It's the first Monday of the quarter. Your practice manager pulls the recall list — 412 patients overdue for retainer checks, lapsed mid-treatment, or consultation no-shows.
She prints it out and hands it to the front desk. "Call as many as you can between patients."
Two weeks later, the numbers come in. The front desk reached 62 patients by phone. Emails went to the remaining 350. Of those, 104 opened the email. Eighteen clicked the link. Nine scheduled.
Total recovered from 412 patients: 71. That's a 17% recovery rate. The other 341 patients are still sitting in your database, doing nothing — until the next quarterly push. If it happens at all.
This isn't a staffing problem. Your front desk isn't failing you. The process is.
Phone calls hit a hard ceiling. Parents don't answer numbers they don't recognize during the workday. Voicemails pile up. Emails get opened but rarely acted on — there are too many steps between "open email" and "scheduled appointment."
By the time anyone follows up, the moment has passed.
The recall list doesn't need more phone calls. It needs a different channel.
Cloud 9 orthodontic recall campaigns build, target, and send through Curogram's Campaign Builder — giving your practice manager a self-service tool to reach every dormant patient via text, in three clicks, without touching a printed list or asking the front desk to dial a single number.
In the time it takes to export that quarterly recall spreadsheet, your manager can launch a targeted text campaign to every overdue patient on the list, with a personalized message and a direct scheduling link.
No phone calls. No email blasts with a 5% click rate. No quarterly ritual that resets to zero the next time it runs.
The patients are already in your system. They're already overdue.
All they need is a message that reaches them where they actually are — on their phone.
Your recall process isn't broken in an obvious way. It runs. It generates activity.
There are phone calls, there are emails, and at the end of each quarter, there is a number of patients recovered. It looks like effort. It doesn't look like failure.
But the math tells a different story.
At most Cloud 9 practices, recall is a manual, quarterly exercise.
The practice manager exports an overdue patient list from the system, cleans it up, removes duplicates, and hands it to the front desk with verbal instructions. The front desk starts calling.
They fit the calls in between checking patients in, answering questions, processing payments, and managing a waiting room.
After two weeks, the recall push quietly stops — not because it's complete, but because daily patient volume takes over. The list goes into a folder.
Three months later, the cycle starts again. Many of the same patients are still on it.
The process generates activity, but the execution channel can't actually reach the majority of the list.
Front-desk phone recall has a structural ceiling. Parents are at work during business hours.
They don't answer calls from unknown numbers. They mean to call back. They don't. Your front desk team can realistically make 30–40 calls per day between patients, reaching maybe 5–8 people — and that's before their other responsibilities get in the way.
15–20% |
| The maximum phone contact rate for front-desk recall, even when the team is fully dedicated to it. |
The phone call approach isn't failing because your team isn't trying. It's failing because it's 2026, and this isn't how most parents communicate anymore.
After the phone calls hit their ceiling, the rest of the recall list gets an email. Generic subject line. Brief message. A phone number to call.
Even when a parent opens the email, the next step requires too much friction — open, read, find the number, call during business hours, wait on hold, schedule — which is especially challenging when managing dental care for medically compromised patients who need personalized follow‑up and streamlined care pathways.
Most parents abandon the process somewhere in between.
2–5% |
| The email recall conversion rate from send to scheduled appointment. |
Email recall doesn't fail because the message is bad. It fails because the channel requires too many steps.
For DSOs and OSOs managing multiple locations, every problem above compounds.
Each location runs recall on its own timeline — some quarterly, some monthly, some barely at all.
The VP of Operations has no reliable visibility into which locations are actually executing recall, what their recovery rates are, or where the biggest revenue gaps exist.
Without a centralized system for building and tracking orthodontic recall campaigns, recall stays inconsistent, location-dependent, and invisible at the organizational level.
Revenue that should be flowing back to the practice sits untouched in the database.
Curogram's Campaign Builder — paired with Cloud 9 mass texting capabilities — gives your practice manager a self-service tool to build, target, and send a recall campaign without involving the front desk, without a printed list, and without a single phone call.
The entire workflow has three steps.
Step 1: Select the patient segment.
Filter by last visit date, treatment status, appointment type, provider, or location. Want to reach every post-treatment patient whose last retainer check was more than 12 months ago at your Riverside location?
That's a segment. Two clicks to build it.
Step 2: Choose or customize a message template.
