Dentistry’s Leading Non-Clinical

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Let’s Talk About Your Next Hire

Building a team? Need leadership that actually fits? Let’s have a real conversation about what you need.

Explore your next move

Looking for a new role? We work with companies that care more about what you can actually do than how you look on paper.

The Dentele Group is a boutique recruiting agency built for dental leaders who value strategic talent partnerships over transactional recruiting.


We place professionals in:

  • Sales & Commercial Leadership

  • Operations & Practice Management

  • Customer Success & Implementation

  • Technology & Training

  • Executive & Strategic Roles
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What People Say About Us

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The Dentele Group is a boutique recruiting agency built for dental leaders who value strategic talent partnerships over transactional recruiting.


We place professionals in:


  • Sales & Commercial Leadership
  • Operations & Practice Management
  • Customer Success & Implementation
  • Technology & Training
  • Executive & Strategic Roles


Our Difference

We’re Here to Solve This With You.


The Dentele Group exists because we know how diffcult the hiring process is and we’re not interested in adding to that stress.


We’re a boutique talent-strategy agency for private practices, emerging DSOs, and dental companies who need non-clinical leaders that actually make things happen.


What we do:

* Place leaders who understand dentistry and know how to run a business

* Prevent the costly bad hires that set you back six months

* Help you build structure without losing what makes you different

* Act as your hiring team when you don’t have one


We’re not a vendor. We’re your partner. And if something doesn’t feel right, we’ll tell you. We don't fill seats, we design futures.

Roles We Specialize In

We focus exclusively on non-clinical roles where hiring mistakes are costly and internal bandwidth is limited.

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Commercial & Revenue Roles

  • Sales Representatives
  • Regional & National Sales Managers
  • Sales Directors & VPs
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Operations & Leadership

  • Operations Managers & Directors
  • Practice Administrators
  • Regional Managers
  • VP of Operations
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Technology, Training & Support

  • Implementation Specialists
  • Software Trainers
  • Onboarding & Enablement
  • Customer Success Managers
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Executive & Strategic  Hires

  • Directors
  • VPs
  • Fractional & growth-stage leadership

If the role impacts revenue, people, or scale — we can help.

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What We Have Won

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Who We Work With

Private Practices >

You've built a clinically strong, patient-focused practice. You don’t need to sift through unqualified candidates.

Emerging & Mid-Market DSOs >

You’re scaling. Hiring is all over the place. You don’t have an internal recruiter. Each bad hire costs you time and money. We help you start building a talent strategy so you can grow without constantly putting out fires.

Dental Tech & Suppliers >

You need people who understand dentistry not just sales. Field teams. Implementation. Customer success. Training and onboarding.
We find people who can speak the language and succeed.

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JOBS


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Companies we work with

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Awards & Recognition

What happens when you work with us

We don't have a rigid 5-step process with fancy graphics. Every search is different because every organization is different. But here's generally how it goes when we work together...

  • WE START WITH THE TRUTH

    Before we talk about candidates, we talk about reality. What's actually happening in your organization? What's working? What's not? Why is this role open or why are you creating it now?


    We ask questions that might feel uncomfortable. Not to be difficult, but because clarity here saves everyone time.


    If the role isn't ready or the expectations aren't realistic, we'll tell you. And we'll help you fix it before we start looking.

  • WHAT THE RIGHT FIT ACTUALLY MEANS

    "Culture fit" is lazy. We get specific. What does this person need to do in the first 90 days? What will make them successful in year one? What will make them fail?


    We talk about your leadership style, your team dynamics, your growth plans.

    This isn't a job description exercise. It's building a filter for the right person.

  • WE GO FIND THEM, WE DON'T WAIT

    The best candidates aren't sitting on job boards.


    We go after passive talent...people who are great at what they do, not desperate for a job. We tap our network. We reach out directly. We have conversations with people who aren't actively looking but might be open to the right opportunity.


    You're not getting a pile of resumes. You're getting a short list of people we'd actually hire ourselves.

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Let's work together

If you’re building something real and you need people who can help you protect it, grow it, and scale it without breaking it, we should talk.

