4 min read

The Biggest Optical Retail Challenges and How to Solve Them

Optical can account for a significant portion of your practice’s revenue. Frames have healthy margins, lens upgrades can boost average order value, and customers are increasingly seeking quality eyewear. A recent Vision Council report found that in 2025, patients prioritized higher quality even at a higher price.

So why does it often feel like the most chaotic part of your operations?

Rising costs, manual processes, and disconnected optical retail software are all common challenges eye care practices face. Let's dive into the most common optical pain points and strategies your practice can adopt to boost optical performance and profitability.

Manual or Reactive Inventory Management

Every practice has that one drawer full of discontinued frames, or the best seller that always goes out of stock during your busiest weeks. Inventory is one of the largest investments in optical, yet many practices still rely on error-prone processes like manual counting or spreadsheets.

The result?

  • Overstocked slow movers
  • Out-of-stock best sellers
  • Capital invested in frames that don’t move
  • Time spent on manual inventory counts instead of selling frames

If your unsold inventory accounts for a significant portion of your total investment, that’s thousands of dollars sitting on the shelves.

The fix: Investing in technology with real-time inventory tracking and automated reporting can take time-consuming manual work off your team and help you understand what’s selling, what’s not, and where margins are the healthiest. When inventory is always up to date and visible, your buying decisions can be more strategic rather than reactive.

Lack of Visibility into the Market and Your Performance

Optician placing glasses on a smiling female patient

The root cause of many optical challenges stems from a lack of data.

Ask yourself questions like:

  • What’s your optical capture rate?
  • What’s your average order value, and how is it trending?
  • Which frames have the highest margins?
  • Are staff selling more premium lens upgrades?
  • What does your patient base look like, and what are their preferences?

If you’re unsure, you might be looking only at revenue at the end of the month. But the truth is, retail success is found in the details, such as turnover rate, margin by brand, upgrade rates, and seasonal shifts.

It’s also important to keep an eye on industry reports and trends. For example, if national data shows that patients want smart eyewear or blue-light glasses, that insight should inform what you stock.

The fix: Clear, accessible performance reporting, regular review of market trends, and monthly optical strategy conversations ensure you’re proactive instead of reactive.

Missed Opportunities at the Point of Sale

You may not realize it’s happening, but scenarios like this are common: The optometrist recommends an antireflective coating and blue light protection, but the patient walks into the optical shop and leaves with basic lenses. Or worse, leaves without eyewear altogether.

The average optical capture rate for optometry practices is around 50%, meaning many practices are losing about 50% of potential eyewear revenue. This stems from common issues, such as:

  • Lack of visibility into optical benefits
  • Unclear insurance details
  • Clinical documentation and prescription information don’t automatically flow into the optical point-of-sale
  • The handoff from provider to optical isn’t seamless
  • Patients receive generalized recommendations rather than a more personalized experience

Every bit of friction pushes a patient closer to “I’ll think about it.”

Female patient trying on a pair of glasses in the optical shop of an optometry clinic.

The fix: A smooth clinical-to-optical workflow, automated benefit checks, and integrated optical retail software eliminate uncertainty and toggling between systems so staff can focus on selling. It’s also important to tailor recommendations to the patient and offer multiple frames that fit their lifestyle, such as an everyday pair, reading glasses, computer eyeglasses, polarized sunglasses, and safety eyewear for work or sports.

Disconnected Systems Between Clinical and Optical

If your team has to switch between platforms to view prescriptions, check insurance details, process claims, or update orders, it’s not just annoying. It drains time, revenue, and patience.

Disconnected optical retail software also increases errors. A mistyped prescription can lead to costly remakes, denied claims, and a negative patient experience. Your optical staff should be able to pull information from the patient’s clinical chart directly into their view.

The fix: Integrated optical and clinical workflows. When exams, optical, billing, and payments live in a single, connected platform, information moves seamlessly, and errors drop significantly.

Order Tracking and Lab Coordination

Optician looking at a pair of frames and completing a manual inventory check.

Patients are eager to get their new eyewear, and your front desk might feel the pressure with daily “How much longer until my glasses are ready?” calls. Without clear order tracking or lab integrations, staff rely on manual status updates or phone calls to labs.

Beyond the inconvenience, this also affects patient experience. They expect the same visibility and updates they get from Amazon or DoorDash.

The fix: Digital order tracking and lab integrations that provide real-time status updates. Even automated notifications when lenses are ordered or when glasses are ready for pickup can reduce inbound calls and keep patients happy.

Slow Checkout and Payment Friction

Checkout and payment should feel smooth, but in many practices, it’s yet another screen switch and manual entry. Chasing down balances after the fact is another daily battle for front desk staff. It doesn’t just slow down the day—it also slows down revenue and frustrates patients.

Patients increasingly expect convenient payment options, with studies showing that 69% of consumers want to receive texts related to making payments.

The fix: Integrated payment processing, automated posting, and modern payment options. When checkout is simple, collections improve, and staff can move on to the next patient faster. Modern tools like Text-to-Pay let patients pay where they already are with a simple tap.

Poor Patient Retail Experience

Patient receiving text from the optometry office about eyewear pickup

Optical is a crucial part of the patient experience and often the last impression before patients walk out your doors. Long wait times, lack of personalization, difficult reorders, and no follow-up after pickup can damage satisfaction.

Studies show that:

  • 63% of people believe improvement is needed in the patient experience.
  • 76% of patients believe being able to initiate a conversation via text would improve their healthcare experience.
  • 64% of patients prefer conversational messaging.

If patients don’t feel convenience and connection, they’ll order glasses or contacts somewhere else next time.

The fix: Automated recalls and follow-ups, two-way texting, and contact lens reordering enable small touches that make your practice feel modern and attentive. A simple “How are your new glasses, John?” or “Ready to reorder your contact lenses, Samantha?” can go a long way in making patients feel seen and cared for.

Sightview’s optical retail software helps practices build patient engagement and loyalty by offering two-way texting and nearly 1,000 pre-built templates for automated communication via email, text, and phone.

Optical Should Be Streamlined and Profitable

When you step back, most optical retail challenges share the same root cause: Manual processes. Disconnected systems. Limited visibility. Your team can work as hard as possible, but if your optical tools aren’t built to work together with your EHR and Practice Management system, every day can feel chaotic.

Optical can be one of the strongest revenue drivers and loyalty boosters when the right workflows support it. When inventory updates automatically, prescriptions flow seamlessly into retail, benefits are clear at the point of sale, payments post instantly, and patients receive proactive updates, optical stops feeling chaotic.

Sightview helps practices connect clinical, retail, billing, and communication workflows into a unified system designed specifically for eye care. If you’re ready to see what modern, connected optical workflows can look like in your practice, schedule a live demo with our team.

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