Bill Greene, a healthcare professional with over 30 years of experience, shows how to grow medical practices successfully. As CEO of Premier Gastroenterology Associates (PGA) in Arkansas, Greene helped the practice reach $12 million in yearly income in just three years. This quick growth came from good management, smart marketing, and involving employees. His way of working can guide specialized medical practices across the United States that want to grow.
The key to growing a practice is using good business “best practices.” Bill Greene started MD Growth in 2007 to help medical practices make more money through smart management. He has advised over 30 medical practices in 12 states. His methods include making operations more efficient to lower costs and increase income.
One example is a regional orthopedic practice in Arkansas that, with MD Growth’s help, raised monthly income by more than 50%. At the same time, they reduced first-pass denials and cut monthly costs. This shows how changing operations carefully can affect money, even in complicated healthcare settings.
Improving operations means fixing slow points and better handling billing, patient flow, and use of resources. Many specialized practices find it important to lower claim denials on the first try and improve revenue cycle management. Greene’s practice shows that financial benchmarking helps compare spending to industry standards. This lets managers find ways to cut costs without lowering quality.
Marketing helps keep patient numbers steady and grows the practice. Greene’s time as Director of Marketing at Vein Centers of Texas shows this. There, his plans increased yearly income from $4 million to $18 million in just two years, a 350% increase. Marketing focused on community outreach, referral networks, and online branding works well for specialized medical fields where patient trust is important.
Marketing isn’t just about getting new patients. It also means keeping good communication with current patients, scheduling appointments well, and helping patients stay loyal. Practices that combine smart marketing with efficient operations are better able to handle more patients without lowering service quality.
Strong leadership and involving employees are important for managing growth. At Premier Gastroenterology Associates, Greene focused on helping employees grow to improve patient experience and efficiency. He set up ways to measure employee work, creating feedback that raised performance.
Managers in specialized medical fields should know that engaged staff, both medical and administrative, make operations run smoother and patients happier. Setting clear productivity goals and encouraging responsibility helps practices grow without breaking internal workflows.
Besides daily operations, Greene showed how large facility projects can boost growth. Premier Gastroenterology Associates bought an 80,000+ square foot old K-Mart building and turned it into a multi-use medical center in West Little Rock, Arkansas. This $35 million project offers many services in one place and attracts more patients.
This multi-use approach helps specialized practices by putting many specialties under one roof. It cuts patient travel time and makes referrals easier. For managers, these expansions need careful planning, budgets, and following regulations.
Financial benchmarking is key to checking and improving practice efficiency. During an 18-month work with Shewmake Plastic Surgery/The Skin Retreat MedSpa, Greene set up a benchmarking program. It helped the practice compare costs to industry standards and find ways to save money.
The practice found avoidable costs and waste, which helped raise monthly income and long-term profits. For medical managers and owners, financial benchmarking is a helpful tool to watch how changes inside the practice and market shifts affect results.
In recent years, artificial intelligence (AI) and workflow automation have become important for running specialized medical practices well. These tools reduce work for staff, improve patient communication, and make operations smoother.
Simbo AI is a company that focuses on front-office AI automation, which helps medical practices. By automating phone calls and answering, AI can handle scheduling, confirming appointments, patient questions, and pre-screening.
Using AI phone helpers means smaller admin teams are needed and patients wait less. This raises patient satisfaction. AI also lowers missed appointments and improves booking accuracy. Practices can use staff time for harder tasks or patient care instead of repetitive work.
AI tools can connect with Electronic Health Records (EHR) and practice management systems, creating smooth workflows. For example, AI-driven appointment scheduling syncs with EHR calendars instantly so providers and patients see available times easily.
Automated reminders by phone, text, or email cut no-show rates and keep patient flow steady. Automation also helps with insurance checks and prior authorizations, tasks that often slow care and payments.
Making operations better with AI lowers admin costs and builds patient trust through quick communication. In specialized practices, where patients might need many follow-ups or complex care, automation makes sure they get timely information.
This leads to higher practice capacity without much rise in staff or costs. Practices using AI front-office tools like Simbo AI can focus more on clinical care while keeping admin tasks running well.
Bill Greene’s strategies go beyond individual practices. He has helped start 12 clinics in six states, focusing on growth models that last. MD Growth’s method mixes marketing with better operations.
Medical practice managers should know that strong clinics are built on solid operations and good community connections. Growth plans include:
Epoch Men’s Health grew daily patient visits by 137%, and another clinic grew monthly revenue by 135% under Greene’s guidance. These show what clear plans can do.
The U.S. healthcare market is competitive and regulated. Specialized medical practices need to plan growth in many ways. Here are some main strategies:
By following these strategies, many specialized medical practices in the U.S. can improve their finances, patient satisfaction, and operation stability. The work of leaders like Bill Greene and new tools from companies like Simbo AI offer a plan to handle complex business needs while keeping good healthcare.
Medical managers and owners should think about these methods when planning their practice’s future. The goal is growth that helps patients, staff, and the healthcare community.
MD Growth Strategies, led by Bill Greene, focuses on improving medical practices’ profitability through implementation of business best practices, helping them to prepare for long-term success.
Bill Greene has over 30 years of healthcare experience, specializing in business development, growth strategy, and practice administration, including serving as CEO of Premier Gastroenterology Associates.
MD Growth spent 18 months assisting Shewmake Plastic Surgery/The Skin Retreat MedSpa in developing strategic initiatives for business growth and future expansion.
MDG helped a regional orthopedic practice increase monthly revenue by over 50%, while also reducing first pass denials and monthly expenses.
Bill led Premier Gastroenterology from inception to $12 million in annual revenue within three years, managing all operations and growth activities.
Bill implemented benchmarking processes that allowed for measuring employee performance against productivity metrics, helping to increase their contribution to the business.
As Director of Marketing, Bill directed branding, marketing, and advertising efforts, growing annual revenue from $4 million to $18 million.
Bill holds a Master Certificate in Business Marketing from Tulane University and a BBA in Marketing from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock.
Bill directed the acquisition and development of an 80,000+ square foot facility for a multi-use medical plaza, overseeing budgeting and implementation.
Bill is highly recommended by colleagues for his leadership skills, business acumen, and ability to foster collaboration and growth within medical practices.