Meet the team

Latest Jobs

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By Allison Norris March 30, 2026
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By Allison Norris March 30, 2026
This is a subtitle for your new post
By Allison Norris March 28, 2026
Part 4: Building your personal brand When you're pivoting careers, your personal brand does a lot of heavy lifting. It's how people understand who you are before they meet you — and it's how you control the narrative of your transition. Why your LinkedIn profile needs a pivot-ready overhaul Most dental professionals have LinkedIn profiles that look like a CV — a list of where they worked and what procedures they did. That's fine when you're staying in dentistry. It's a problem when you're leaving. Your profile needs to answer one question for every person who lands on it: Why should I take this person seriously for a non-clinical role? Crafting a headline that works Your headline is the most-read line on your profile. "DDS | Seeking New Opportunities" tells people nothing useful. Instead, try something like: "Dentist turned healthcare consultant | Helping organizations improve clinical operations" "Former DDS | Now in dental industry sales | Bridging the gap between clinicians and companies" "Dental professional transitioning into health tech | Patient experience advocate" Lead with where you're going, not just where you've been. Writing an About section that tells your story Your About section is your chance to own the narrative. Don't be shy about the pivot — address it directly and confidently. A strong structure: Open with a hook (a belief, a moment, or a bold statement). Briefly acknowledge your clinical background and what it gave you. Explain what drew you toward your new direction. State clearly what you're looking for and what you bring to it. End with a call to action (connect with me, reach out, etc.). How to start showing up online before you've made the move You don't have to wait until you've landed a new role to start building your brand. In fact, the earlier you start, the better. Follow and engage with leaders in your target industry. Share your perspective on healthcare trends, patient experience, or industry news. Write short posts about what you're learning as you explore a new field. Connect intentionally — not randomly.  Consistency over time builds credibility. Even two or three posts a month makes a difference.
By Allison Norris March 27, 2026
Your Guide to What's Next Introduction You didn't spend years in dental school to feel stuck. But here you are — maybe exhausted, maybe curious, maybe just quietly wondering if there's something more. And the truth is, you're not alone. Thousands of dental professionals are asking the same question: What else can I do with this degree? The answer is: more than you think.  You're not starting over. You're starting smarter.
By Allison Norris March 27, 2026
Part 1: Know your "why" before you go Before you update your resume or start scrolling job boards, there's one question worth sitting with: Why do you want to leave? This isn't about talking yourself out of it. It's about making sure your next move actually solves the problem — because the wrong move for the wrong reason just trades one kind of unhappy for another. Burnout vs. boredom vs. ambition These three feel similar on the surface but point to very different paths. Burnout is exhaustion — physical, emotional, or both. If this is you, the priority is recovery and sustainability. You may need a role with less patient-facing pressure, more autonomy, or simply fewer hours. Boredom is a signal that you've outgrown your current environment. You might not need to leave dentistry entirely — you might need a bigger stage. Ambition is the quiet voice saying I want to build something, lead something, or create something. This is the fuel for a real pivot. Leaving clinical work vs. leaving dentistry These are not the same thing. Many professionals leave the operatory but stay deeply connected to the dental industry — in consulting, education, sales, or leadership. Others want a clean break into something entirely new. Both are valid. Knowing which camp you're in will save you months of confusion.  Common fears — and how to reframe them "I'll be wasting my degree." Your degree gave you clinical expertise, yes — but it also gave you discipline, precision, communication skills, and the ability to perform under pressure. None of that is wasted. "I don't have experience in anything else." You have more transferable experience than you realize. We'll cover exactly how to articulate it. "What will people think?" The people who matter will respect the courage it takes to bet on yourself.
By Allison Norris March 27, 2026
Part 2: What can a dentist actually do outside the clinic? More than most people expect. Here's a real, practical look at where dental professionals land when they make the move. Clinical-adjacent roles These keep you close to dentistry without keeping you in the chair. Dental consultant – advising practices on operations, growth, or compliance. DSO (Dental Service Organization) leadership – regional director, clinical director, or operations roles within large dental groups. Dental educator – teaching at dental schools, hygiene programs, or CE (continuing education) platforms. Clinical researcher – working with universities, hospitals, or companies on dental research and trials. Industry and corporate roles These leverage your clinical credibility in a business context. Dental/medical device sales – companies actively recruit clinicians because you speak the language of the buyer. Pharmaceutical or biotech roles – clinical affairs, medical science liaison, or product specialist positions. Dental insurance and utilization review – reviewing claims, advising on coverage, or working in policy. Healthcare technology – product management, clinical advisory, or customer success roles at health tech companies. Business and entrepreneurship For those who want to build. Non-clinical practice ownership – some dentists step back from clinical work but retain ownership and hire associates. Coaching and consulting – career coaching for other dental professionals, practice management consulting, or wellness coaching. Speaking and content creation – building a platform around your expertise and story.  Completely new fields Yes, this is possible — and more common than you'd think. Healthcare administration – hospital systems, health systems, and insurance companies value clinical backgrounds in leadership. UX research and health tech design – your patient experience perspective is genuinely valuable. Health policy and advocacy – working with government agencies, nonprofits, or think tanks. Writing and communications – medical writing, content strategy, or journalism in the health space.
By Allison Norris March 27, 2026
Part 3: Translating your skills for the non-clinical world Here's the thing nobody tells you: hiring managers outside dentistry don't know what your day actually looked like. They see "DDS" and think: teeth. Your job is to help them see so much more. What your dental training actually signals Precision and attention to detail – you worked in millimeters, under pressure, with zero margin for error. High-stakes communication – you delivered difficult diagnoses, managed anxious patients, and built trust quickly. Business acumen – if you ran or co-ran a practice, you managed a P&L, led a team, handled HR, and drove revenue. Resilience – dental school is brutal. You finished it. That says something. Clinical decision-making – you assessed complex situations and made judgment calls in real time. How to reframe clinical experience on a resume Stop writing: "Performed restorative procedures including crowns, fillings, and extractions." Start writing: "Delivered high-quality patient care across 15–20 daily appointments, maintaining a 95%+ patient satisfaction rate and growing a loyal patient base through trust-based communication." The shift is from what you did to what it produced. Every clinical role has a business outcome attached to it — find it. Keywords that resonate outside dentistry Depending on your target role, consider weaving in language like: Patient outcomes, care coordination, clinical operations Team leadership, staff development, performance management Revenue growth, practice development, client retention Stakeholder communication, cross-functional collaboration Data-driven decision making, quality improvement

