1. The PI practice is two businesses in one
Every personal injury practice — whether it’s a chiropractic clinic, a pain management practice, an orthopedic group, or a solo spine surgeon — is actually running two businesses at once.
The first is a medical practice: diagnosis, treatment plans, documentation, outcomes. The second is a legal-adjacent operation: attorney relationships, letters of protection, liens, records production, and case timelines that end in a settlement rather than a discharge. Most practices staff and systematize the first business and improvise the second — and the second is where PI revenue is won or lost.
2. Referrals: the only marketing channel that really matters
PI patients overwhelmingly arrive through referral — from attorneys, from other treating providers, and from past patients. Of these, the attorney channel is the most concentrated and the most fragile: a handful of firms can fill your schedule, and a handful of bad experiences can empty it.
What attorneys are actually evaluating when they place a case:
- Responsiveness. Does someone answer when the referral coordinator calls — including at 6:45pm? An unanswered phone reads as an unmanaged practice.
- Communication quality. Do status updates arrive without being chased? Are records complete, organized, and produced quickly?
- Treatment discipline. Do patients follow the plan, or do gaps in care give the insurer ammunition?
- LOP reliability. Is the practice professional about lien paperwork and settlement negotiation, or does every case end in friction?
Notice that none of these are clinical. They’re operational. We wrote a full piece on this from the other side of the table: what PI attorneys wish treating clinics did differently.
3. LOPs and liens: the financial spine of the practice
A letter of protection lets an injured patient treat now and pay from the eventual settlement. For the practice, an LOP caseload is a portfolio: capital tied up in treatment delivered months before payment, with case outcomes determining recovery. Managing that portfolio well means:
- Tracking every case’s status — treating, awaiting demand, in negotiation, settled — and knowing your exposure at each stage.
- Keeping documentation settlement-ready from day one, so a records request never delays a demand package.
- Protecting case value during treatment — every missed re-exam and unexplained gap is a discount the insurer will take at the negotiating table.
- Communicating with the firm so lien questions get answered in hours, not weeks.
4. Treatment continuity is case value
In PI, attendance isn’t just a clinical concern — it’s the evidence. Insurers and defense counsel attack gaps in care to argue the patient wasn’t really hurt. A practice that lets patients drift doesn’t just lose visit revenue; it shrinks the settlement that ultimately pays the bill, and it teaches the referring firm to send the next case elsewhere.
The fix is unglamorous: someone — or something — has to watch treatment cadence across the entire active caseload, every day, and intervene the moment a patient slips. Re-exam dates, no-shows, declining frequency, an unfinished referral loop. In most clinics this job belongs to nobody, which is why it doesn’t happen.
5. The front office: where PI practices actually break
The classic PI practice failure isn’t clinical. It’s a phone that rang out on a Friday evening, a records request sitting in a queue for three weeks, a re-exam never scheduled, an attorney who asked for a status update twice and stopped asking. These failures share a root cause: the front office is staffed for the patient flow of a normal practice, but a PI practice carries a second, invisible workload of legal-adjacent coordination.
Three structural problems make it worse:
- Coverage. Calls arrive 24/7; staff work 9 to 5. Answering services take messages but can’t book, answer questions, or update a case.
- Turnover. Front desk churn is endemic, and every departure resets the clinic’s institutional memory — which attorney likes which update format, which patients need a firmer nudge.
- Vendor sprawl. EMR, billing, reminders, answering service, documentation tools — five systems, five logins, and a human carrying context between them all day.
This is the layer Kaira was built for: a single AI agent that answers every call, tracks every case, watches treatment cadence, and drafts attorney communication — with your staff approving what goes out. See how the agent covers the whole gap map, or put your own missed-call numbers into the calculator.
6. The Texas landscape
Texas is one of the largest and most competitive PI treatment markets in the country — dense metro referral networks, high crash volumes, and an active plaintiff’s bar. The dynamics differ by metro:
- Houston — sheer scale: more cases, more firms, more competing clinics. Operations are the differentiator because attorneys always have an alternative.
- Dallas–Fort Worth — a sprawling metroplex where referral relationships span dozens of suburbs and the after-hours call is the norm, not the exception.
- San Antonio — a relationship market where a smaller circle of firms and clinics know each other, and reputation compounds fast in both directions.
Workers’ comp adds a second dimension across all three metros — hard regulatory deadlines, work-status reporting, and designated-doctor logistics that punish loose operations even faster than PI does.
7. The operational scorecard
If you run a PI practice, grade yourself honestly on five questions:
- What percentage of inbound calls — including after hours — get answered live?
- How long does an attorney wait for a status update or records request?
- Who is watching treatment cadence across every active case, today?
- If your best front desk person quit tomorrow, what walks out the door with them?
- How many vendors, contracts, and logins does your operation depend on?
Practices that score well on these five win referrals from the ones that don’t. The encouraging news: every one of them is fixable with systems — and increasingly, with a single agent instead of five more vendors.