Competitive Intelligence Deep Dive: Financials, Operations, Technology, Employment, Legal, and Strategy
| Brand | Category | Scale | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aspen Dental | General/restorative dentistry | ~1,100 offices | Core brand, insurance/Medicaid-friendly, retail locations |
| ClearChoice | Full-arch dental implants | 78+ centers | Acquired 2020 for $1.135B from Sun Capital |
| WellNow Urgent Care | Medical urgent care | 189+ locations | Expanded aggressively during COVID |
| Lovet Pet Health | Veterinary care | Expanding | 367K+ pets served, includes AZPetVet |
| Chapter Aesthetic Studio | Med-spa/aesthetics | Limited | Newer brand, struggling/dissolved |
| Year | Event | Parties |
|---|---|---|
| 2006 | Initial PE acquisition (87 locations) | Ares Management |
| 2010 | Sale (~$500M) | Leonard Green & Partners acquires from Ares |
| 2015 | Recapitalization | American Securities leads, with Ares + LGP + mgmt |
| 2017 | Increased ownership | Ares + Leonard Green increase stake |
| 2020 | ClearChoice acquisition ($1.135B) | Bought from Sun Capital Partners |
| Current | Majority ownership | Leonard Green & Ares (~80%), American Securities + mgmt (~20%) |
| Period | Revenue | Source |
|---|---|---|
| LTM June 2022 (excl. POP offices) | ~$1.9B | Moody's report |
| LTM June 2022 (incl. POP offices) | ~$3.2B | Moody's — combined TAG |
| ADMI standalone 2024 | ~$2.3B | Estimated from multiple sources |
| TAG portfolio H1 2025 (annualized) | $4.2B | Press release, 8% YoY growth |
| TAG full year 2025 | "Nearly double-digit growth" | March 2026 press release |
No EBITDA figure has been directly disclosed. Backing into it from debt market data:
| Facility | Amount | Maturity | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| First Lien Senior Secured Term Loan | $875M | 2025 | Core facility |
| Revolving Credit Facility | $450M ($220M drawn) | 2025 | Working capital |
| Incremental Term Loan (ClearChoice) | $1.2B | 2027 | Non-fungible first-lien |
| Incremental Term Loan (AZPetVet) | $275M | — | Veterinary expansion |
Cash on hand (June 2022): ~$200M. Total funded debt estimated $2.5B+ (some estimates $3-4B including all incremental facilities). Arrangers: RBC Capital Markets (lead), JPMorgan, Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse, Bank of Montreal, KKR. Legal: Milbank LLP.
| Date | Agency | Action | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | Moody's | Initial rating (LBO financing) | B2 CFR |
| June 2021 | Moody's | Outlook change (post $835M dividend) | B2, Negative |
| August 2022 | Moody's | Downgrade | B3 CFR, B3-PD, Stable |
B3 = deep junk territory. Moody's cited: persistent leverage above 6.0x, aggressive growth strategy, macroeconomic pressures (labor costs, interest rates).
| Date | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| February 2012 | $127M | |
| April 2018 | $85M | |
| February 2020 | $50M | |
| June 2021 | $835M | Brought leverage to 7.4x; Moody's downgraded outlook |
| Total | $1.1B+ | 9x+ annual free cash flow extracted via debt |
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Dentist investment | ~$250K buy-in |
| Franchise-like fee | $10K-$37.5K |
| Profit share to dentist | ~50% of office profits |
| Ongoing royalty | 5-15% of gross sales (estimated) |
| Current POP network | 277 practice owners, 137 partners |
| POP growth | ~15% YoY (2025) |
| Transaction Type | Multiple |
|---|---|
| Platform-level DSO transactions | 12-14x EBITDA |
| DSO add-on practice acquisitions | 5-8x EBITDA |
| Standalone practice sales | 1.8-5x EBITDA |
| ClearChoice acquisition implied | 15-20x+ EBITDA (3.5-5.5x revenue) |
| TAG implied enterprise value | $5.4-7.4B (12-14x on ~$450-525M EBITDA) |
TAG has been periodically rumored as an IPO candidate. Leonard Green's typical hold period is 5-7 years; the 2018 investment puts a potential exit window around 2025-2027. Alternatives include secondary buyout or sale of individual brands.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Total TAG locations | 1,400+ across 46 states |
| Aspen Dental offices | ~1,100 |
| ClearChoice centers | 78+ (expanded into 3 new markets in 2025) |
| WellNow Urgent Care | 189+ |
| Total patients/year | 9M+ |
