The Dental Boardroom

The Dental Boardroom

PracticeCFO
Negara Amerika Serikat
Bahasa EN
Episode 163
Terbaru 03.06.2026

A podcast for dentists seeking expert advice on topics like residency, associate opportunities, and practice ownership. Hosted by PracticeCFO, it provides financial and business insights tailored to dental professionals.

Episode

  • 161: The Trusted Transition: Dental Practice Brokers & Better Technology 03.06.2026 54mnt
    In this episode of The Dental Boardroom Podcast, Wes takes a break from his discussion of The Five Types of Wealth to tackle an important topic for dental practice owners: buying and selling dental practices.Drawing from years of experience as a dental CPA and financial advisor involved in hundreds of practice transitions, Wes explores why dental practice sales remain an inefficient marketplace, the critical role brokers play in successful transitions, and the challenges buyers and sellers face throughout the process.He also shares the vision behind Practice Orbit, a technology platform designed to modernize and streamline dental practice transactions while supporting brokers, buyers, sellers, lenders, attorneys, and advisors.Key TakeawaysDental practice transitions are complex, emotional, and financially significant events.A skilled broker can provide tremendous value by finding buyers, coordinating the process, and helping avoid costly mistakes.Dentists should carefully evaluate broker experience, incentives, and transparency.DSO offers should be analyzed beyond the headline purchase price.Technology can improve efficiency, transparency, and communication throughout the transition process.The future of dental practice sales may involve a combination of experienced brokers and modern marketplace technology.
  • 160: The Life Razor - Cut Through What Doesn’t Matter 02.06.2026 40mnt
    Wes Read continues his series on The Five Types of Wealth by Sahil Bloom, diving deep into Chapter 4: The Life Razor. Building on the five categories of wealth Time, Social, Mental, Physical, and Financial Wes explores how a single, carefully crafted sentence can become the most powerful decision-making tool in your life and practice. From the cockpit of Apollo 13 to Netflix’s boardrooms, to a late afternoon assembling a hydraulic bed with his son, this episode delivers a framework that is equal parts philosophical and practical.What You’ll LearnWhy your net worth number alone doesn’t define true wealth and what fills the gapThe philosophical concept of a “razor” and how it applies to your personal lifeThe 3 non-negotiable traits of a powerful life razor: controllable, ripple-creating, and identity-definingHow Marc Randolph (co-founder & first CEO of Netflix) used a five-word rule to protect his marriage through startup chaosA step-by-step process to discover and draft your own life razorWes’s personal life razor and the touching story behind it
  • 159: ES: AI & The Dental Practice 27.05.2026 46mnt
    159: Executive Sessions: AI & The Dental PracticeWhat does AI actually mean for your dental practice right now? In this executive session, host Wes sits down with Michael Anderson from Wonderist Agency, one of the nation's largest dental marketing firms, and Dr. Megan Shelton of Shelton Solutions to cut through the hype and talk about what's really changing.They cover the dramatic shift in patient search behavior (ChatGPT now accounts for 20% of all searches and is growing), why the fundamentals of digital marketing still drive AI search results, how AI-informed patients are showing up differently at the front desk, and why the human connection at the center of your practice is more valuable than ever.Wes also shares a powerful framework from Lawrence Ford's book The Difference Between Knowledge, Intelligence, and Wisdom and explains exactly how Practice CFO is approaching AI adoption, client investment strategy, and the future of financial advisory.What You'll LearnWhy 20% of patients are now searching for a dentist via ChatGPT — and what that means for your marketingThe "unsatisfying but true" answer to ranking in AI search: go back to the basicsWhy AI-generated content is not penalized — but lazy AI content is a dead endHow the AI-prepped patient is changing chair-side conversations and silently eroding trustThe knowledge → intelligence → wisdom framework and why wisdom is AI-proofWhy documenting your SOPs is the mandatory first step before any AI automationWhat Practice CFO is doing with client investment strategy in an AI-dominated market
  • 158: The Richest Dentist You Know Isn't the Wealthiest 07.05.2026 45mnt
    In this episode, Wes Read continues his deep-dive review of The Five Types of Wealth by Sahil Bloom, a book that profoundly influenced his thinking as a financial planner who has spent his career helping dentists build meaningful lives through their practices.Wes covers the book’s preface and Chapter 2, unpacking the research on money and happiness, the philosophy behind redefining wealth, and Sahil Bloom’s powerful framework: the five types of wealth that truly define a fulfilled life.What You’ll Learn in This EpisodeWhy money matters but only up to a point. Wes walks through three core findings from the research on money and happiness, including the concept of declining marginal utility.The Pyrrhic Victory. The story of King Pyrrhus in 280 BC and what it means to win the battle but lose the war, and how this applies directly to the pursuit of financial success at the expense of everything else.Wealth inequality by the numbers. A candid look at Federal Reserve data on how wealth is distributed in America and what it means for dentists trying to cross from labor income to capital ownership.The comparison trap. Why “there’s always a bigger boat” and how excessive comparison is one of the greatest enemies of happiness.The 90% rule. A striking stat: 90% of all the time you will ever spend with your children happens before they leave home.The Five Types of Wealth are defined:Time Wealth: The freedom to choose how, where, with whom, and when you spend your time.Social Wealth: The depth and breadth of your meaningful relationships; the #1 predictor of happiness.Mental Wealth: Connection to higher-order purpose, lifelong growth, and a healthy relationship with your mind.Physical Wealth: Your health, fitness, and vitality; the most entropic form of wealth requiring consistent daily habits.Financial Wealth: Assets minus liabilities, but with a twist: your expectations are also a liability.The seasons of life. How your priorities across these five categories will naturally shift over time, and why balance, not perfection, is the goal.
