Front-end and scheduling flow
Review where missing information, authorization issues, or scheduling handoffs create billing cleanup later.
Use this checklist to review the workflow gaps that quietly slow billing, provider readiness, documentation flow, reimbursement follow-through, and day-to-day operations.
This is built for practice owners, operators, and administrators who want a clearer starting point before the next growth step adds more handoffs, more cleanup, and more operational drag.
This is not meant to create more theory. It is meant to help you see which part of the practice is creating repeated drag before it turns into more rework, more denials, or more staff frustration.
Review where missing information, authorization issues, or scheduling handoffs create billing cleanup later.
Check whether enrollment status, payer follow-up, and billable readiness are visible enough to support growth.
Look at how timing, handoffs, and note completion are affecting billing and follow-through.
Identify where the system setup, queue design, or task routing is adding unnecessary admin work.
Review where claims are stalling, denials are repeating, or follow-up ownership is too hard to see.
Surface where work is still dependent on side conversations, inbox follow-up, or scattered reporting.
Most practices can already feel the drag. The harder part is seeing whether the issue starts in front-end workflow, provider readiness, documentation timing, current-system use, billing follow-through, or unclear ownership between those parts of the practice.
This checklist gives you a cleaner first pass so the next move is based on what is actually repeating, not just what feels loudest that week.
Start with the workflow area that is already creating the most drag.
Those are usually the first places where follow-through is weaker than it should be.
Patterns matter more than one-off problems when you are deciding what to fix first.
Bring the findings into a consultation if the issue looks bigger than one team or one queue.
Follow-up gets carried person to person instead of staying visible in one process.
Provider onboarding, documentation timing, or claim flow looks fine until the delay hits reimbursement.
The practice can feel the drag, but the current reports still do not show where it is repeating.
Use the worksheet first if you need clarity. Book a consultation if you already know the issue is bigger than one isolated billing task.