| Daily patient volume | 35,000+ |
| Aspen Dental patient visits (2025) | 5.2M |
| ClearChoice implant patients (2025) | 27,500 |
| New patient exams/month (estimated) | 50,000+ |
| KPI | Benchmark / Target | Source |
|---|---|---|
| New patient volume | 50,000+ exams/month network-wide | Executive presentations |
| Patient conversion rate (exam → treatment) | 40-60% industry; Aspen targets upper range | ADSO conferences |
| Same-store revenue growth | Mid-single digits annually | PE investor reporting |
| Revenue per office (mature) | $1.2-2.1M annual collections | Bond prospectus / estimates |
| Production per provider | Daily/monthly tracked per dentist & hygienist | Employee reviews |
| Hygiene recall rate | Industry avg ~40%; DSOs target 55-65% | Industry benchmarks |
| Case acceptance rate | Heavily trained and measured | Lawsuits, training docs |
| Office maturity curve | 18-36 months to profitability (de novo) | Industry / Moody's |
| Provider retention | Known pain point; 30-40% turnover | Glassdoor, industry est. |
| Schedule utilization | Tracked daily by office managers | Job descriptions |
| AR aging | Part of OM daily metrics | Job descriptions |
| Step | Description | Key Detail |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Initial Contact | Patient calls centralized Scheduling Center or books online 24/7 | Scheduling agents use "trained sales and customer service techniques" to convert calls to appointments |
| 2. Pre-Visit | Patient completes new patient forms | Available as PDF download or completed in-office |
| 3. Digital Check-In | Staff scans driver's license + insurance card | Auto-populates PMS in <10 seconds; iPad consent forms; reduced wait time ~50% |
| 4. Clinical Exam | ~1 hour for new patients: exam, X-rays, assessment | Digital imaging (Planmeca CBCT), digital charting, intraoral scanning (3Shape TRIOS 4) |
| 5. Treatment Plan | Dentist creates customized treatment plan | "Comprehensive, big-picture approach" — targets $3,000-$5,000+ per new patient |
| 6. Financial Consultation | Office manager sits with patient separately | Presents insurance coverage, out-of-pocket costs, financing options (CareCredit, AFF, Proceed, Fortiva). This is the key conversion point. |
| 7. Treatment | Scheduled based on plan; same-day capability for many procedures | In-house 3D printing for dentures, surgical guides, crowns via 900+ onsite labs |
| 8. Follow-Up | Future appointments scheduled before patient leaves | Recall/hygiene schedule established |
| Role | Count | Compensation Range |
|---|---|---|
| Dentists (1 owner + associates) | 2-3 | Associates: $150K-$250K; Owners: $200K-$400K+ |
| Dental Hygienists | 2-3 | $60K-$90K ($30-$45/hr, $50+ in high-cost markets) |
| Dental Assistants | 4-6 | $32K-$48K ($15-$22/hr; EFDAs $18-$28/hr) |
| Office Manager | 1 | $45K-$70K base + $5K-$15K bonus |
| Front Desk / Scheduling | 2-3 | ~$30K-$40K |
| Lab Technician | 1 (where applicable) | Varies |
Typical office: 6-10+ operatories in retail/strip mall locations (2,500-4,000 SF). Offices are larger than average private practices.
| Program | Duration | Key Areas |
|---|---|---|
| AspenOne Orientation | 90 min virtual + 90-day journey | Mission, values, behaviors, role integration |
| Dentist Training | Blended (Chicago campus + Oral Care Center) | Denture workflows, intraoral scanning, extraction academy, implant surgery (live patients), business leadership, ownership pathway |
| Hygienist Onboarding | Day-one blended | Shoulder-to-shoulder trainer, virtual classes, Perio Masters, implant/aligner training |
| Dental Assistant | Blended DA Onboarding | Room prep, infection prevention, sterilization, radiography, charting, DALE/DANB certification |
| Front Office | 8 weeks | Clinical knowledge, patient intake, scheduling, insurance/billing, treatment plan presentation, patient financing, metrics |
| Lab Technician | Hands-on side-by-side | Denture fabrication, CDT reimbursement, implant restoration, in-house cert |
| Continuing Education | Ongoing | 200+ CE credits, 1,000+ hours e-learning via aspendentallearning.com |
Lawsuits have alleged supply costs charged through the MSA are above market rates, reducing dentist effective compensation.