  • 157: 30 Dinners Left - Why Money Isn't Wealth 04.05.2026 47mnt
    Most dentists are hitting their financial goals and still feel like something is missing. In this episode, Wes Read (CPA, CFP, and founder of Practice CFO) steps back from the balance sheet to ask a bigger question: what does wealth actually mean? Kicking off a new multi-episode series, Wes introduces the book The 5 Types of Wealth by Sahil Bloom, a framework that redefines wealth across five dimensions and challenges high-earning, time-poor practice owners to intentionally design the lives they keep deferring.What You’ll LearnWhy financial success and true wealth are not the same thingThe five types of wealth: time, social, mental, physical, and financialThe “arrival fallacy” is why reaching your goals won’t create the satisfaction you’re expectingHow to break the cycle of marginal thinking and start building your designed lifeThe math exercise that changed Sahil Bloom’s life and Wes’sWhy dentists in particular are vulnerable to being rich on one dimension and bankrupt on the othersThree questions to take inventory of your own wealth right nowThree action items to start this weekKey TakeawaysFinancial wealth is one of the five.Time wealth, social wealth, mental wealth, physical wealth, and financial wealth. Most successful dentists score very high on one and are quietly bankrupt in at least one other, often wealthy.The arrival fallacy will keep moving the finish line.Reaching a financial milestone does not produce lasting contentment. The assumption that it will be the arrival fallacy. Recognizing it is the first step to escaping it.A designed life beats a default life every time.If you don’t intentionally author your life, thousands of others are waiting to do it for you. The opposite of a successful life isn’t a failed life. It’s a default life.What gets measured gets managed.The reason most practices run well financially is that everything gets tracked. How much are you tracking the other dimensions of your wealth? The book gives you a scorecard to do exactly that.Marginal thinking is the enemy of blueprinted life.Skipping the gym once is harmless. Skipping it 9 out of 10 times compounds. The aggregation of small neglected decisions is what separates the life you designed from the life you actually lived.The 1% framework works.The coach of Team Sky didn’t demand a breakthrough; he asked for 1% improvements across every variable. Small, consistent, intentional gains compound into transformation.
  • 156: Build the Practice or Build the Life? The Reinvestment Decision Every Dentist Faces 01.05.2026 43mnt
    One of the most persistent tensions in dental practice ownership is deceptively simple: should you reinvest surplus cash back into the practice, or distribute it to yourself? In this executive roundtable, Wes, Michael, and Megan break down the capital allocation framework every dentist-owner needs, from defining “enough” personally and professionally, to tracking ROI on every dollar invested in people, equipment, and marketing.Key Topics Capital allocation is the most important strategic decision every dental CEO makesWhy every financial plan starts with a personal budgetDefining “enough”, lessons from Jack Bogle’s book, and the Shelter Island storyWhy money becomes psychological and “enough” becomes a moving targetTreating your dental practice like a micro-stock, when the internal ROI beats the S&P 500Where the first dollar of surplus should go: people, systems, or equipment?The CBCT trap, six-figure equipment sitting unused because training was skippedWorking capital “sleep insurance”: how much cash to always keep on handTracking marketing ROI and holding your agency accountable like a CMOThe annual practice roadmap: aligning personal goals with business investmentPractical example, how to allocate $200K as a growing dental practiceWhy maxing your 401(k) early outperforms most practice reinvestment past the optimization pointKey TakeawaysPersonal financial planning should drive the conversation before practice investment decisions are made.Every practice has a breakeven point, 100% of collections cover overhead until that’s met. The surplus is where strategy begins.Your practice is a micro-stock. A dollar invested there can beat the S&P 500 until the practice is fully optimized.Invest in people before equipment. Great team members multiply results; equipment amplifies existing leaks.Working capital target: 75–100% of one month’s collections sitting in the bank at all times.Track ROI on every dollar, marketing, equipment, coaching, or you’re flying blind.Start your 401(k) early. A 40% first-year return from tax savings is nearly impossible to beat.Attack one bottleneck at a time. Spreading dollars too thin creates friction, not momentum.
  • 155: 2026 Q1 Financial Market Update 28.04.2026 25mnt
    In this episode, host Wes Read uses an AI-generated summary of the American Dental Association Health Policy Institute's Q1 2026 State of the US Dental Economy report to unpack what's really happening inside your local dental clinic and why it's a surprisingly accurate lens for the entire American economy.Your local dentist is fighting an invisible war: global supply chain disruptions, international tariffs, a crippling labor shortage, and flatlined insurance reimbursements all while keeping smiles healthy. This episode digs into the data, the contradictions, and the survival blueprint emerging from the Q1 2026 ADA report.Key Takeaways68% of dentists are confident in their own practice, but only 32% trust the national economy. They're operating in a microclimate: recession-resistant but not inflation-resistant.33% of practices report not being busy enough, even though total dental spending is up 4% YoY and 11% since pre-pandemic. Slow growth gets absorbed by existing capacity, leaving empty chairs.Supply costs rose 6% in one year, while insurance reimbursement stayed completely flat. The "fiscal squeeze" eliminates any ability to pass costs on to patients.Nearly 40% of practices lack adequate hygienist staffing. Over 90% of those hiring called it "very or extremely challenging." One practice got one application in 9 months from a tattoo artist.Dental assistants are a different problem: a large applicant pool, but candidates are shallow, and ghost interviews and ignore callbacks. Some practices pay 17% recruiter fees just to poach from competitors.Fully staffed clinics aren't paying wildly higher wages; they're offering health insurance and paid leave. In a revenue-capped market, comprehensive benefits are the competitive moat.Tech investment accelerated well beyond plans: 16.9% intended software upgrades in Q4 2025; 24.4% had already invested by Q1 2026. Automation is becoming an economic necessity.
