# Study Guide: Add, Keep, Renegotiate or Drop: The Dental PPO Decision Tree
## How To Use This Guide
Use this as a pre-recording briefing, not article copy.
The goal is to help Joey record the decision logic behind an add, keep,
renegotiate, or drop framework for an established private-practice owner. The
final article should still come from Joey's spoken explanation, examples,
threshold language, caveats, and preferred service framing.
Before recording, study for three things:
- The practical trigger: an owner is busy, frustrated by flat profit, and unsure
whether a PPO is helping, hurting, or worth changing.
- The core correction: the decision should not start with carrier reputation,
emotion, or write-off percentage alone.
- The decision limit: a decision tree can organize inputs and next steps, but it
cannot safely tell every practice to add, keep, renegotiate, or drop without
plan-level review.
During recording, keep the tone calm and owner-practical. This reader may want a
simple answer, but the helpful answer is a sequence:
1. Identify the actual participation path.
2. Measure weighted reimbursement and plan economics.
3. Check capacity and opportunity cost.
4. Check network overlap and alternative paths.
5. Model patient-retention and execution risk before acting.
Do not draft polished article prose from this guide. Use these notes to prompt
Joey's field judgment, examples, branch language, and "do not decide yet"
conditions.
## Article Thesis
The article should help an established dental practice owner turn a vague PPO
question into a structured participation decision.
The main thesis to study:
- A PPO is not simply "good" or "bad."
- The right branch depends on how the practice participates, what the plan
actually pays across the practice's own procedure mix, whether the schedule
has useful capacity or is already constrained, what other network paths exist,
and how much patient-retention or implementation risk the practice can absorb.
- The goal is not more insurance or less insurance. The goal is cleaner
participation strategy.
The article should move the reader away from these shortcuts:
- "This plan has the biggest write-off, so it must be the first to drop."
- "This plan brings patients, so we have to keep it."
- "The schedule is full, so the PPO must be helping."
- "The carrier is familiar, so adding it is safe."
- "If fees improve, collections will automatically rise."
- "If we drop the plan, patients will automatically leave."
- "The office manager can figure it out from summary reports."
And toward a decision file:
- What contract, leased network, shared network, TPA, or stacked path controls
the plan?
- What are the top-code allowed fees, procedure volumes, chair-time realities,
write-offs, and administrative friction?
- Does the plan fill otherwise unused capacity or occupy time that could be
replaced with better-fit patients or higher-value care?
- Is there a direct-contract, opt-out, renegotiation, or alternate network path
worth reviewing before termination?
- If the practice drops or narrows participation, which patients, employer
groups, treatment plans, notice periods, team scripts, and post-change EOBs
need attention?
The owner-facing promise should be modest: this framework helps the practice
know what to review next and which branch may be responsible. It is not a
guaranteed recommendation engine.
## What To Understand Before Recording
The reader is likely an established, privately owned, single-location practice
owner. The practice may look healthy from the outside. The schedule is full or
near full, production may be up, and the team is busy. But collections, profit,
or owner compensation feel flat.
Likely owner language from the raw research:
- "We're busy, but the money isn't showing up."
- "I can see write-offs, but I can't tell which plan is actually hurting us."
- "I don't even know which PPOs we're actually tied into."
- "Are we direct with this plan, or accessing it through another network?"
- "What happens to our patient base if we drop this plan?"
- "My office manager is already overloaded."
- "I don't need another report. I need someone to help me make the decision and
execute it."
