We're not saying fire your receptionist. We're saying you shouldn't need to hire a second one — or lose patients every night because no one answered. Skrypt handles the overflow, the after-hours, and the high-volume periods so your team can focus on the patients in the room.
A skilled human receptionist handles things Skrypt doesn't — complex patient relationships, emotional support during difficult diagnoses, judgment calls that don't fit a script. We're not trying to replace that. We're trying to make sure every call that comes in during lunch, after 5pm, or while your receptionist is handling a patient in the chair — gets answered and resolved. Most practices find Skrypt works best alongside one good human on the desk, not as a replacement.
We'll calculate your missed call volume and the revenue impact in the demo.
Book a demo →The $42,000/year salary figure understates the real cost of a full-time receptionist because it doesn't account for turnover. The average tenure of a dental or veterinary front desk staff member is 18–24 months. When they leave, the practice pays again: job posting, interview time, the 2–4 week onboarding period where the new hire is still learning the PMS, the providers' preferences, and the practice's patient communication norms. Industry estimates for the all-in cost of replacing a front desk hire range from $5,000–$15,000 per turnover event.
Skrypt has no turnover. The AI is trained on your practice once during onboarding and retrained whenever you add a provider, update hours, or change fee schedules — changes that take hours, not weeks. There is no institutional knowledge that walks out the door when staff changes, because the knowledge lives in the platform rather than in a person.
The comparison is also incomplete without accounting for coverage gaps. A full-time receptionist works 8 hours a day, 5 days a week, with PTO, sick days, and the occasional unplanned absence. A dental practice that closes at 5 PM and opens at 9 AM is dark for 16 hours every weekday and 48 hours every weekend. Every call that comes in during those hours goes to voicemail — including new patient inquiries, appointment rescheduling requests, and after-hours clinical questions. Skrypt covers those hours at no additional cost.
A skilled human receptionist handles things Skrypt isn't designed to replace: long-term patient relationships where the receptionist knows a patient by name and history, emotionally complex conversations where a patient is distressed or grieving, nuanced clinical triage where the receptionist uses judgment built from years of experience at the practice, and the physical coordination of the waiting room that no voice AI can touch.
Most practices find that Skrypt works best alongside one good human on the desk — not as a replacement. The model that consistently produces the highest ROI: Skrypt handles all inbound calls that arrive during peak hours (when the receptionist is occupied with check-ins and in-person patients), after hours, and on weekends. The receptionist handles the calls that need human touch, the walk-in interactions, and the complex situations Skrypt escalates. The practice gets 24/7 coverage, no hold times, and no missed after-hours calls — while the human receptionist spends their time on the interactions that actually require a human.
The financial version of this: replacing a second receptionist hire with Skrypt saves $42,000/year in salary. Deploying Skrypt alongside an existing receptionist costs $429–$799/month and typically pays for itself within the first 2–3 new patients captured from after-hours calls that previously went to voicemail.
No — and we'd recommend against framing it that way. Skrypt is most commonly deployed to handle the calls that currently go unanswered: after-hours calls, calls during peak patient volume when the receptionist is occupied, and overflow calls when multiple lines ring simultaneously. Your existing receptionist continues to handle the interactions that benefit from a human touch. The result is that your receptionist can be more present with in-room patients while Skrypt ensures no caller gets voicemail.
During onboarding, Skrypt is trained on your practice-specific information: business hours, provider schedules, services offered, fee schedule, insurance carriers you accept, and common patient FAQs. The AI connects to your PMS and reads the live schedule in real time, so it never double-books or offer slots that are unavailable. When your hours change, a provider goes on leave, or you add a new service, you update the configuration in the Skrypt dashboard — the AI reflects the change on the next call. No retraining lag, no institutional knowledge bottleneck.
Skrypt has a defined escalation matrix configured during onboarding. Any call type outside the AI's scope — complex billing disputes, clinical advice requests, patients who explicitly ask for a human — triggers an escalation. During business hours, escalated calls warm-transfer to your front desk or the appropriate staff member. After hours, escalation goes to your designated on-call contact or routes to a voicemail that flags for morning priority follow-up. The AI captures full conversation context before escalating, so your staff has the patient name, nature of the call, and any information already collected when they pick up or listen to the message.