  • 154: The Hidden Ceiling: How Doctors Cap Their Own Practice Growth 23.04.2026 1j 4mnt
    Most dentists are brilliant clinicians, but somewhere between $1M and $3M in collections, growth stalls. Not because of skill, not because of ambition, but because every decision still runs through the doctor. In this Executive Session, Wes sits down with practice management consultant Megan Shelton (Shelton Solutions) and marketing strategist Michael Anderson (Wondrous) to break down what it actually takes to build a leadership team that lets you scale, whether you’re going from one practice to three, or from $1.5M to $3M under one roof.What You’ll LearnWhy dentists keep hitting the same ceiling and what’s actually causing itWhat a fractional COO, CFO, and CMO look like in a dental practice contextThe four most dangerous clarity gaps inside a dental officeHow to identify and build your “Janine,” the internal operator who frees the doctorThe financial fingerprint of undefined leadership (and exactly where it bleeds on your P&L)Why DIY isn’t always bad and when it becomes the bottleneckThe difference between training people to execute and training them to thinkHow job descriptions, SOPs, and KPIs connect and why most practices get all three wrongKey TakeawaysYou can only scale what is clear.Role clarity, expectation clarity, decision clarity, and culture clarity; without these four, everything keeps surfacing to the doctor.The fractional model works.A fractional COO, CFO, or CMO gives a $1–5M practice access to executive-level thinking without the $250–500K salary. The doctor still has to engage but they’re no longer doing the day-to-day administration.The financial fingerprint of poor leadership:Payroll creeping past 28% of collections (GP target: 26–28%)Supplies & labs drifting toward 8–9% (target: 5–6%)Doctor distributions quietly shrinking even as W2 stays the sameBuild your “Janine” your internal operator.It doesn’t require an MBA. It requires someone bought into your vision, is hungry to grow, and is willing to hold the line. Promote from within, give them authority in front of the team, and back them publicly.SOPs before AI.You can’t build agentic workflows on top of chaos. Your SOPs are the blueprint. Claude can put them into a pretty format, but garbage in is garbage out.Less is more financially.Retain earnings in the business. That retained capital is what funds the hire that buys back your highest-value hours. A doctor doing $400–600/hr chairside should not be doing $25/hr administrative work.Stop being the hero.If you want everyone to bring decisions to you, keep being the person who has all the answers. If you want scale, train your team to think and celebrate when they do.
  • 153: Cost Segregation Tax Strategy for Dentists - Part 5 21.04.2026 50mnt
    The final episode of the cost segregation series. Wes covers the grouping election, the one tax election that determines whether building losses can offset practice income or get suspended indefinitely. Includes the self-rental asymmetry, how to execute the election, five pros, six cons, and when to make it.Key Topics Covered1. The Self-Rental AsymmetryRental income from a building you operate in a non-passive (taxable)Rental losses from that same building are passive (trapped)Result: a $300,000 year-one cost segregation loss cannot reduce your W2 or K-1; it is suspended until the building has future taxable profit2. What the Grouping Election DoesIRC Section 1.469-4(f): elect to treat the building LLC and practice S corp as one economic unitLosses in the building LLC that become non-passive can now offset W2 and K-1 income directlyExample: $400,000 building loss reduces $1M of practice income to $600,000, saving $150,000–$200,000 in taxes in year one3. Qualification and TimingQualifies when: same ownership percentage in building and practice, dentist is the only tenant, same locationMust be elected on the original tax return for the first year of building ownership; it cannot be made retroactivelyCPA must attach a disclosure statement identifying the grouped activities alongside Form 85824. Five Pros of the Grouping ElectionLoss utilization: building losses offset W2 and K-1 in the year they are generatedCost segregation amplification: first-year bonus depreciation becomes immediately usable instead of frozenFixes the asymmetry: losses become non-passive, matching the non-passive character of building incomeSimpler participation: one shared material participation test for both activitiesPredictable: no annual suspended loss ledger to manage5. Six Cons of the Grouping ElectionOne-way door: binding in all future years; can only be undone by a material change in facts (e.g., selling the practice)Partial sale complexity: selling the building without the practice creates complicated suspended loss treatmentForfeits passive shelter: building losses can no longer offset passive income from outside rental propertiesDSO or partner disruption: any equity sale that misaligns building and practice ownership breaks the grouping1031 exchange complications: a grouped building is harder to roll into a like-kind exchangeSemi-retirement trap: when practice income drops, the non-passive characterization no longer helps and can hurt6. Best-Case ScenarioDentist buys practice without building, grows income into the top brackets over 5+ years, then buys the buildingCommissions cost seg study in year one of building ownership, makes the grouping election, and offsets peak practice incomeWorst case: buying practice and building simultaneously at low income — better to wait for a higher-income year7. When to Make and When to Skip the ElectionMake it when:Buying the building with a long-term operating planHigh practice income and a cost seg study ready to deployNo near-term plans to sell, partner, or transition ownershipSkip or defer when:Income is low, preserve deductions for a higher-bracket yearYou own other passive real estate and need building losses to stay passiveA DSO transaction or partnership is within the next few years
  • 152: Cost Segregation Tax Strategy for Dentists - Part 4 16.04.2026 45mnt