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News and Insights

By Allison Norris March 30, 2026
This is a subtitle for your new post
By Allison Norris March 30, 2026
This is a subtitle for your new post
By Allison Norris March 28, 2026
Part 4: Building your personal brand When you're pivoting careers, your personal brand does a lot of heavy lifting. It's how people understand who you are before they meet you — and it's how you control the narrative of your transition. Why your LinkedIn profile needs a pivot-ready overhaul Most dental professionals have LinkedIn profiles that look like a CV — a list of where they worked and what procedures they did. That's fine when you're staying in dentistry. It's a problem when you're leaving. Your profile needs to answer one question for every person who lands on it: Why should I take this person seriously for a non-clinical role? Crafting a headline that works Your headline is the most-read line on your profile. "DDS | Seeking New Opportunities" tells people nothing useful. Instead, try something like: "Dentist turned healthcare consultant | Helping organizations improve clinical operations" "Former DDS | Now in dental industry sales | Bridging the gap between clinicians and companies" "Dental professional transitioning into health tech | Patient experience advocate" Lead with where you're going, not just where you've been. Writing an About section that tells your story Your About section is your chance to own the narrative. Don't be shy about the pivot — address it directly and confidently. A strong structure: Open with a hook (a belief, a moment, or a bold statement). Briefly acknowledge your clinical background and what it gave you. Explain what drew you toward your new direction. State clearly what you're looking for and what you bring to it. End with a call to action (connect with me, reach out, etc.). How to start showing up online before you've made the move You don't have to wait until you've landed a new role to start building your brand. In fact, the earlier you start, the better. Follow and engage with leaders in your target industry. Share your perspective on healthcare trends, patient experience, or industry news. Write short posts about what you're learning as you explore a new field. Connect intentionally — not randomly.  Consistency over time builds credibility. Even two or three posts a month makes a difference.
By Allison Norris March 27, 2026
Your Guide to What's Next Introduction You didn't spend years in dental school to feel stuck. But here you are — maybe exhausted, maybe curious, maybe just quietly wondering if there's something more. And the truth is, you're not alone. Thousands of dental professionals are asking the same question: What else can I do with this degree? The answer is: more than you think.  You're not starting over. You're starting smarter.
By Allison Norris March 27, 2026
Part 1: Know your "why" before you go Before you update your resume or start scrolling job boards, there's one question worth sitting with: Why do you want to leave? This isn't about talking yourself out of it. It's about making sure your next move actually solves the problem — because the wrong move for the wrong reason just trades one kind of unhappy for another. Burnout vs. boredom vs. ambition These three feel similar on the surface but point to very different paths. Burnout is exhaustion — physical, emotional, or both. If this is you, the priority is recovery and sustainability. You may need a role with less patient-facing pressure, more autonomy, or simply fewer hours. Boredom is a signal that you've outgrown your current environment. You might not need to leave dentistry entirely — you might need a bigger stage. Ambition is the quiet voice saying I want to build something, lead something, or create something. This is the fuel for a real pivot. Leaving clinical work vs. leaving dentistry These are not the same thing. Many professionals leave the operatory but stay deeply connected to the dental industry — in consulting, education, sales, or leadership. Others want a clean break into something entirely new. Both are valid. Knowing which camp you're in will save you months of confusion.  Common fears — and how to reframe them "I'll be wasting my degree." Your degree gave you clinical expertise, yes — but it also gave you discipline, precision, communication skills, and the ability to perform under pressure. None of that is wasted. "I don't have experience in anything else." You have more transferable experience than you realize. We'll cover exactly how to articulate it. "What will people think?" The people who matter will respect the courage it takes to bet on yourself.
