Treatment revenue by service
Clinics should be able to see which treatments bring the most revenue, which are consistent and which may need attention.
See which treatments are really performing.
Revenue reporting should help the clinic understand more than total sales. The team needs to see which treatments are growing, which are slowing, which are profitable and which may be taking more from the clinic than expected.
Back to Reporting & ROIThese four areas show how revenue reporting works when it is connected to treatment activity, product cost and performance trends rather than extracted from total sales figures.
Clinics should be able to see which treatments bring the most revenue, which are consistent and which may need attention.
Treatment performance changes. Reporting helps the clinic see trends across weeks, months and campaigns, rather than relying on memory or one busy period.
Revenue is more useful when product cost and treatment usage are considered. A high-revenue treatment may still need review if the cost to deliver it is rising.
Clear treatment performance data helps with scheduling, stock planning, practitioner time, pricing reviews and campaign decisions.
Reporting can show where demand is growing, where margins are under pressure and where clinic time may be better used.
Revenue and treatment performance reporting shows the clinic which appointments are earning well, which are growing and where cost pressure or opportunity may be building.