    In this episode of the Dental Boardroom Podcast, host Wes Read, CPA and financial advisor at Practice CFO, delves into the advanced mechanics of cost segregation and how dentists can use it strategically to optimize long-term tax outcomes. He explains the key differences between bonus depreciation and Section 179, explores how state tax rules can impact overall savings, and shares what to look for when selecting a qualified cost segregation firm.Wes also highlights how cost segregation can play a role in building purchase negotiations and why aligning tax strategies with a broader financial plan is critical for sustainable growth.What You’ll LearnHow cost segregation works and why it’s more than just a tax-saving tacticWhy front-loading deductions can create long-term tax problems if not planned properlyHow multi-year tax planning helps optimize savings and avoid future tax spikesThe impact of rising income on tax brackets and the loss of valuable deductionsHow to align tax strategies with actual cash flow to avoid financial mismatchesWhy state tax rules can significantly change the outcome of your tax strategyHow cost segregation can influence building purchase decisions and negotiationsWhy taking a holistic, long-term approach is essential for maximizing financial outcomesKey TakeawaysBonus depreciation allows you to create losses and offset other income, while Section 179 only reduces income to zero and requires election.Cost segregation can accelerate 30–40% of a building’s value into shorter depreciation schedules, increasing early tax deductions.Front-loading deductions without a plan can result in significantly higher taxes in later years.Multi-year tax planning helps smooth income, maintain lower tax brackets, and preserve valuable deductions.Large early deductions may reduce future eligibility for benefits like QBI and child tax credits.Financing equipment while taking full Section 179 deductions can create a mismatch between tax savings and future cash outflows.State tax laws may not follow federal bonus depreciation rules, reducing total expected savings.Choosing the right cost segregation firm is critical look for engineering-based studies, detailed reports, and audit support.Avoid firms that use contingency pricing or promise aggressive results without proper analysis.Conducting a cost segregation study during the purchase process can improve negotiations and reveal true after-tax costs.Allocating more value to shorter-life assets increases depreciation opportunities, while land provides no depreciation benefit.The party who pays for tenant improvements receives the tax benefit, making structuring decisions important.Tax strategies should always be aligned with a broader financial plan to avoid unintended long-term consequences.
  • 151: Cost Segregation Tax Strategy for Dentists - Part 3 14.04.2026 31mnt
    In Part 3 of the Cost Segregation series, Wes Read shifts from theory to execution. He walks through the five concrete implementation steps every dentist must follow to set up the strategy correctly, runs a detailed numerical example showing exactly how the money flows between the dental S-Corp and the real estate LLC, covers how to determine the right rent amount without triggering IRS scrutiny, and closes with three options dentists should consider when it comes time to retire and decide what to do with the building.Key Topics Covered1. The 5 Implementation StepsWes lays out the exact sequence for setting up cost segregation correctly:Step 1: Form the LLC first. The LLC must be the purchaser on the deed. Do not buy the building personally and transfer it later.Step 2: Close on the building. The LLC takes out its own mortgage, personally guaranteed by the dentist. This is standard and should not be a deterrent.Step 3: Commission the cost segregation study. Hire a qualified engineering firm (not your general CPA) to do a room-by-room breakdown of all tangible assets into their correct depreciation buckets (5, 7, and 15-year categories vs. the standard 39-year).Step 4: Execute a formal, arms-length lease agreement between the Dental S-Corp and the Real Estate LLC. Get a market rent analysis from a licensed commercial real estate broker to document the rate and protect yourself in the event of an audit.Step 5: Keep clean books. Maintain completely separate bank accounts for the LLC and the S-Corp. A clean Chinese wall between entities is non-negotiable.2. How the Numbers Flow (Real Example)Using a dentist collecting $1.2M per year:Dental S-Corp: $1.2M collections, less $600K clinical expenses, less $170K rent paid to the LLC = $430K net K-1 to the dentist.Real Estate LLC: $170K rent collected, less $80K mortgage interest = $90K taxable income before depreciation.After $200K in cost segregation depreciation, the LLC runs a loss of $110K. The $170K of rent is completely sheltered, with zero taxes owed.If the dentist's spouse qualifies as a real estate professional (750+ hours/year), the $110K loss can be applied directly against the $430K of dental income an additional six-figure deduction.3. Setting the Right Rent AmountThe IRS requires rent to be at fair market value. Inflating rent to absorb 100% of cost segregation depreciation is a red flag and can result in full disallowance of the deduction plus penalties. Wes advises:Hire a licensed commercial real estate broker to provide a market rent analysis in writing.Consider getting two brokers' opinions and taking the higher of the two.Have a real estate attorney memorialize the agreed rate in a formal lease agreement.Optimize within the range 'toe the line, don't cross it.'4. Options When You RetireWhen it's time to hang up the drill, dentists who own their building have three paths:Option 1: Keep the building and collect passive rental income from the successor dentist or a new tenant. Reliable income, but requires ongoing management.Option 2: Sell the building, pay capital gains tax, and invest the proceeds in dividend-paying stocks or other passive assets. Cleanest exit for those who don't want to manage real estate in retirement.Option 3: Execute a 1031 exchange into a larger property, deferring all capital gains taxes. If carried through death, heirs receive a step-up in basis, and the gain disappears entirely one of the most powerful wealth-transfer strategies available.
