All Posts

Is sell a Four-letter Word?

Author:Emmet Scott
Share this post

Rethinking sales in your organization

By Charles Moser

In my years as dental director for a very large Dental Service Organization, I had the privilege of interviewing, hiring, onboarding, and interacting with hundreds of associate doctors of all stripes and skill sets so different, I questioned if we were in the same field. But the one common thread was their inability to sell treatment. Many quickly chirped that they dont like the word sell, thinking I was one of those that immediately drew the picture of a man in an overly worn plaid coat pushing Hurricane Harvey submerged cars and presenting them as slightly soiled. However, Im not that guy. I spoke with clarity. Sales was not a bad word. In fact, as Daniel Pink says: everything involves sales. I happen to agree. In this column, my one hope is to simply create a space offering you the opportunity to rethink your position on the word. sales.

Since Adam ate the apple, individuals and civilizations have been selling goods and services worldwide with very little disagreement that it is how its supposed to be. It seems that medicine, dentistry included, diverged, deciding sales was a word we just couldnt be cozy with. Somehow, we were above it. But why?

Going back to my dental director days, I broached the sticky subject early with my associates to dispel any undue misunderstanding of exactly what I meant when I said, sell. Few disagreed when they heard the follow-up statement: as long as you are selling what is morally and ethically right. Heck, we live in a capitalistic society practically demanding we amass as much money as possible (morally and ethically) to provide salaries, bonuses, and incentives for our teams. I can recall mentors espousing it as a duty. Whether persuading, influencing, presenting, consulting, or cajoling, the fact is, you are selling.

But if you are still a holdout and you just cant bring yourself to say it out loud, you have my permission to substitute, educate. Ah, yes, educate. Baby steps. If we just educate our patients, surely they will schedule that treatment we said they need, right? Wrong! People, which most patients are, dont buy what they need, they buy what they want. As a matter of fact, reflecting back to those innocent conversations with newbies, I would educate them that people spell need, W.A.N.T. For instance, I need those AirPod Pros to make work easier. Sure I do.

I submit, selling goods and services that will improve a persons life is an opportunity to help someone. Thats the oath we took. Wording and semantics aside, healthcare providers must take every step possible to open a patients eyes letting the light of better living shine in. It is who we are.

Let it go. The world will not catch fire if you embrace this little truth. In fact, you may even find it liberating. Sell! There you said it. Now, dont you feel better? Should you desire to know more about a simple 4-step process to get your associates to sell more dentistry, contact me at cmoser@deodentalgroup.com.

Dr. Charles Moser, VP Community Management for DEO, has more than 25 years of experience in the dental industry. His leadership skills and business acumen has guided the successful careers of many great clinicians. Dr. Moser continues to share his knowledge with DEO Members. He leads DEO Expert Webinars, Mastermind Calls, and accountability calls, as well coaching calls.

Emmet Scott
Founder & CEO

Share this post

You might also like

The 2026 Playbook for Filling Your Schedule

Presented by Rise DDS Join Neil Zemba, Founder & CEO of Rise DDS, alongside Jason.
January 15, 2026

The Four Most Expensive Insurance Mistakes Growing Dental Practices Make (& How to Avoid Them)

Presented by Dentist Insurance Services Ever wonder if your insurance is actually.
November 24, 2025

CE Zoom: the Compliance Engine Dsos Have Been Waiting for

Sponsored Content: CE Zoom By Sarah Thiel, CEO/Co-Founder, CE Zoom In the DSO world,.
November 24, 2025