Key definitions Joey should be ready to explain simply:
| Term | Study note |
|---|---|
| Participation path | The actual way the practice is connected to the plan: direct contract, leased network, shared network, TPA, umbrella relationship, stacked path, or unknown. |
| Weighted reimbursement | What the plan pays across the procedures the practice actually performs, not a simple average of the fee schedule. |
| Write-off percentage | A useful signal, but not the same thing as plan profitability or strategic value. |
| Capacity cost | The opportunity cost of using doctor or hygiene time for low-fee work when the practice could fill that time differently. |
| Useful capacity | Open time that the plan may help fill without displacing better work. |
| Replacement demand | Whether the practice can realistically replace lost PPO demand with other patients, services, or schedule use. |
| Network overlap | When the same payer, plan, or patient access may be reachable through more than one contract or network path. |
| Redundant plan | A plan that adds little unique patient access, fee value, or strategic benefit compared with other participation paths. |
| Admin drag | Claim follow-up, eligibility confusion, credentialing issues, fee loading problems, patient questions, and other workload tied to the plan. |
| Retention risk | The chance that patients, family groups, employer groups, or unfinished treatment may be lost or disrupted after a participation change. |
Decision inputs to keep in Joey's head:
| Input | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Contract and network path | A direct contract, shared-network route, or unknown path can change the available options. |
| Current and proposed fee schedules | The owner needs actual allowed fees before judging reimbursement. |
| Top-code volume | The plan's impact depends on procedures performed, not just fee schedule lines. |
| Active patients by plan | Patient concentration changes add, keep, renegotiate, and drop risk. |
| Production or collections tied to plan | Shows exposure, but must be cleaned up before over-reading. |
| Doctor and hygiene capacity | A low-fee plan has different meaning when chairs are empty versus overbooked. |
| New-patient demand | Strong demand can make drop or narrow decisions more realistic. Weak demand may make keeping or renegotiating safer. |
| Employer or local-market concentration | A major employer plan can change patient-retention risk and communication planning. |
| Admin burden | Low fees plus high operational friction can move a plan toward renegotiate, narrow, or drop review. |
| Notice windows and effective dates | Timing can make a good decision risky if executed poorly. |
| EOB verification | The intended strategy is not real until claims pay under the expected path and fee schedule. |
Possible branch shorthand for recording, subject to Joey review:
| Branch | Study definition |
|---|---|
| Add | Consider when the plan supports a real growth or capacity goal, has acceptable economics, and does not create avoidable network or credentialing problems. |
| Keep | Consider when the plan still contributes useful patients, access, profit, or strategic value and the current risk of changing it is higher than the current pain. |
| Renegotiate | Consider when the relationship has value but the fee schedule, code clusters, or implementation path underperforms. |
| Drop or narrow | Consider when the plan is low-margin, redundant, disruptive, or blocking better use of schedule capacity after retention and execution risk are reviewed. |
| Wait / gather data | Use when the practice does not know enough about participation path, fee schedules, patient exposure, or notice rules to act responsibly. |
## Research Briefing
The core article, prompt, research pack, SEO pack, topical authority map, buyer
profile, citation questions, and tool briefs all point to the same structure:
core-019 should be the main decision pillar for "what should we do with this
PPO?"
Study the framework as a sequence, not a static quiz.
### 1. Start With The Actual Participation Path
The practice may think it is deciding about one carrier, but the controlling
relationship may involve direct contracts, leased networks, shared networks,
TPAs, umbrella networks, or stacked routes.
Recording prompts:
- "When an owner names a PPO, what do you check before you assume which contract
controls it?"
- "What documents or EOB clues tell you whether the plan is direct, leased,
shared, stacked, or unknown?"
- "When does a participation map need to come before any add/drop discussion?"
Study caveat:
- Source-needed: carrier-specific statements about direct contracts overriding
shared-network paths, opt-outs, or downstream network access.
- Keep this as operational review language, not legal advice.
### 2. Measure Weighted Reimbursement
The research repeatedly warns against relying on broad write-off percentages or
simple fee schedule averages. The decision needs practice-specific economics:
top codes, annual volume, allowed fees, chair time, and admin drag.
Recording prompts:
- "If an owner says the write-off is high, what do you ask next?"
- "Which procedure categories usually need to be checked first?"
- "How do you explain weighted reimbursement without making it feel like a math
class?"