  • 150: Cost Segregation Tax Strategy for Dentists - Part 2 09.04.2026 30mnt
    In Part 2 of this series, Wes Read builds on the cost segregation foundation from Part 1 to cover the critical structural decisions every building-owning dentist must get right. He opens with a firm warning against holding your building inside your S-Corporation, walks through the correct two-entity structure, and then dives into passive activity rules — including the often-asked question about qualifying a spouse as a real estate professional.Key Topics Covered1. Critical Warning: Never Hold Your Building in Your S-CorpWes outlines four major reasons why placing your building inside your dental S-Corporation is one of the most costly mistakes a dentist can make:Extraction is a tax nightmare. Pulling real estate out later triggers a taxable distribution at fair market value, potentially creating a $200K-$250K tax billLiability exposure: the building is exposed to malpractice claims and employment disputes inside the operating entityFinancing complications, lenders underwrite commercial real estate separately; mixing it with operating assets creates problems for refinancing and equity linesState licensing compliance in many states, non-dentists cannot own a dental professional corporation; a separate LLC keeps ownership clean2. The Right Structure: Two-Entity StrategyThe correct setup involves three layers:You (the dentist) file a personal 1040 tax returnDental S-Corporation owns the practice, generates clinical revenue, and pays rent to the building LLCReal Estate LLC (disregarded, single-member) owns the building, collects rent, deducts mortgage interest and building expenses, and applies cost segregation depreciationThe dental S-Corp pays rent to the real estate LLC. This reduces K-1 taxable income from the dental practice. The rental income in the LLC is then offset by expenses, including mortgage interest, maintenance, and most importantly, cost segregation depreciation.3. Disregarded LLC ExplainedA disregarded LLC provides state-level liability protection but does not exist as a separate entity for federal tax purposes. It files directly on Schedule E, Page 1 of your personal 1040, the lowest-cost, simplest filing structure.If married, spouses can often be treated as a single member (check your state). If a non-spouse partner is involved, the LLC must file as a partnership — a separate tax return.4. Passive Activity RulesRental income and losses in your building LLC are classified as passive. Key points:Passive losses can offset passive income (rent collected) dollar-for-dollar — potentially making rental income tax-free in early yearsPassive losses generally cannot offset W-2 or K-1 income from your dental practiceException: if your AGI is under $100,000, up to $25,000 of passive losses can offset active incomeFor owner-operated buildings (you are both tenant and landlord), limitations are stricter5. The Real Estate Professional ExceptionIf you or your spouse qualifies as a real estate professional (750+ hours per year, more than any other professional activity), all passive losses from the building LLC can offset any income, including dental W-2 and K-1. This can create a $400K-$500K year-one deduction that nets against dental income.For most practicing dentists, this is not achievable. However, for dentists with a stay-at-home or non-working spouse, having the spouse obtain a real estate license, manage properties, and log 750+ hours is a legitimate and powerful strategy. This must be well-documented and is audit-sensitive.
  • 149: Cost Segregation Tax Strategy for Dentists -Part 1 07.04.2026 44mnt
    In this episode, Wes Read walks dentists through one of the most powerful and underutilized tax strategies available to building-owning dental professionals: cost segregation. With a focus on education and practical application, Wes explains how the two-entity structure (dental S-Corp + real estate LLC), combined with a formal cost segregation study, can generate massive upfront tax deductions that accelerate wealth building. He covers the fundamentals of depreciation, the mechanics of cost segregation, real-world examples, and what to watch out for.Key Topics CoveredPractice CFO Background & the Wealth Advisor ModelWes explains how Practice CFO was built as a fiduciary-based firm integrating CPA services with financial planning specifically designed for practice-owning dentists to accelerate personal financial independence.The Three-Pocket FrameworkEvery practice-owning dentist operates across three financial entities: the dental practice (S-Corp), the building LLC (real estate), and personal finances. Understanding cash flow across all three is the foundation of advanced tax planning.What Is Cost Segregation?A formal engineering + accounting study that reclassifies building components from the standard 39-year depreciation schedule into shorter 5-, 7-, or 15-year asset classes — dramatically accelerating tax deductions.Depreciation 101Wes explains straight-line vs. accelerated depreciation, asset classes (5-year, 7-year, 15-year, 39-year), MACRS depreciation schedules, and how bonus depreciation allows dentists to take massive deductions in year one.Real-World Example: $2M BuildingUsing a $2 million dental office as a case study: ~30% ($600K) is reclassified, enabling a potential $200–400K deduction in year one when paired with bonus depreciation — at zero additional cash outlay.Pros of Cost SegregationFront-loaded paper losses, offsetting rental income, building real wealth via appreciating assets, lookback studies for existing buildings, and estate planning advantages through gifting LLC interests.Cons & CautionsDepreciation recapture (25% federal tax on sale), passive activity rules limiting loss deductions against active income, and the requirement to use a qualified cost segregation firm ($5–15K study fee).Key TakeawaysCost segregation is a legal, IRS-recognized tax strategy, not a loophole. It's tax avoidance (legal), not tax evasion.Two entities are required: a dental S-Corp (practice) and a separate real estate LLC (building). Never mix them.Typically, ~30% of a building's value can be reclassified into 5–15 year asset classes, dramatically accelerating depreciation.On a $2M building, cost segregation + bonus depreciation can generate $200–400K in year-one tax deductions with no additional cash outlay.The deduction reduces the taxable rental income flowing from the dental S-Corp to the building LLC, lowering your personal tax bill.Depreciation recapture applies when you sell: the IRS taxes recovered depreciation at 25% federally. Plan your exit strategy early.Passive activity rules prevent most dentists from using building LLC losses to offset active dental income; instead, losses carry forward.A qualified cost segregation firm is essential. Studies cost $5–15K but can generate 10–20x ROI in tax savings.Lookback studies may allow dentists who have owned their building for years to capture missed depreciation; consult your CPA carefully.Estate planning benefits: you can gradually give LLC interest to heirs over time using the annual gift exclusion, reducing estate tax exposure.