| Partner | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| CareCredit | Primary financing | 30+ year partnership |
| American First Finance (AFF) | No-credit-needed | Second-look option |
| Proceed Finance | Low-rate financing | |
| Fortiva | Second-look financing | |
| Aspen Dental Savings Plan | In-house membership | ~30% savings, not insurance |
99% patient approval rate across all financing partners combined.
| Layer | Technology | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Container Orchestration | Kubernetes | 85%+ of workloads; migrated from VMs |
| Microservices | 80-150 services | Migrated from 900+ monolithic APIs |
| Backend Languages | Python (FastAPI), .NET Core, TypeScript (Next.js/Angular) | Multi-stack |
| API Layer | GraphQL | |
| Cloud Hosting | Rackspace Cloud | Adopted 2015/2017 |
| Data Warehouse | Google BigQuery | Primary analytics warehouse |
| CRM | Salesforce Sales Cloud | Adopted 2021 |
| ERP / Finance | Workday Financial Management | GL, AP, Expense, Banking, Capital Projects (since 2016) |
| APM | New Relic | Application performance monitoring (since 2013) |
| ITSM | Atlassian Jira Service Desk | Adopted 2021 |
| BI / Visualization | Power BI / Tableau | Both referenced in job postings |
| Search | Algolia | Site search/discovery (since 2020) |
| Digital Advertising | AdRoll | Adopted 2021 |
| Category | Tool | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Test Orchestration | Testkube | Kubernetes-native, tests as CRDs |
| UI Testing | Playwright | |
| Performance Testing | K6 | Load testing |
| CI/CD | Argo / Spinnaker compatible | |
| CDN | Multiple (2018, 2020) |
| Partner | Category | Deployment |
|---|---|---|
| Planmeca | Digital Imaging | Viso & ProMax CBCT, ProX/ProSensor HD/ProX GO intraoral, Romexis software, Insights IoT monitoring — 1,100+ locations. Installed by Henry Schein (900+ technicians). |
| 3Shape | CAD/CAM & Scanning | TRIOS 4 intraoral scanner, Dental System software — 900+ locations |
| SprintRay | 3D Printing | Largest single installation in the world. In-house dentures, surgical guides, night guards, crowns. 900+ onsite labs. |
| Forward Science | Cancer Screening | OralID devices in 900+ offices |
| MyLabConnect | Lab Communication | Digital lab platform across all offices |
| Denti.AI | AI / Clinical | AI-powered voice perio charting (in evaluation) |
| Henry Schein | Distribution | Installation partner for Planmeca + 3Shape |
Aspen Dental Management, Inc. (ADMI) does not employ dentists directly. Each office is structured as a separate professional entity (PC/PLLC) owned on paper by a licensed dentist. ADMI provides management services in exchange for a percentage of collections.
Revealed through court filings and departing-dentist lawsuits:
| Term | Detail |
|---|---|
| Management fee | 28-35% of gross collections, plus additional charges for IT, marketing, HR, procurement |
| Contract duration | 3-5 year initial term with automatic renewal |
| Termination notice | 6-12 months required |
| Non-compete | 2 years, 10-25 mile radius from any Aspen office (not just the dentist's own) |
| Non-solicitation | Prohibits soliciting patients and staff |
| Liquidated damages | $50,000-$100,000+ for breach in some contracts |
| Buy-out | Dentist must buy practice from Aspen at Aspen's valuation to leave |
| Right of first refusal | ADMI controls valuation and transfer of equity |
ADMI controls through the MSA: office location, hours, staffing, equipment purchasing, marketing, insurance contracting, fee schedules, patient scheduling, lab/supplier selection. The dentist "owns" the clinical practice but ADMI manages all business operations.
Dentist effective take-home: 25-30% of production after ADMI fees and overhead — significantly lower than 55-70% in independent practice.