Study notes:
- Weighted reimbursement shows expected allowed-fee impact across the practice's
actual mix.
- It does not prove full plan profitability by itself.
- Full review may also need chair time, hygiene mix, lab or supply cost,
patient count, admin work, claim friction, and capacity.
Source-needed:
- Any universal claim that a certain number of top codes is always enough.
- Any numerical break-even example unless clearly labeled hypothetical or
reviewed.
### 3. Check Capacity And Opportunity Cost
The same low-fee PPO can mean different things in different schedule realities.
If the practice has unused capacity, the plan may still fill useful openings. If
the practice is already full, the plan may block better production or better-fit
patients.
Recording prompts:
- "How does your answer change when the schedule has open doctor time?"
- "How does your answer change when hygiene is full and prime doctor time is
constrained?"
- "What signs show a PPO is no longer filling useful capacity but is crowding
out better work?"
Study caveat:
- Avoid saying unused capacity makes a low-fee plan "good." Say it may change
the analysis.
- Avoid saying a full schedule makes dropping safe. Replacement demand and
patient-retention risk still matter.
### 4. Check Network Overlap And Alternatives
Before dropping or adding, Joey should be ready to talk through whether the same
patients, plans, or fee path can be reached differently.
Examples to prompt:
- A direct contract may be better than a shared-network route.
- An opt-out may clean up a path without a full termination.
- Renegotiation may preserve access while improving the worst codes.
- A plan may be redundant if the practice already reaches the same patient base
through another route.
Study caveat:
- Source-needed: any "always" statement about direct contracts, opt-outs, shared
networks, or remaining network access after termination.
### 5. Model Patient-Retention And Execution Risk
The decision is not complete when the spreadsheet points to a branch. The
practice still has to consider active patients, employer groups, family clusters,
treatment in progress, hygiene recare, communication timing, team readiness,
notice windows, effective dates, claim runout, directory changes, PMS fee
loading, and post-change EOB verification.
Recording prompts:
- "What do you check before letting a practice send a termination notice?"
- "What patient groups need special attention?"
- "What does the office manager usually know that the owner may not see in a
summary report?"
Study caveat:
- Patient retention should be discussed as planning and estimation, not a
promise.
- Do not imply a worksheet can predict exact attrition.
### 6. Use "Do Not Decide Yet" As A Valid Branch
The research pack and tool brief both support a caution-level outcome. Sometimes
the responsible answer is not add, keep, renegotiate, or drop. It is "pause and
gather the missing decision inputs."
Good "do not decide yet" triggers:
- The participation path is unknown.
- The current fee schedule is outdated or not verified by EOBs.
- The practice only has gross write-off data.
- Active patient count by plan is unclear.
- Capacity is assumed but not measured.
- Employer-group or local demand impact is unknown.
- Notice windows, opt-outs, or effective dates have not been checked.
- The team is overloaded and no one owns execution.
## Competitive And SERP Briefing
This article should win by being more operational than generic PPO negotiation
content.
SERP and AI-search target questions:
- Should I keep this dental PPO?
- When should I renegotiate instead of drop?
- Which PPO should I drop first?
- Should I add another dental PPO?
- What reports should I pull before changing PPO participation?
- How do I decide whether a PPO is profitable?
- How can I model patient loss before dropping a PPO?
Competitive pattern from the raw research:
- Competitors already talk about PPO fee negotiation, better reimbursement,
leased networks, shared networks, and general participation optimization.
- Podcast and forum visibility is active around "PPO fees are killing private
dentistry," "stop guessing your PPO fees," and dental loss ratio topics.
- Unlock's opening is participation execution: decide which networks to join,
remain in, renegotiate, narrow, or leave, then make sure the intended contract
and fee schedule govern actual claims.
Best extractable answer after Joey records:
- A dental PPO decision should route through actual participation path,
weighted reimbursement, capacity/opportunity cost, network overlap, and
patient-retention risk before choosing add, keep, renegotiate, drop, or wait.