  • 148: Why Your Marketing Campaigns are Falling Flat 01.04.2026 57mnt
    In this executive session of The Dental Boardroom Podcast, Wes Read is joined by Michael Anderson (Wondrous) and Megan Shelton (Shelton Solutions) to break down one of the most misunderstood drivers of practice growth: marketing offers.The conversation goes far beyond “$99 new patient specials” and explores what truly makes an offer effective in today’s competitive dental landscape. From identifying when practices should (and shouldn’t) use offers, to understanding how operations and patient experience directly impact ROI, this episode highlights the interconnected roles of marketing, operations, and financial systems.The team also dives into tracking ROI, improving case acceptance, leveraging lifetime patient value, and why many dentists believe marketing “doesn’t work” when the real issue lies inside the practice.If you want to attract the right patients, convert them effectively, and build a profitable, sustainable practice, this episode is a must-listen.What You’ll LearnThe difference between a weak offer and a high-converting offerWhen dental practices should (and should NOT) run offersHow to evaluate your local market and competition effectivelyWhy tracking data and ROI is critical to marketing successThe role of front desk training in converting marketing leadsHow patient experience impacts case acceptance and retentionWhy lifetime patient value matters more than day-one ROIThe connection between marketing, operations, and financial systemsHow poor operations can make great marketing failSimple ways to test, refine, and improve your offers over timeKey Takeaways1. Not Every Practice Needs an OfferOffers should match your stage of growth. Startups may need them to attract patients, but established practices at capacity often don’t.2. Value Beats PriceA strong offer isn’t about being the cheapest; it’s about clearly communicating the value and outcome for the patient.3. Differentiate or DisappearIf your offer looks like everyone else’s, it won’t stand out. Unique positioning is what captures attention.4. Marketing Fails Without Strong OperationsEven great marketing won’t work if your team can’t handle calls, build trust, or convert patients effectively.5. Case Acceptance is the Real LeverLow case acceptance (around 33–35%) shows that improving communication and patient experience can drive more growth than more marketing.6. Track Everything That MattersLeads alone don’t matter; track how many become patients and how much revenue they generate to truly measure ROI.7. Think Long-Term with Patient ValueA patient’s lifetime value far exceeds the initial visit, making it worth investing more upfront to acquire the right patients.8. Your Front Desk Drives ConversionsConfidence, clarity, and proper scripting at the front desk can make or break your marketing results.9. Discounts Should Support, Not Replace ValueIf your team relies only on discounts to close cases, it signals a deeper issue in communication and positioning.10. Systems Must Work TogetherMarketing, operations, and financial management are interconnected—success happens when all three are aligned.11. Training is Non-NegotiableRole-playing and consistent training help teams improve communication and increase patient trust and conversions.12. Evolve Beyond Offers Over TimeAs your brand, reputation, and systems improve, you should rely less on discounts and more on perceived value.
  • 147: 2026 Q1 Financial Market Update: Iran and Your Investment Portfolio 27.03.2026 54mnt
    In this Episode of Dental Board Room Podcast, host Wes Read sits down with Brandon and Paul to break down the biggest forces currently shaping the market, from geopolitical tensions with Iran to Federal Reserve policy and overall stock market resilience.The discussion explores how global conflict, particularly disruptions in energy supply, can ripple through inflation, interest rates, and portfolio performance. The team shares their base-case expectations, potential risks, and how they are actively positioning client portfolios to navigate uncertainty.Despite short-term volatility, the conversation reinforces a long-term, disciplined investment philosophy focusing on diversification, strategic rebalancing, and avoiding emotional decision-making. The episode closes with practical, “set-it-and-forget-it” strategies investors can apply right now.What You’ll LearnHow the Iran conflict and energy disruptions impact global marketsWhy oil prices are a key indicator for economic and market directionThe role of the Federal Reserve and how interest rate decisions affect investmentsWhat the “Great Rotation” means and why value stocks are outperformingHow rising bond yields influence tech stocks and overall valuationsWhy diversification beyond the “Magnificent Seven” is criticalHow disciplined rebalancing helps investors take advantage of volatilitySimple, practical strategies to strengthen your portfolio in uncertain marketsKey TakeawaysGeopolitical events drive markets through energy: Oil supply disruptions can increase inflation and recession risk if prolonged.Short-term volatility is expected but often temporary: Markets have historically rebounded after geopolitical shocks.Interest rates may stay higher for longer: Inflation risks from energy prices are delaying expected rate cuts.Value stocks are gaining momentum: Sectors like energy, financials, and utilities are outperforming high-growth tech.Diversification matters more than ever: Overexposure to a few large tech stocks increases portfolio risk.Rebalancing creates opportunity: Selling stable assets (like bonds) to buy discounted equities during downturns can enhance long-term returns.Markets reward discipline, not timing: Consistent investing and dollar-cost averaging outperform emotional decisions.Focus on what you can control: Income growth, spending discipline, and steady investing are the true drivers of long-term wealth.