| Role | Compensation | Structure |
|---|---|---|
| Associate Dentist | $150,000-$250,000/yr | Base ($120K-$160K) + production bonus (25-30% above threshold). Daily guarantee $500-$800. |
| Owner-Dentist | $200,000-$400,000+/yr | ~50% of office profits under POP; less autonomy than independent |
| Dental Hygienist | $60,000-$90,000/yr | $30-$45/hr ($50+ in high-cost markets). 8-10 patients/day. |
| Dental Assistant | $32,000-$48,000/yr | $15-$22/hr. EFDAs $18-$28/hr. |
| DA Trainee (ADDAT) | $27,000-$33,000/yr | $13-$16/hr during training program |
| Office Manager | $45,000-$70,000 base | + $5K-$15K performance bonus tied to production/collections |
| Front Desk | ~$30,000-$40,000/yr | |
| Regional Director | $100,000-$150,000+ | + performance bonuses |
| VP-level | $150,000-$300,000+ | |
| C-suite | $500K-$2M+ | Base + bonus + equity |
| Action | Year | Allegations | Outcome | Intel Revealed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FTC v. Aspen Dental Management Inc. | 2024 | Deceptive "free exam" advertising, bait-and-switch, charging for services advertised as free | $9.1M settlement + injunctive relief | Centralized corporate-controlled marketing; internal metrics tracked "conversion rates" from free-exam to paid treatment; exposed volume model with aggressive same-day treatment recommendations |
| State | Year | Allegations | Outcome | Intel Revealed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Massachusetts | 2009-2010 | Unnecessary procedures, pressuring patients, charging for services not rendered, deceptive advertising | $990,000 settlement | Internal training materials showed new patient "workflows" designed to maximize same-visit revenue; office managers involved in presenting treatment costs |
| Pennsylvania | 2010 | Misleading advertising, billing irregularities, aggressive upselling | $175,000 settlement | Coupon/discount advertising practices |
| New York | 2013-2015 | 300+ consumer complaints; billing practices, unauthorized practice of dentistry | $450,000 settlement | Corporate practice of dentistry concerns; business practice reforms required |
| Oregon | 2011-2012 | Billing for unperformed services, misleading denture pricing | Voluntary compliance agreement | Denture pricing model exposed |
| Illinois | 2015 | Consumer fraud: denture quality and refund practices | Resolved through mediation |
| Category | Key Case | Allegations | Intel Revealed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overcharging / Upcoding | Britt v. ADMI (~2020) | Systematic overbilling, insurance fraud, upcoding exam and X-ray codes | Corporate policies directed offices to perform panoramic X-rays on every new patient regardless of clinical need — a corporate clinical protocol imposed through management agreement |
| Denture Quality | Multiple (FL, NY, PA, OH) | Defective dentures, refusal to refund, using lower-cost labs | Corporate-mandated use of specific cheaper labs; denture cases per month tracked as corporate KPI |
| COVID-19 Reopening | 2020 class actions | Premature reopening, inadequate PPE, ignoring CDC guidelines | Corporate directives to reopen pushed to local offices — further evidence of centralized control despite "independent dentist" framing |
| Category | Allegations | Intel Revealed |
|---|---|---|
| Wage & Hour (FLSA) | Office managers misclassified as exempt; DAs required to work off-the-clock; automatic meal break deductions when breaks not taken | ADMI sets pay scales centrally; internal corporate HR policies on time tracking; staffing ratios and labor cost targets documented in internal emails |
| Non-Compete Disputes | Dentists challenging overbroad non-competes, unconscionable MSA terms | Management fee 28-35%; non-compete 2yr/10-25mi; liquidated damages $50K-$100K+; dentist effective take-home only 25-30% of production |
| Initiative | Details | Signal Source |
|---|---|---|
| Digital Transformation | Online self-service scheduling, virtual consultations/teledentistry, AI-powered treatment planning (radiograph interpretation), patient mobile app/portal | Job postings, press releases, conference talks |
| Performance Marketing Shift | Moving from traditional TV to digital/performance channels; $100M+ annual marketing spend; one of largest dental advertisers in US | AdRoll adoption, CMO turnover, hiring patterns |
| Revenue Cycle Optimization | RCM technology investment; faster claims, better collections; exploring membership/subscription plans for uninsured | Hiring patterns, Workday implementation |
| Specialty Integration | Cross-referral pipeline Aspen → ClearChoice; adding ortho/clear aligners in general offices; bringing oral surgery in-house | ClearChoice expansion into 3 new markets 2025 |
| Provider Model Evolution | Mentorship programs for new grads; associate-to-owner pathway refinement; compensation model rebalancing | POP program growth (15% YoY), recruiting materials |