Best citation-worthy assets:
- Four-branch add/keep/renegotiate/drop table.
- Decision input checklist.
- "Do not decide yet" missing-data box.
- Responsible drop-readiness checklist.
- Capacity-sensitive branch examples.
- Caveat block for shared networks, notice rules, and patient-retention risk.
Internal cluster role:
- Core-019 should be the hub for Wave 4 add, renegotiate, and exit intent.
- Link backward to participation map, weighted fee comparison, PPO profitability
analysis, plan profitability scorecard, capacity cost, and interactive
calculator.
- Link forward to when to add PPOs, should I drop a PPO, which PPO to drop
first, direct contracts/shared-network opt-outs, and patient-retention
planning.
Avoid pSEO risk:
- Do not create carrier-specific recommendations from generic data.
- Do not imply state-specific legal rights without review.
- Do not publish a plan-level answer without proprietary review, contract
context, and Joey-approved caveats.
## Examples And Scenarios To Study
Use these as recording prompts. They are not final article examples unless Joey
validates them, replaces them with field examples, or approves them as clearly
synthetic.
### Scenario 1: Busy Schedule, Flat Profit
The practice is full, the owner is tired, and the team feels productive. Yet the
owner's take-home pay or profit margin is disappointing.
Study angle:
- This is the emotional entry point for the article.
- The owner may blame the most disliked carrier, the biggest write-off, or the
last frustrating EOB.
- Joey should redirect to plan-level decision inputs.
Potential Joey prompt:
- "When an owner says, 'We're busy, but the money isn't showing up,' what do you
look at before naming any plan as the problem?"
### Scenario 2: The Worst Write-Off Is Not Automatically The First Drop
One plan shows the largest write-off percentage, but it may also have lower
patient volume, useful open-capacity contribution, less admin drag, or less
replacement risk than another plan.
Study angle:
- Write-off percentage is a signal, not a final ranking.
- Drop priority should account for weighted reimbursement, patient exposure,
capacity, redundancy, admin burden, and retention risk.
Potential Joey prompt:
- "Tell the story of a plan that looked worst by write-off but was not the first
one you would touch."
### Scenario 3: The Plan That Fills The Schedule But Blocks Better Work
A PPO brings patients and keeps chairs full, but the practice is capacity
constrained. The plan may be using prime doctor or hygiene time that could be
used for better-fit patients, treatment, or fee-for-service demand.
Study angle:
- A full schedule is not the same as a healthy schedule.
- Capacity cost matters most when the practice has replacement demand.
- Patient-retention planning still comes before any abrupt change.
Potential Joey prompt:
- "How do you help an owner see the difference between useful volume and volume
that is crowding out better production?"
### Scenario 4: The Low-Fee Plan That Should Be Kept For Now
A plan pays poorly, but the practice has open time, a new associate, weak local
replacement demand, or important patient concentration tied to that plan.
Study angle:
- Keep can be a valid branch even when the owner dislikes the plan.
- The correct next step may be monitor, renegotiate later, or gather better
data, not terminate.
Potential Joey prompt:
- "When do you tell a practice, 'I know you do not love this plan, but this may
not be the one to drop right now'?"
### Scenario 5: Renegotiate Before Dropping
The plan has meaningful patient access or local-market value, but specific
codes, fee schedules, or network routing are underperforming.
Study angle:
- Renegotiation is cleanest when the relationship has value and the problem is
fixable.
- The evidence file should include top-code volume, current allowed fees,
target concerns, participation path, and any access or market context Joey
uses.
Potential Joey prompt:
- "What makes you say, 'This is a renegotiation candidate, not a drop candidate
yet'?"
### Scenario 6: Add A PPO For A Real Capacity Or Growth Reason
An established practice has open capacity, wants a specific patient segment, or
is in a market where a payer may support growth.
Study angle:
- Adding a PPO should answer a strategic question, not just a fear of empty
chairs.