  • 146: Who Owns Dentistry 24.03.2026 1j 1mnt
    In this episode of the Dental Boardroom Podcast, Wes Read continues his analysis of the ADA Health Policy Institute 2024 study, focusing on one of the biggest shifts in modern dentistry who actually owns the industry today.This episode dives deep into the rise of Dental Service Organizations (DSOs) and compares them with traditional private practice models. Wes breaks down real data on ownership trends, career stages, and practice sizes, and shares practical insights from years of advising dentists.Beyond the numbers, he explores the hidden challenges of scaling multi-location practices, the financial trade-offs of choosing employment over ownership, and the reality behind DSO deal structures.The episode closes with a strong perspective on the future of DSOs, why many may struggle in the long term, and why private practice ownership remains the most powerful path to autonomy, control, and wealth in dentistry.Key Takeaways1) Ownership Trends Are Shifting Younger dentists are moving away from solo ownership. The majority of older dentists still prefer private practice.2) DSOs Are Growing, but Not Dominating Only a small percentage of dentists are DSO-affiliated. Most practices are still single-location setups.3) Scaling Is Harder Than It Looks Expanding beyond one location adds significant complexity. Many dentists struggle in the “in-between” growth phase.4) Stability vs. Wealth Trade-Off DSOs offer more predictable income. Private ownership offers significantly higher long-term earnings.5) Small Income Gap = Massive Lifetime Impact Even a $50K annual difference can lead to millions lost over time.6) DSO Deals Can Be Misleading Higher valuations often come with strings attached. Earn-outs and equity rollovers carry uncertainty.7) Early Players Win in DSOs The biggest gains go to early adopters. Late entrants typically see limited upside.8) Private Equity Plays a Short-Term Game The focus is often on scaling and reselling, not long-term operations.9) Future Risk for DSOs Talent retention and performance consistency are major challenges. Many DSOs may struggle as original owners exit.10) Private Practice Still Wins (for Most) Greater control, autonomy, and wealth-building potential. The best path for long-term financial success in dentistry.What You’ll LearnThe current breakdown of DSOs vs. private practice ownership in dentistryWhy solo practice is declining among early-career dentistsHow student debt is influencing career decisions and risk toleranceThe real challenges of scaling from one to multiple locationsHow DSOs are structured and how their deals actually workThe difference in income and long-term wealth between owners and employeesWhy many dentists may be leaving money on the table by choosing DSOsThe role of private equity in shaping the dental industryPredictions on the future of DSOs and potential market shifts
  • 145: Is Dentistry Struggling? 19.03.2026 53mnt
    In this episode of The Dental Boardroom Podcast, host Wes Read, CPA and financial advisor at Practice CFO, breaks down fresh data from the ADA Health Policy Institute (2024–2025) to uncover what’s really happening inside the dental industry. While many dentists are earning less despite working more, rising overhead, stagnant PPO reimbursements, and economic pressure are creating real challenges.But here’s the truth: not every practice is struggling.Some dentists are not only surviving but thriving. They’re building highly profitable practices, growing wealth faster than their peers, and creating systems that allow them to win despite industry headwinds.This episode dives into both sides of the story and, more importantly, what separates those who struggle from those who succeed.Key Takeaways1. Dentistry is facing real financial pressure: Dentists are working more hours while earning less due to rising expenses and flat reimbursements.2. Overhead is the silent profit killer: Staff wages, supplies, and operational costs are increasing year over year, shrinking take-home income.3. Flat revenue = declining wealth: If your collections aren’t growing with inflation, you’re effectively losing purchasing power every year.4. Growth creates leverage: Because most dental costs are fixed, increasing revenue significantly boosts profit margins.5. PPO dependence is expensive: Insurance-based dentistry often sacrifices profitability for patient volume.6. Business skills are no longer optional: Top-performing dentists aren’t just clinicians—they’re strong business operators.7. “Platforming” your practice is the key to scaling: Building systems, processes, and teams allows growth beyond your personal clinical hours.8. Three core systems drive success:Marketing → drives patient flowPractice Management → improves efficiency & experienceFinancial Systems → maximize profit and control cash flow9. What gets measured gets improved: Regularly tracking performance metrics and reviewing financials is essential for growth.10. Less personal spending = more business growth: Reinvesting in your practice (rather than lifestyle inflation) accelerates long-term success.
  • 144: Inside Spear: Strategy, AI, and the Future of Dental Education 16.03.2026 52mnt
    In this episode of The Dental Boardroom Podcast, host Wes Read talks with Matt Coggin about how dental education is evolving in today’s fast-changing healthcare landscape. They explore how dentists can stay competitive through continuous learning, team training, and effective communication, while navigating challenges like staff turnover, AI integration, and the rise of DSOs. The episode highlights practical strategies for improving clinical skills, patient care, and overall practice performance.Key Topics CoveredEvolution of dental education and continuous learningTraining pathways for early-career dentistsBlended learning: online modules + hands-on workshopsImportance of training the full dental teamEnhancing patient communication for higher case acceptanceIntegrating AI into dental practiceAddressing staff turnover and operational consistencyImpact of DSOs and private equity on dentistryKey TakeawaysContinuous Learning Is Essential: Ongoing education improves both clinical skills and patient outcomes.Support for Early-Career Dentists: Structured training helps new dentists gain confidence in procedures and decision-making.Blended Learning Works Best: Combining online modules, workshops, and coaching reinforces knowledge and practical application.Team Alignment Matters: Training the entire dental team ensures consistent patient experiences and smoother operations.Communication Drives Growth: Clear patient communication increases trust, case acceptance, and overall practice success.AI Is Emerging in Dentistry: Tools can assist diagnostics and treatment planning, but must be integrated thoughtfully.Staff Turnover Requires Planning: Structured onboarding and ongoing training help maintain efficiency despite staffing changes.DSOs and Private Equity Influence Practices: Scalable education systems are key for multi-location or corporate-backed practices.
