The Power of Networking

In the field of dentistry, your technical skill gets you through the door, but your relationships may determine how far you actually go. Whether you’re staring down dental school boards or trying to scale a multi-specialty practice, who you know and who trusts you can make the ultimate difference. Here’s a look at why building a network matters at every single stage of your career.
1. Dental Students and Residents
While going through school or a residency, it’s easy to treat the people around you as competition or just passing faces. You’re stressed, tired, and focused on requirements but treating school as a solo adventure can be a mistake.
Your Classmates: The person sitting next to you in class today is the one you may be texting five years from now when a complex problem goes sideways. These early friendships and connections you make will turn into a trusted professional network in the future.
Your Faculty: Don't just be a face in the crowd to your instructors. Faculty members and residency directors can play a major role in your future career and where you end up. When associate positions or competitive slots open up, specialists and practice owners may sometimes skip posting them online. They call their friends who are teaching at the dental school and ask if there are any current students that may be a good fit when they graduate.
A Country Wide Connection: Your classmates will spread out across the country. Having a network across different states gives you an idea on how different dental markets are performing, what corporate groups to avoid, and where the actual opportunities are.
2. Colleagues and Partners Post-Graduation
The transition from dental school to private practice can be nerve wrecking and challenging. Suddenly, there is no attending looking over your shoulder. You are the one making the final call, which can feel incredibly isolating if you are on your own.
Handling Clinical Isolation: As a new associate, having a strong relationship with senior doctors in your practice or local dental network provides a safety net. When a tough case goes wrong, you want to be able to text a mentor for advice without feeling judged.
The Path to Ownership: If your goal is to buy into a practice or take over for a retiring doctor, those opportunities rarely come from cold broker listings. They happen because a senior doctor has seen you at local CE courses, respects your work ethic, and trusts you to take over the patient base they spent decades building.
Earning Respect: Connecting isn’t just about looking "up" at mentors. If you don't build real relationships with your assistants, hygienists, and front desk staff, your day-to-day work life will be incredibly difficult. A doctor who respects and communicates well with their team faces less workplace drama and builds a staff that actually has their back during a stressful day.
3. Building a Reliable Network
Once you are practicing, it becomes clear that general dentistry doesn't exist on its own. To provide the best patient care and run a smooth business, you need a reliable network of specialists such as orthodontists and pediatric dentists.
Better Patient Referrals: Think about it from a patient's perspective. There is a massive difference between handing them a business card and saying, "Go see this orthodontist," versus saying, "I’m going to reach out to Dr. Smith's office for you. We work on these exact types of cases together, and his team does great work." It builds instant trust and ensures the patient actually gets the care they need.
A Board for Practice Owners: When you build strong ties with non-competing specialists and owners in your area, you gain a sounding board. You can grab lunch and openly discuss the business challenges you can't talk about with staff, like managing overhead or finding marketing strategies that actually work.
4. The Big Picture
People always say, "It's not what you know, it's who you know." But the reality is, it's about who knows you, and what they say about you when you aren't in the room.
Where Opportunities Come From: Professional opportunities rarely fall out of the sky and come out of nowhere; they are brought to us by other people. Often, it's casual partners, the people outside your immediate daily circle, who introduce you to your next career move, a great investment, or a new partnership, simply because they see a different side of the things than you do.
Protecting Your Mental Health: Burnout in healthcare is incredibly common, and the people who hit a wall are almost always the ones who feel isolated. Knowing you have a community of peers who understand the exact pressures of a difficult day or a business cash-flow crunch completely changes how you handle stress.
At the end of the day, building a professional network shouldn't feel forced or an exercise in passing out business cards. It is just about being a collaborative, decent colleague. Show up, listen, help others when you can, and build a community. In a career as demanding as dentistry, those relationships aren't a luxury, they are what keep you grounded.
Written by: Michael Dougherty









