your App or a bespoke business App?
Our Dental App helps us save time giving repetitive advice by empowering our patient to take ownership of their health and marketing their more profitable services. Unlike traditional websites that can’t be personalised by the user.
Individual DCP App
- No set-up fee for most DCPs to customise the App and be visible on it.
- Maintenance cost for a website is higher than the cost for the App.
- Easy to maintain and update the site to market yourself
- No fee for the majority of the dental team
- Minimal fee for dentists who have the most to gain by marketing themselves as their profile services can be altered.
- Three fixed services for those who don't pay for the App.
Practice App
- Similar to DCP App, but you are the administrator.
- Customised home page and logo.
- Once more than ten of you are paying, then the cost of having your white labelled template will be less.
- More customisable throughout the My Care section, and any other therapy sections.
- The Location services would only show your practices if requested.
- Shopping cart would have your products to sell online.
- Teledentistry will be the same with direct access to an NHS triage site when it is created.
- Listed on the free teeth4life My Dentist location finder.
Public
The current teeth4life is free, and when the language facility, teledentistry, and user history are developed, they will be added as an App update. Any practice registered on the App can be found by the public for face to face and remote dental care.
The current teeth4life is free, and when the language facility, teledentistry, and user history are developed, they will be added as an App update. Any practice registered on the App can be found by the public for face to face and remote dental care.
FAQ
Why an App and not a website?
I initially looked at Apps as they developed for the mobile phone not PCs. Nearly everyone takes them in the Bathroom, and now most at waterproof. But they didn't engage the user to take responsibility for their health. The traditional websites focus on the dental practice, not the customer. The most common site visited on a website are presnt on the App with more detail for the trusted individual DCP, who the user generally engages more with rather than the practice business.
An App is personalised by the user and allows them to understand their dental health more. By setting personalised specific, timely reminders advised by you improve and maintain their oral health better.
Why an App and not a website?
I initially looked at Apps as they developed for the mobile phone not PCs. Nearly everyone takes them in the Bathroom, and now most at waterproof. But they didn't engage the user to take responsibility for their health. The traditional websites focus on the dental practice, not the customer. The most common site visited on a website are presnt on the App with more detail for the trusted individual DCP, who the user generally engages more with rather than the practice business.
An App is personalised by the user and allows them to understand their dental health more. By setting personalised specific, timely reminders advised by you improve and maintain their oral health better.
These are some more features that make Apps superior to websites.
- Apps allow user Personalisation i.e. user engagement.
- Notifications PUSH-regardless of activity
- Notifications IN APP- only when App is open
- Utilise features, camera, location services, scoring, contact list
- Work Offline.
- Gamification through traffic light system
- Branding of the freemium and the white labelled
- Can Aquire conversions through embedded social media
- Brand presence gives a subconscious reminder
- Functions quicker due to advanced software
- Cost
- Can link to existing websites
Should I make my own?
You could, and it will take some time and be better than what is currently available. The NHS traditionally takes a while to implement change and adapts better to a single entry point. Look how Area Teams prefer to connect with large corporates rather than small practices.
It will take a generation to move away from the exam S&P notes and procedure I delivered in the 80s, which applies to many DCPs and the public. The innovation is that this engages the public more with dentistry and health rather than high private dentistry fees and abandoning the NHS. They are unaware of the thousands of dentists who left the NHS, earned less but delivered more.
What if it makes a profit?
It would be nice to get the money I have invested back, but I would give it to companies like Dentaid working in our schools instead of working in the third world. The other group would be for supporting care homes through such companies as KOHC and Mouth Care Matters. The best may be to pay a barrister to act against the dubious litigation claims that have resulted in general dentists being scared to carry out treatment the general public need.
You could, and it will take some time and be better than what is currently available. The NHS traditionally takes a while to implement change and adapts better to a single entry point. Look how Area Teams prefer to connect with large corporates rather than small practices.
It will take a generation to move away from the exam S&P notes and procedure I delivered in the 80s, which applies to many DCPs and the public. The innovation is that this engages the public more with dentistry and health rather than high private dentistry fees and abandoning the NHS. They are unaware of the thousands of dentists who left the NHS, earned less but delivered more.
What if it makes a profit?
It would be nice to get the money I have invested back, but I would give it to companies like Dentaid working in our schools instead of working in the third world. The other group would be for supporting care homes through such companies as KOHC and Mouth Care Matters. The best may be to pay a barrister to act against the dubious litigation claims that have resulted in general dentists being scared to carry out treatment the general public need.