The Campaign Builder includes pre-built orthodontic templates for the four recall types that matter most to Cloud 9 practices — retainer check recall, treatment reactivation, consultation follow-up (at 30, 60, and 90 days), and seasonal campaigns tied to the calendar.
Each template is editable, and your practice manager can save custom versions for campaigns unique to your practice.
Every message is personalized — patient name, provider name, time since last visit — so it doesn't read like a broadcast.
Step 3: Schedule the send time and launch.
Set the exact date and time. Most practices find mid-morning on Tuesday through Thursday — around 10 to 11 AM — generates the strongest response.
Schedule it once, or configure it to recur automatically each month.
That's it. The campaign goes out via text to every patient in the segment. Each parent receives a personalized message with a direct scheduling link.
No hold music. No back-and-forth. One tap takes them to the schedule.
Every campaign generates real-time performance data.
Your practice manager sees exactly how it's performing:
This is where orthodontic recall campaigns on Cloud 9 stop being a quarterly exercise and start becoming a learning system. The next retainer check campaign adjusts timing, messaging, or segment criteria based on what worked last time.
Over a few campaign cycles, your manager builds a recall playbook — the exact combination of message, timing, and segment that produces the best recovery rate for each patient type.
For multi-location operations, the Campaign Builder supports centralized creation with location-specific execution. Your VP of Operations sets a retainer check recall template at the corporate level.
Each location's campaign uses the same message but routes patients to that location's scheduling page.
Performance rolls up two ways:
Aggregated at the organizational level (total patients reached, total appointments scheduled, total revenue recovered) and detailed at the location level (recovery rate by location, response rate by location).
This means you can see which locations are executing recall consistently, identify top performers, and replicate their approach across the network — rather than hoping each practice manager finds time to run a recall push this quarter.
Here's the number that makes this concrete.
A multi-location practice using Curogram's text-based recall system achieved a 35% appointment reconversion rate — recovering 1,240 patients from dormant status through targeted text campaigns.
For a single Cloud 9 practice with 400 dormant patients, that means 120–140 patients returning to the schedule from a single campaign.
Now translate that gap into revenue. A retainer check runs $200–$300. A treatment reactivation is worth $5,000–$7,000.
If your recall list is a mix — say, 300 patients overdue for retainer checks and 100 lapsed treatment patients — a 35% recovery rate means roughly 105 retainer check appointments and 35 treatment reactivations per campaign.
At those midpoints, 105 retainer checks at $250 each returns $26,250. The 35 treatment reactivations at $6,000 each add another $210,000.
That's approximately $236,250 recovered from a single recall cycle.
That gap — 70 to 100 patients left on the table each quarter — isn't a small operational inefficiency. It's six figures of recoverable revenue sitting in your patient database.
The bigger shift isn't a single campaign's performance. It's what happens when recall stops being a quarterly manual exercise and becomes a continuous, automated system.
With the Campaign Builder, your practice manager sets up recurring campaigns that run on their own:
The system runs continuously, recovering patients as they become overdue rather than waiting for a quarterly batch. The recall schedule stays current. The list never collects dust.
And the front desk stays focused on the patients walking through the door — not on a phone list that can't reach the majority of the people on it.
Your practice's recall process doesn't need a bigger team or more phone hours. It needs a channel that actually reaches parents — and a system that makes launching a campaign faster than exporting a spreadsheet.
Cloud 9 recall campaigns built through Curogram's Campaign Builder give your practice manager the ability to select a patient segment, choose a pre-built orthodontic template, schedule the send time, and reach your entire dormant patient panel via text in minutes.
No front-desk involvement. No phone call lists. No email blasts that convert at 3%.
For practice managers, the workflow becomes manageable and measurable instead of exhausting and invisible. For VPs of Operations managing multiple Cloud 9 locations, it becomes consistent across the network instead of dependent on which location has a motivated practice manager this quarter.
The patients sitting in your dormant panel aren't gone. They're just waiting to hear from you in a way that actually works.
Stop printing the list. Stop asking the front desk to fit in calls between patients. Build a targeted text campaign, send it to the right segment, and let the scheduling links do the work.
Schedule a demo to see exactly how Curogram's Campaign Builder recovers revenue from your Cloud 9 orthodontic practice's dormant patient panel — and what a 35% recall recovery rate looks like for your specific patient mix and location volume.