Episode 34 · Jared Aron · 29 May 2026 · 46 min

    Why Retention Is a Revenue Problem

    Patient leakage across the journey, not ad spend, is where clinics quietly lose revenue, and most of it is recoverable without new marketing.

    On this episode

    Jared Aron

    Co-founder & CEO, Coherent Healthcare
    Jared Aron is co-founder and CEO of Coherent Healthcare and the host of The Business of a Clinic. He spends his weeks with the owners and operators of private clinics, from single sites to large multi-site groups.

    Show notes

    Jared opens with a rapid-fire test, then makes his case: the most expensive leak in any clinic is consultation drop-off, because acquisition, practitioner time and front-office costs are all spent before a patient ever starts a journey. The marketing funnel, he argues, runs all the way through to a journey start, not just to a booked consult, which is why cost per lead is a false positive.

    He explains why operations, not marketing, is the real constraint. Patient volume scales but the patient operations team does not, so reaching and responding to patients at scale, especially on WhatsApp, is a technology problem rather than a hiring one. He is candid about the limits of today's AI receptionists and argues tools should be judged at the P&L level, not on time saved.

    The second half covers reactivation math, the difference between conversational care and marketing spam, and why messy lead data hides the true cost of growth. Existing patients arriving as new leads, he notes, is a sign that retention and lead management should be plugging each other's gaps.

    Key takeaways

    • Consultation drop-off is the most expensive leak, because acquisition, practitioner time, room and front-office costs are all incurred before a patient ever starts a journey.
    • The true cost of a new patient is total marketing spend divided by new journey starters, not new consultations, which makes cost per lead misleading.
    • Patient volume grows but the operations team does not, so reaching and responding to patients at scale is a technology problem, not a hiring one.
    • AI receptionists tend to promise self-driving while delivering a Roadster, so judge any tool at the P&L level, including the leads it loses, not on time saved.
    • Conversational, one-to-one outreach can reactivate dormant patients and double new starters while roughly halving cost of acquisition, with no new marketing spend.
    • Much lead data is dirty, with duplicate submissions and existing patients arriving as new leads, so lead management is really a data problem.
    It's promising self-driving, but it's delivering a Roadster.
    Jared Aron
    Stop the leak

    See how much revenue your clinic is leaking.

    Coherent gives private clinics one patient relationship engine, recovering revenue lost at enquiry, recall and billing.