By Allison Norris March 27, 2026
Part 2: What can a dentist actually do outside the clinic? More than most people expect. Here's a real, practical look at where dental professionals land when they make the move. Clinical-adjacent roles These keep you close to dentistry without keeping you in the chair. Dental consultant – advising practices on operations, growth, or compliance. DSO (Dental Service Organization) leadership – regional director, clinical director, or operations roles within large dental groups. Dental educator – teaching at dental schools, hygiene programs, or CE (continuing education) platforms. Clinical researcher – working with universities, hospitals, or companies on dental research and trials. Industry and corporate roles These leverage your clinical credibility in a business context. Dental/medical device sales – companies actively recruit clinicians because you speak the language of the buyer. Pharmaceutical or biotech roles – clinical affairs, medical science liaison, or product specialist positions. Dental insurance and utilization review – reviewing claims, advising on coverage, or working in policy. Healthcare technology – product management, clinical advisory, or customer success roles at health tech companies. Business and entrepreneurship For those who want to build. Non-clinical practice ownership – some dentists step back from clinical work but retain ownership and hire associates. Coaching and consulting – career coaching for other dental professionals, practice management consulting, or wellness coaching. Speaking and content creation – building a platform around your expertise and story.  Completely new fields Yes, this is possible — and more common than you'd think. Healthcare administration – hospital systems, health systems, and insurance companies value clinical backgrounds in leadership. UX research and health tech design – your patient experience perspective is genuinely valuable. Health policy and advocacy – working with government agencies, nonprofits, or think tanks. Writing and communications – medical writing, content strategy, or journalism in the health space.
By Allison Norris March 27, 2026
Part 3: Translating your skills for the non-clinical world Here's the thing nobody tells you: hiring managers outside dentistry don't know what your day actually looked like. They see "DDS" and think: teeth. Your job is to help them see so much more. What your dental training actually signals Precision and attention to detail – you worked in millimeters, under pressure, with zero margin for error. High-stakes communication – you delivered difficult diagnoses, managed anxious patients, and built trust quickly. Business acumen – if you ran or co-ran a practice, you managed a P&L, led a team, handled HR, and drove revenue. Resilience – dental school is brutal. You finished it. That says something. Clinical decision-making – you assessed complex situations and made judgment calls in real time. How to reframe clinical experience on a resume Stop writing: "Performed restorative procedures including crowns, fillings, and extractions." Start writing: "Delivered high-quality patient care across 15–20 daily appointments, maintaining a 95%+ patient satisfaction rate and growing a loyal patient base through trust-based communication." The shift is from what you did to what it produced. Every clinical role has a business outcome attached to it — find it. Keywords that resonate outside dentistry Depending on your target role, consider weaving in language like: Patient outcomes, care coordination, clinical operations Team leadership, staff development, performance management Revenue growth, practice development, client retention Stakeholder communication, cross-functional collaboration Data-driven decision making, quality improvement