Dental AI guide
You've Got Your Blueprint. Now What?
Your report just showed you red, amber and green across booking, visibility and wording. This is the Monday-morning guide to reading it right — what each colour really means, what to fix first, and what to ignore.
A report nobody acts on is decoration. The Blueprint's findings are deliberately fixable — most in days — but only if you read the colours correctly and fix things in the order that pays. This guide is the fifteen minutes between receiving your report and knowing exactly what Monday looks like.
No patient data required. Use these guides for practice workflow education, not patient-specific advice.
Your Blueprint just gave your practice a red, amber or green read across three lenses — booking, visibility, and website wording. Keep the PDF, save the private link, and give this guide fifteen minutes before you act. The order you fix things in matters more than how fast you start.
What the colours actually mean
Green means "we looked and found nothing worth flagging" — not a certification, just a clean pass on publicly visible signals. Amber means "worth a look this month": a pattern that costs patients or invites questions, but isn't urgent. Red means "this is actively costing you or worth reviewing now" — an invisible practice, a booking dead-end, wording in the riskiest category. None of it is a legal finding or a compliance verdict; every flag is a review trigger — a place to look, with your context, before deciding.
Fix in the order that pays, not the order that scares
Counter-intuitively, the wording findings — the AHPRA-sounding ones — usually go second, not first.
- Booking dead-ends first. A missing after-hours path or absent online booking loses real patients tonight, and the fix is usually configuration, not construction: one paragraph of after-hours guidance, one visible booking link. Days, not months.
- Wording second. Testimonial-style quotes, superlatives, outcome promises — these are editorial fixes: rewrite or remove. They matter, but a regulator complaint is a possible future cost; a 9pm patient bouncing to the practice up the road is a certain present one.
- Visibility third. Schema markup, named-dentist bylines, answer-shaped pages — the compounding work. It pays for years, but nothing breaks while you schedule it properly.
Also in the full guide
- What to ignore (for now)
- When to get help — and when not to
Optional — get a customised version
Request the version adapted for your practice
The guide above is free to read and download. If you would like a version tailored to your practice workflow, leave your details below. Use practice-level details only. Do not include patient names, treatment details, clinical notes, X-rays, invoices or identifiable emails.