- The practice should review local demand, capacity, fee schedule, network path,
credentialing timing, and first-EOB verification before treating it as a win.
Potential Joey prompt:
- "What makes adding a PPO strategic instead of just signing another low-fee
contract?"
### Scenario 7: The Unknown Network Path
The practice wants to drop, renegotiate, or add a plan, but no one can say
whether the relationship is direct, leased, shared, TPA-based, stacked, or
effective through another contract.
Study angle:
- Unknown participation path should stop the decision tree.
- The next step is participation mapping and document/EOB review.
Potential Joey prompt:
- "How do you explain to an owner that the first decision is not keep or drop;
it is 'find out what we are actually in'?"
### Scenario 8: The Office Manager Knows The Operational Pain
The owner sees broad financial reports. The office manager sees the daily
friction: eligibility problems, patient confusion, claim follow-up, incorrect
fees, credentialing weirdness, and repeated EOB discrepancies.
Study angle:
- The decision should include the team's operational reality.
- Do not dump the whole strategic decision on the office manager.
Potential Joey prompt:
- "What does the office manager usually know that should change the owner's PPO
decision?"
### Scenario 9: The Drop Looks Good Until Patient-Retention Risk Appears
The plan is financially weak, but a large active patient group, employer cluster,
treatment-in-progress group, or hygiene recall base is tied to it.
Study angle:
- Drop planning needs patient analysis and communication sequencing.
- The right branch may be renegotiate, narrow, phase, or wait.
Potential Joey prompt:
- "What patient-retention checks do you want before a practice acts on a
financially weak plan?"
### Scenario 10: The Strategy Fails At Implementation
The practice negotiates, changes, or terminates a plan, but the PMS fee schedule,
provider record, effective date, network route, or EOB payment does not match the
intended strategy.
Study angle:
- Participation strategy is not complete until claims and EOBs prove it.
- This connects the article to effective-date tracking, fee schedule loading,
and EOB verification.
Potential Joey prompt:
- "Where do participation decisions break after everyone thinks the decision is
done?"
## Claims And Caveats
Treat these as study notes and source-needed guardrails.
### Claims To Avoid Or Qualify
| Claim | Treatment |
|---|---|
| The plan with the biggest write-off should be dropped first. | Avoid. It ignores volume, capacity, profitability, redundancy, and retention risk. |
| A full schedule means a PPO is good for the practice. | Qualify. A full schedule can still be low-margin or blocking better work. |
| A low-fee PPO should always be dropped. | Avoid. Capacity, patient concentration, network path, and alternatives matter. |
| A PPO that brings patients should always be kept. | Avoid. Patient volume may not justify poor reimbursement, admin drag, or opportunity cost. |
| Renegotiation will increase collections by a specific amount. | Source-needed and high-risk unless based on reviewed data and verified implementation. |
| A direct contract always overrides a shared-network path. | Source-needed. Contract language, carrier implementation, provider, location, TIN, and plan details may matter. |
| Shared-network opt-outs are always available. | Source-needed. This is payer, contract, state, and timing dependent. |
| Patient loss after dropping a PPO can be predicted exactly. | Avoid. Use scenario modeling and retention planning, not promises. |
| Most dentists are dropping PPOs. | Source-needed. Raw research mentions survey data, but publication needs source review and date context. |
| A decision tree can recommend the right branch for every practice. | Avoid. It can organize decision inputs and route next steps. |
### Legal, Compliance, And Contract Caveats
- Do not imply legal advice.
- Do not give carrier-specific termination, opt-out, ERISA, state-law,
noncovered-services, or notice-window guidance without review.
- Do not tell practices to coordinate fees, contract positions, or participation
decisions with competitors.
- Do not publish client fee schedules or identifiable payer-specific examples
unless fully cleared.
- If peer benchmarking is discussed, keep it antitrust-safe and source-reviewed.
- If patient communication is discussed, keep it general until Joey approves
scripts and any legal/compliance review needed.
