A two-chair private dental practice in central Manchester pulls in roughly 220 new-patient enquiries a month between Google, the website, and word of mouth. The receptionist is excellent. She is also one person. Between 10am and 2pm, when the chairs are full and patients are checking in and out, the phone goes to voicemail more often than anyone wants to admit. The owner does not see this happen. He sees the calendar fill up. He does not see the people who tried to book and gave up.
We have run this math with three private dental practices in the UK in the last two months. The shape of it is always the same. About one in four new-patient calls in peak hours never connect to a human. About one in three of those never call back. The rest of this post is the working.
Where the leak actually is.
The leak is not where most owners think it is. It is not in marketing. It is not in conversion rate on the booking page. It is in the four hours a day when the front desk is overloaded and the phone is the lowest priority object in the room.
Industry data from the ADA and from our own conversations with practice owners suggests the following for a typical two-chair UK practice during peak hours:
- Roughly 28% of new-patient calls go unanswered during the 10am to 2pm overlap window.
- About 65% of those callers do not try again. They book the next clinic they can reach.
- First-visit value averages £180 in the UK for a new-patient consultation and hygiene visit.
- Lifetime patient value is comfortably north of £2,400 across a five-year average tenure.
What it costs the practice every month.
Run those numbers against a clinic taking 220 new-patient enquiries a month. The leak gets large quickly.
Figures illustrative. Based on industry benchmarks and three audited UK practices, May 2026.
What we would do, in order of payback.
None of this is novel. None of it is expensive. All of it is the kind of unglamorous infrastructure work that pays for itself inside ninety days. We list these in the order we would build them, fastest payback first.
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01 · Week 1
A voice agent on the front-desk line.
An AI receptionist that picks up every call the human cannot, in the practice's own voice, with access to the live calendar. Books the appointment. Sends a confirmation by SMS. Logs the call. Hands off to a human only when the caller asks for one. We have these live in roughly two weeks. Closes the gap that costs the practice the most money.
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02 · Week 2
A WhatsApp agent for follow-ups and FAQs.
Roughly half of patient enquiries are not "book me in". They are "do you accept Bupa", "what does an implant cost", "can my kid be seen on Saturday". A WhatsApp agent answers those questions in your tone, with your prices, around the clock. The phone stops ringing for the easy questions. The receptionist gets her job back.
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03 · Week 3
A speed-to-lead sequence on the website form.
Every new enquiry through the website gets a personalised reply within five minutes, twenty-four hours a day. Conversion rates on new enquiries drop by roughly 80% after the first hour of silence. This is the cheapest fix in the stack and the easiest one to skip. Do not skip it.
A reasonable expectation of the first ninety days.
For a practice with the profile above, recovering 60 to 70% of those lost first visits is a reasonable target inside the first ninety days. That is roughly twenty-four to twenty-eight extra new patients a month, give or take. At a £180 first visit and a £2,400 LTV, the system pays for itself well inside the first month and continues paying for itself every month after that, quietly, without anyone thinking about it.
If you want to know what the math looks like in your own numbers, the next section of this page is the conversation worth having.