Walking into my eye doctor’s office is like entering a black hole. The appointment is for 10:00 am but you know that it will be 11:00 or 12:00 before your name is called – and they don’t even have good magazines to read. Once back in the exam room, it can take another 20-30 minutes before anyone starts the exam.
Recently I had the occasion to accompany my daughter to her first ophthalmologist appointment. I expected ‘the usual’ but what I experienced was anything but.
- First, we experienced no more than a 5 minute wait (which was almost a letdown considering they had really great magazines).
- We were followed into the room by the doctor’s assistant who immediately began the examination.
- Part of the exam was dilating my daughter’s eyes (a process that can take about 30 minutes). The office had a ‘kid-focused’ play area for us to wait in. After just 25 minutes they came to get us. Better than our expectation – we never felt they had forgotten us.
- The doctor walked into the exam room at the same time we did and immediately continued the exam.
- When we were done, they provided a pair of sunglasses for my daughter to wear (normally after a retina dilation you are left to stumble into walls unless you remember to bring your own sunglasses).
I talked to the doctor and complimented him on how well his office runs and how considerate they are of their patients. He was appreciative – almost genuinely surprised that not every doctor was so customer focused.
He commented that since he has a pediatric practice, it is important to move people through. Otherwise the kids can get pretty antsy & loud.
That got me thinking – do doctors for adults not worry about having a good operation because adults have been so trained to accept bad service silently?
Three thoughts for all of us…
1) Just because no one complains doesn’t mean they don’t have complaints. If this Doctor took adult patients, I would leave my guy in a heartbeat and he’d never know why (probably wouldn’t notice either).
2) Having an operational focus on timeliness and respect go a long way in any business.
3) Added extras like the sunglasses and waiting room magazines cost little yet leave a lasting positive impression. What can you do in your business to get that added impact?
By the way, if you need a pediatric ophthalmologist in the St. Louis area, go see Dr. Andy Blatt. You won’t be disappointed.
Marc Bluestone