### Evidence Caveats
- The raw research files are directional and need source review before public
claims.
- Public source notes mention ADA and market data, but this study guide should
not turn those into final citations.
- Deep research report 12 includes useful modeling ideas, but any numbers should
be treated as hypothetical unless Joey/source review confirms them.
- The core-019 article has no Joey transcript yet. Strong lines are still
source-needed.
- No dedicated `research/raw/deep-research/core-019...` file exists in the
current workspace; the alternate research pack is
`content/research-packs/core-019-add-keep-renegotiate-drop-dental-ppo-decision-tree.md`.
## Open Research Questions
Ask Joey before final drafting:
- What is Joey's exact first question when an owner asks, "Should I drop this
PPO?"
- Does Joey prefer to call this a decision tree, scorecard, participation
review, plan review workflow, or something else?
- What is Joey's preferred order of operations: participation map, weighted fee
review, capacity review, patient-retention model, notice/effective-date
review, or another sequence?
- Does Unlock use a formal add/keep/renegotiate/drop scorecard today?
- What are the minimum required reports Joey asks for before reviewing a plan?
- Which practice-management-system reports are most useful for active patients,
production, collections, adjustments, top codes, and payer attribution?
- Which top codes or procedure categories does Joey usually review first?
- How does Joey distinguish low-fee, redundant, strategically useful, and
operationally painful plans?
- What threshold language does Joey actually use, if any?
- When does Joey say "keep for now" even if reimbursement is poor?
- When does Joey say "renegotiate first" instead of drop?
- When does Joey say "drop," "narrow," "opt out," or "phase" instead of
tolerate?
- What anonymized examples can Joey safely tell for add, keep, renegotiate, and
drop?
- What example should be clearly labeled hypothetical rather than field-based?
- How should Joey talk about patient-retention risk without increasing fear?
- What role should the office manager play in gathering data versus making the
strategic decision?
- What implementation mistakes has Joey seen after a practice thinks the
participation decision is complete?
- What claims about dentist concerns, overhead pressure, or dropping networks
should be source-reviewed before publication?
- Which internal tool should this article promote first: Add/Drop Decision
Helper, Plan Impact Estimator, decision calculator, checklist, or consult?
- What final article CTA feels consultative rather than fear-based?
Research still needed before publication:
- Joey-approved order of operations.
- Joey-approved branch examples.
- Source-reviewed benchmark claims.
- Source-reviewed legal/network caveat language.
- Confirmed names and destinations for any Unlock tools, worksheets, or lead
magnets.
- Author/reviewer attribution and last-updated process.
## Connections To Tools And Offers
This article should connect naturally to Unlock's participation strategy work,
especially for established practices.
Relevant internal concepts and assets:
- Add, Keep, Renegotiate, or Drop scorecard.
- Dental PPO Add/Drop Decision Helper (`tool-004`).
- PPO Plan Impact Estimator (`tool-008`), if risk/disclaimer framework is
approved.
- Interactive PPO Decision Calculator (`core-018`).
- Weighted Fee Comparison calculator or worksheet, if Joey confirms the name.
- PPO fee schedule data pull guide.
- PPO fee schedule review prep generator.
- Dental PPO profitability analysis.
- Dental PPO plan profitability scorecard.
- Dropping PPOs Responsibly Checklist (`magnet-007`).
- Adding PPOs Strategically Checklist (`magnet-008`).
- Patient-retention planning worksheet.
- Effective-Date and EOB Verification Tracker.
- Annual PPO review checklist.
Service connection:
- The reader should understand what to bring to Unlock: plan name, contracts or
participation documents, fee schedules, recent EOBs, top-code reports, active
patient counts, plan production or collections data, capacity context, and
known team or patient concerns.
- The CTA should invite review of the specific plan before the practice changes
participation.
- Do not promise a generic fee increase, exact savings, automatic collections
lift, or guaranteed patient retention.
