Exit Interview Survey for Dental Practices
Dental care is often anxiety-inducing and high-cost, so patient experience drives whether people return and refer. Surveys help practices manage exactly that. Post-appointment feedback reveals whether patients felt comfortable, understood their treatment options and costs, and trusted the dentist's recommendations. Because many dental services are elective and price-sensitive, understanding hesitation around treatment plans and financing is critical to case acceptance. Surveys also catch issues with pain management, scheduling, and front-desk billing before they become negative reviews. For practices competing on trust and gentleness as much as clinical skill, structured feedback boosts retention, lifts treatment acceptance, and builds the reputation that fills the appointment book.
Why it matters
- Patient anxiety and fear of treatment
- Hesitation over treatment cost and financing
- Low acceptance of recommended treatment plans
- Missed appointments and last-minute cancellations
- Confusing insurance and billing communication
- Negative reviews after a painful or rushed visit
Recommended questions — Dental Practices
Common use cases
- After a routine check-up or cleaning
- Following a major procedure like an implant or root canal
- After presenting a treatment plan or quote
- New-patient first-visit experience survey
- After a billing or insurance interaction
- Recall survey for patients overdue for a visit
What it is — Exit Interview Survey
An exit interview survey gathers structured feedback from employees who are leaving the organization, capturing their honest reasons for departing and their candid view of the role, management, culture, and growth opportunities. Because departing employees have little to lose, they often share insights they withheld while employed, making this one of the richest sources of retention intelligence. Aggregated over time, exit data reveals patterns behind turnover, exposes management or culture issues, and highlights what the company should change to keep its best people from leaving in the first place.
When to use it
Conduct an exit survey for every employee who voluntarily resigns, ideally during their notice period and after the decision to leave is final. It also applies to end-of-contract departures and, in some cases, retirements. Use it alongside or instead of a live exit conversation to capture honest, comparable data at scale. Review the aggregated results regularly, not just case by case, so you can spot recurring themes in why people leave and act on them before they cost you more talent.
How it is measured
Exit surveys mix quantitative ratings with categorical and open-ended questions. Track the distribution of primary departure reasons (such as compensation, management, growth, or workload), the percentage of regrettable versus non-regrettable exits, and average ratings of management and culture among leavers. Compare these by department, manager, and tenure to locate hotspots. Trend the leading reasons over time so you can tell whether your retention efforts are working, and combine the numbers with themed analysis of written comments to understand the story behind the data.
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