Spring-cleaning is about starting fresh. By applying this mindset to your business, you can return your business to a healthier, livelier, and more profitable state in no time.
Opticianry can be a mysterious creature, it encompasses so many wide ranging tasks and emphasis areas that if you ask 10 opticians what it is they do, you will likely get 10 different answers. None of those answers are wrong, but they are likely quite different.
When our normally calm and pleasant Optometrist barreled into the optical department frustrated because she had been scheduled to ReRefract a patient who was having problems seeing had her right and left lenses switched in her frame.
Flow. Churn. They sound like adjectives from your favorite ice cream's latest ad
campaign, but they're really terms used in the optometric field; and
despite differing definitions, they both indicate the same thing:
Movement. Movement throughout an office; movement to another practice.
Ever wonder what issues there were with the optician and/or their office from the lab's point of view and ways that they could be solved? In a survey to labs, through our sister publication
LabTalk, we asked just that. After reviewing the results, here's the first of what will be a number of discussions and recommendations.
Source:
VisionWeb Blog
We're all connected these days to a variety of companies and their methods to place orders, add comments or add efficiency.
VisionWeb sent out this infographic making cloud computing very clear.
Selling eyecare accessories, or "extras," like contact lens cases, eyedrops and neck chains for eyeglasses, provides patients with convenience—and your practice with added revenues. To make it work, meet patient needs, and price fairly.