- Frame Unlock's value as decision cleanup and execution support: identify the
path, review the economics, model the risk, sequence the move, and verify
actual claims behavior.
Possible internal link map after drafting:
| Link target | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| `core-010` Complete PPO participation map | First step when participation path is unknown. |
| `core-011` PPO layering and contract stacking | Explains why multiple paths can affect reimbursement. |
| `core-012` Shared-network opt-out | Supports narrow/cleanup options before termination. |
| `core-014` Write-offs by carrier | Helps move from broad write-offs to plan review. |
| `core-015` Weighted fee comparison | Core reimbursement math before branch choice. |
| `core-016` Plan profitability scorecard | Broader scoring beyond fee schedules. |
| `core-017` Capacity cost | Explains why schedule reality changes the answer. |
| `core-018` Interactive decision calculator | Tool cluster and decision-model bridge. |
| `core-020` Good time to add PPOs | Branch-specific add article. |
| `core-021` Should my practice drop a PPO? | Branch-specific drop article. |
| `core-022` Which PPO to drop first? | Prioritization after decision inputs are known. |
| `core-023` Direct contracts and shared-network opt-outs | Termination and path cleanup risk. |
| `core-024` Patient-retention planning | Required before exit or narrowing. |
| `core-032` Effective dates | Execution timing. |
| `core-034` Verify negotiated fees on EOBs | Proof that intended reimbursement is real. |
| `core-035` Annual PPO review checklist | Maintenance cadence after the decision. |
## Suggested Study Path
1. Read the core article stub.
Focus on the intent: this is the main decision pillar for an established owner
trying to decide what to do with a PPO.
2. Read the recording prompt.
Notice the repeated requests for Joey's order of operations, branch examples,
data inputs, "do not decide yet" conditions, team roles, and service framing.
3. Study the four main inputs.
Memorize the backbone:
- Participation path.
- Weighted reimbursement.
- Capacity and opportunity cost.
- Patient-retention and execution risk.
Add network overlap and alternatives as the bridge between economics and action.
4. Practice the branch table out loud.
Use short, non-final language:
- Add when there is a real capacity or growth reason and acceptable economics.
- Keep when the relationship still has strategic value or changing it is riskier
than tolerating it for now.
- Renegotiate when the relationship is worth preserving but the economics need
improvement.
- Drop or narrow when the plan is low-margin, redundant, disruptive, or blocking
better use of the schedule after risk checks.
- Wait when the data is not clean enough to act.
5. Prepare the owner objections.
Be ready for:
- "Just tell me which PPO to drop first."
- "This plan has the biggest write-off."
- "We cannot drop it because patients will leave."
- "We should keep it because it fills the schedule."
- "If we negotiate, collections will automatically go up."
- "We do not know if we are direct or leased."
- "Can my office manager just handle this?"
6. Prepare one example per branch.
Do not worry about polished storytelling. The recording needs the decision
logic. Joey can replace synthetic examples with real anonymized examples later.
7. Prepare the caveat block.
Say clearly that contract terms, shared-network paths, state rules, notice
periods, ERISA/self-funded issues, patient-retention estimates, and carrier
implementation details can change the answer.
8. Prepare the office-manager handoff.
Name what the team can gather:
- Fee schedules.
- Recent EOBs.
- Top-code production or completed procedure reports.
- Active patients by plan.
- Schedule capacity.
- Treatment in progress.
- Claim friction examples.
- Contract notices and effective dates.
Also name what should not be dumped on the team:
- Final strategic branch choice.
- Legal or contract interpretation.
- Patient-risk promises.
- Carrier-specific termination or opt-out decisions without review.
9. Prepare the service bridge.
Frame Unlock as the partner that turns a messy PPO question into a plan-level
decision file and implementation path. Keep it consultative, not fear-based.
10. Record for judgment, not polish.
The final article can be shaped later. The recording needs Joey's exact
decision sequence, preferred wording, examples, and caution language.