  • 143: Six Mistakes that Can Lead to Operational Misery 10.02.2026 48mnt
    In this episode of the Dental Boardroom Podcast, Wes Reed dives into some of the most common and costly business and practice management mistakes dentists make. Drawing from years of experience working with hundreds of dental practices, Wes explains how strong clinical skills alone aren’t enough to build a sustainable, profitable, and stress-free practice.He breaks these mistakes into six core areas, covering everything from management systems and PPO economics to lease agreements, partnerships, financial planning, and KPIs. Throughout the episode, Wes uses practical examples and real-world analogies (including agile software development) to show how intentional systems and financial clarity can free owners from burnout and help practices scale intelligently.This episode is a must-listen for practice owners who want to stop managing reactively and start operating with structure, clarity, and long-term strategy.Key Topics Covered1. Not Adopting a Management ProcessMany dentists manage by instinct instead of by process. Without a clear management operating system including defined roles, meeting cadence, accountability, and decision-making frameworks, practices become reactive, inconsistent, and owner-dependent. Wes explains how adopting even a simple system and iterating over time can dramatically improve operations and reduce burnout.2. Not Understanding the True Cost of PPOsPPOs often increase top-line revenue but quietly erode profitability. Wes breaks down how fee schedules, write-offs, chair utilization, and hygiene profitability impact the bottom line. He emphasizes that PPOs are essentially an expensive marketing channel and that growth without profitability can lead to exhaustion, not success.3. Not Understanding Lease TermsA lease is often the largest non-clinical financial commitment a dentist makes, yet many sign without fully understanding the implications. Wes discusses escalation clauses, renewal options, relocation clauses, and why poor lease terms can hurt practice value or even prevent a successful exit.4. Partnering Without Profit-Split ModelingPartnerships often fail not because of personality conflicts, but because of unclear financial structures. Wes explains why production, ownership, expenses, and profit splits must be modeled and stress-tested before forming a partnership and why aligning accounting execution with the partnership agreement is critical.5. Lacking Financial Planning & Analysis (FP&A)Most practices rely only on historical financial reports, such as P&Ls, which show where the practice has been, not where it’s going. Wes explains how FP&A (or a CFO model) helps dentists forecast cash flow, plan strategically, and turn financial anxiety into financial control.6. Not Using KPIs or KPI SoftwareWithout key performance indicators, practices lack visibility and accountability. Wes highlights the importance of both leading and trailing KPIs, the value of KPI software, and how daily or weekly team huddles around metrics create a culture of ownership and consistency.Key TakeawaysClinical excellence alone doesn’t guarantee a successful practice; systems and strategy matter.A management operating system frees the owner from being the bottleneck.PPO participation must be understood at the procedure- and profitability-levels, not just collections.Lease terms can significantly impact long-term practice value and exit options.Partnerships should be treated like financial marriages, with detailed modeling upfront.FP&A helps dentists make forward-looking decisions instead of relying on gut instinct.KPI create clarity, accountability, and better team alignment.AI should enhance well-designed systems, not replace leadership, processes, or strategy.
  • 142: The Executive Session - Scaling Without Utter Chaos 06.02.2026 1j 8mnt
    In this episode of The Dental Boardroom Podcast, host Wes Read is joined by Megan Shelton (Shelton Solutions) and Michael Anderson (co-founder of Wondrous) for an in-depth executive session focused on one of the most challenging stages of practice ownership: scaling without creating chaos.The conversation explores the concept of “No Man’s Land” the phase where a dental practice is too big to operate informally, yet not structured enough to run like a true organization. The panel breaks down what typically breaks first as practices grow, why culture and clarity often erode before financial performance does, and how intentional systems, leadership layers, and data-driven decision-making can help owners scale sustainably.This episode is especially relevant for dentists approaching $1.5–$2.5M in revenue, adding providers, or feeling increasingly busy, stressed, and constrained despite apparent growth.Key Topics CoveredThe “No Man’s Land” phase of practice growthFounder vs. CEO identity shiftsCulture, values, and psychological safety as scaling foundationsMeasuring quality beyond production and revenueMarketing ROI, lead quality, and tracking systemsOperational dashboards, KPIs, and accountabilityDelegation, leadership development, and team structureCommon myths and misconceptions about growthKey Takeaways1. Growth Without Systems Leads to ChaosWhen revenue outpaces infrastructure, practices experience rising stress, declining consistency, and fractured operations even if production looks strong on paper.2. Culture Breaks Before the Numbers DoTeams feel instability before leaders can name it. Communication breakdowns, confusion, and burnout are often the earliest warning signs of unhealthy growth.3. Identity Must Be Defined Before ScaleClear mission, values, and standards create alignment and serve as a filter for decisions around hiring, marketing, scheduling, and patient care.4. Quality Requires Measurement, Not AssumptionsTrue quality indicators include:Case acceptance consistencyPatient retention and re-treatment ratesTeam turnover and engagementDiagnostic alignment across providersCash flow clarity5. Marketing Success Depends on End-to-End VisibilityMore leads don’t equal better outcomes. Practices must track where patients come from, how they convert, and which channels actually drive ROI.6. Delegation Is Essential for Sustainable GrowthScaling requires owners to let go of certain roles and build leadership layers while maintaining accountability through systems and metrics.7. Many Owners Want Relief, Not More VolumeWithout structure, adding providers, patients, or locations often increases stress instead of freedom.8. A Scalable Practice Can Operate Without the OwnerA key test of operational maturity: if another doctor stepped in tomorrow, what would continue to function and what would immediately break?

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