

The Four Elements of Vision

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A Vision of an ideal practice without action represents nothing more than daydreaming, as no one has ever built an optimal practice from idle thoughts.

There are four critical elements required to transform your Vision from idle thoughts into reality. I call these “The Four P’s Of The Practice Development Process.”

PLANNING: Once you have a clarified Vision, you must establish goals for where, when and how the concepts will be established. At its core, it’s very simple, if you want to make your ideas happen, you must establish a plan-of-action which takes you there in a measurable and manageable fashion. Writing your plan down in detail, and in order is the starting point.

PERSISTENCE: When Dana Ackley, PhD conducted research for The Pankey Institute, he studied the most common characteristics of dentists who were successful at establishing patient-centered comprehensive care practices. The research on Emotional Intelligence revealed that persistence stood out as one of the most important attributes associated with success.

No matter how great your concepts and plans, you will encounter idea-killers and naysayers all along the way who will find every reason to portray your plans in a negative light. To make your plans happen, you must stick with them for months, years, or even decades – depending on how complex the plans are. Additionally, “re-Visioning” is sometimes necessary as you proceed forward into the reality of the marketplace. This requires adaptability and flexibility without compromising values and principles.

PASSION: When seemingly everyone and everything is stacked up against your plans, your personal belief in them and passion for it -will often be the only thing keeping it all alive in the beginning. Additionally, being passionate about your Vision is contagious, and that is a good thing, because you need a dedicated team to help make it all happen. Your Care Team must have an unshakable belief in your leadership OF THEM into the future.

PATIENCE: Persistence and patience go hand in hand, because success seldom happens on our timetable. People’s lives today’s are full of activity, clutter, distractions, and short-hand assumptions about dentistry (which are often totally inaccurate). In fact, it is likely that you will need to wait until a “critical mass” of people (who are in personal alignment with your values, approaches, and philosophy) identify you as their preferred source of helping and healing.

Pursue these “The Four P’s” and your Vision will evolve over time into your preferred future.

Paul A Henny, DDS

Vision Matters

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Don was a 13-year-old paperboy when he read the headline that Buddy Holly had been killed in a tragic plane crash. The news left him devastated and empty inside, particularly when his friends responded with “So what?”.

Later Don McLean become a struggling solo act artist rambling through Canada and playing Buddy Holly songs 13 years after Buddy’s death, and when Holly’s legacy of ‘Peggy Sue’, ‘That’ll be the day’, and ‘Not Fade Away’, were largely forgotten.

But Don McLean had a vision rolling around in his head, a vision of a song which was true as ‘American Pie’ and that revealed his deep feeling of loss.

When the song was finally written following a flurry of inspiration, the recording took months to complete. Don’s former record label had collapsed into bankruptcy; and the session musicians kept telling him what was wrong with it.

McLean persisted, and the song hit #1 for four weeks and quickly propelled the album to gold status, making Don a millionaire along the way. He recently sold a copy of the original manuscript for 1.2 million dollars.

I am sharing this story today, because this is precisely how a vision works. Visions are deep on purpose, inspiration, and tenacity, and they face many obstacles which must be overcome before they are ever shared and generate prosperity.

These same principles apply to the creation of a relationship-based practice. It requires a clear vision, insight, readiness, and a deep determination to overcome every obstacle. And just like Don McLean’s experience, the rewards of execution are greater than ever imagined in the beginning.

Paul A Henny DDS

Thought Experiments LLC, ©2017

Read more at www.codiscovery.com

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