| 3D Printing / Digital Dentistry | Same-day surgical guides, crowns, dentures; "first truly national player in 3D denture printing" | SprintRay partnership (largest installation globally) |
| Cloud-Native Platform | Migrating 900+ monolithic APIs to 80-150 Kubernetes microservices; building proprietary internal platforms | Testkube case study, TAG tech blog, hiring |
| Multi-Vertical Diversification | WellNow (urgent care), Lovet (veterinary), Chapter (aesthetics) — TAG sees itself as a multi-vertical healthcare services platform | Brand launches, PE portfolio strategy |
| DSO | Offices | Growth Model | Key Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aspen Dental (TAG) | ~1,100 | Mostly de novo | Consumer brand, insurance-friendly, retail locations, multi-brand portfolio |
| Heartland Dental | ~1,800+ | Mostly acquisition | "Supported by Heartland" model, less consumer brand |
| Pacific Dental Services | ~900+ | Hybrid | Owner-dentist model, higher clinical autonomy |
| Dental Care Alliance | ~400+ | Acquisition | Southeast focus |
| MB2 Dental | ~700+ | Acquisition | Doctor-led, rapid PE-fueled growth |
| SGA Dental Partners | 260+ | Acquisition | Individual practice brands, culture-first, desktop-first for OMs |
| Hiring Category | Signal |
|---|---|
| Growth roles (VP Growth, Market Development Directors) | Continued aggressive expansion |
| Data & Analytics (Data Engineers, BI Analysts, ML Engineers) | Centralizing data for predictive decision-making |
| Digital/Tech (Software Engineers, PMs, UX Designers) | Building proprietary internal platforms |
| Revenue Cycle (RCM Specialists, Claims Analysts) | Optimizing collections efficiency |
| Field Operations (Regional Directors, Area Managers) | Managing growing span of control |
| Marketing (Performance Marketing, SEO/SEM, CRM) | Shifting to digital channels |
| Real Estate (Site Selection Analysts, Construction PMs) | Active de novo pipeline |
| Aspen Weakness | SGA Opportunity | Relevant Workstream |
|---|---|---|
| 30-40% dentist turnover; production pressure culture | Culture OS (SMILE Program) — position SGA as the DSO where clinicians want to stay. Recruit from Aspen's churn pipeline. | WS3: Culture OS |
| Centralized corporate control; dentists retain only 25-30% | Greater clinical autonomy and better economics — let practices keep their identity and give providers more control over treatment decisions | WS1: Practice Platform |
| 1.2-star consumer reputation; FTC/AG actions | Reputation-first marketing — emphasize local trust, community presence, individual practice brands vs. corporate chain | WS2: Content Engine |
| Corporate-mandated labs with quality complaints | Practice-level lab selection — allow quality choice as a recruiting and retention advantage | Operations |
| Split presentation model drawing regulatory scrutiny | Clinician-led treatment communication — differentiate on patient trust and regulatory safety | WS3: Culture OS |
| Heavy Medicaid/insurance dependency (lower per-patient revenue) | Payer mix optimization — SGA can optimize individual practice payer strategies | WS1: Practice Platform |
| $100M+ centralized marketing but deceptive practices | Authentic local content — Content Engine produces genuine practice-level content, not corporate bait-and-switch | WS2: Content Engine |
| Aspen Strength | SGA Action |
|---|---|
| De novo playbook — repeatable, standardized office buildouts | Develop standardized onboarding playbook for acquired practices |
| Centralized scheduling center driving patient volume | Consider centralized scheduling support for smaller practices |
| Digital check-in eliminating 1,000+ hours/year/office | Evaluate digital check-in for SGA practices (Practice Platform WS1) |
| 85%+ Kubernetes, 80-150 microservices platform | SGA's platform architecture should be cloud-native from day one |
| SprintRay 3D printing at 900+ locations | Evaluate 3D printing rollout across SGA network for same-day capabilities |
| Structured training programs (TAG University) | Build equivalent through Culture OS training module |
| Cross-referral pipeline (Aspen → ClearChoice) | Develop internal specialty referral network across 260 practices |
| Centralized procurement with volume leverage | Negotiate group purchasing but preserve practice choice on quality |
| Metric | Aspen | SGA Target |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue per office | ~$2.1M | Benchmark against SGA practice average |
| Management fee | 28-35% of collections | SGA's fee structure should be competitive |
| Dentist take-home | 25-30% of production | Must beat this to recruit from Aspen pipeline |
| Marketing spend | ~$91K/office/yr ($100M / 1,100) | Content Engine should deliver more efficient spend |
| New patient conversion | 40-60% | Match or exceed with less aggressive tactics |
| Dentist turnover | 30-40% | Culture OS target: industry average or below (15-20%) |