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Healthcare Leadership: A Discourse

Healthcare Leadership:  A Discourse

Monthly Archives: February 2014

Making Yesterday’s Vision Tomorrow’s Reality

19 Wednesday Feb 2014

Posted by Scott Southard in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

business leader, hospital management, leadership, leading, management, vision

ImageDo you want to reach out and help your fellowman and see the difference 100% of your efforts make on humanity? 

A few of my friends have joined overseas missions and can tell you firsthand what that feels like.  The rest of us may have a different story in treating patients here stateside.

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Civilization has its costs and following certain rules, regulations, and standards—for better or for worse—are mandated.  Prior to receiving my first job offer to work in a hospital, I’ll never forget the words uttered by my soon-to-be boss:  “You will need to get a haircut and lose the beard.  The revolution is over.”  Gulp! 

Needless to say, I did just that and so began my long career in health care.  I also found that in the decades that proceeded “work casual,” that the expectation was that I would wear a sport coat or suit and tie.  Yes, even on Friday and even on the weekends when I was called in.

Where all think alike, no one thinks very much.  –Walter Lippmann

Before you pass judgment on my stuffy professional genesis, please take a few paces backwards and look at the context in which this appearance edict was given. 

In the 1970’s, it was a world in which people had certain expectations when they went to the hospital.  They wanted their nurses to wear hats and starch white linen, their physicians to wear suites and/or white coats, and their professional staff to look… well… professional.  Just like when you visited a bank, you want to see your banker dressed conservatively because you expected him to handle your money in a conservative manner.  Likewise, you wanted your medical care to be provided in a starched, antiseptic, and professional manner.

A few years ago, I was told by my younger peers to dress down more.   It didn’t feel right, but I finally adjusted to wearing corduroy pants and shirts without ties.  The feedback from my patients was complementary and welcoming.  Oh!

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It is the primary job of a leader to identify and clearly explain the context of the why, the what, and finally the how.  This can be a moving target. 

I mentioned in an earlier blog of the important role of an organization’s mission, vision, and values.  This blog will discuss the application of the vision.  The vision shows the direction where the organization wants to go.  (And, by the way, you dress for the job you want, not just for the job you are currently assigned to perform… your career vision, if you may.)

A leader not only looks for opportunities to talk about their organization’s vision with individuals, teams, and with groups, but he/she must have a plan to walk the talk.  This walk is not linear, however, and will demand that the leader take an active role to make the vision a reality.

I recognize that a vision statement can seem fully formed and organic in the sense that an organization grew in this direction pushed by forces such as reimbursement, staff, location, and other variables.  Yet, I have found that planning is key to making a vision manifest. 

Before a leader starts out, they need a detailed outline—with specifics if possible—of the plan from the start to the goal, with measureable benchmarks along the way.  A plan should always take into account competition and other obstacles. 

If a leader doesn’t have marketing savvy—or does not have a marketing professional on the team—now would be the time to find someone with these skills!  A marketing professional should be schooled in making messages and visions come alive, and in ways not considered by people with other strengths (a leader doesn’t know everything, and a wise one recognizes that!).

As an example to the work involved, let’s discuss the efforts needed to fulfill a vision for a health care organization to become a regional leader in sports medicine. 

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Currently, the orthopedic and sports medicine arena is hotly contested. 

Customers and patients of such a program are a highly desirable target for health care organizations.  These customers are usually in good physical shape to begin with, tend to be highly motivated to stay physically fit, and once injured work hard to get back in the game. They also have better outcomes from surgery with no to few readmissions, and (also importantly) tend to have good payer sources.  Being active, they will probably spread their good results to others.  Positive word-of-mouth advertising, as we all know, is the very best way to market a product. 

Once a plan is in place, a team needs to be formed.  A sports medicine team will usually be made up of sports medicine physicians and/or orthopedic surgeons, high school athletic trainers, sports performance instructors, physical therapists, physical therapy assistants, and exercise physiologists.   

Physician involvement is crucial for any program in a hospital or health care setting to succeed as anyone pulling together a new program can attest.  Not only can their practice reflect the vision in another practical and results-driven way, but also customers and hospital administrators will listen more closely to what they have to say over the din of competing voices.

The physicians and the others on a team need to understand the vision, the plan, and their role.  In forming a team to actualize this vision, a leader may identify a “champion,” or maybe there will be a few “champions. “

Champions are unusually motivated spokespersons who understand the vision and the plan and can articulate it in a way that recruits and motivates others.  A champion will prove to be a great advantage to a team for moving the vision forward with their commitment towards the program’s success.  It is, however, not unusual for the leader to be the champion at first, to show what the role looks like and identify ad hoc champions or champions for specific tasks.

It is important to note here that with champions or no champions, a leader must keep engaged in the direction that the product is developing making sure that all efforts are fulfilling the vision.  A good leader should not be accused of being asleep at the tiller!  Ultimately all of this—the good, the bad and the ugly—will be a leader’s responsibility.

With a prepared leader, a solid and motivated team with the desired skills, potential champions, a plan that allows for unanticipated variables, a mission, and an inspiring vision, an organization is off to a good start with an itinerary and a destination.

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I lost a former colleague and we all lost a wonderfully caring therapist and a quality human being this January.  He had a reputation for coloring outside of the lines in order to get the job done, but that combination of free-styling-high-energy and healing skills made him all the more wonderful.  Although we hadn’t talked in a few months, I will miss Henry Tim Heemstra, LPT as will the many patients and friends he made through almost four decades of practicing. 

Pedal on, Tim.

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A Health Care Marketing Primer

03 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by Scott Southard in Uncategorized

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Image

How do you make decisions about where you go for your health care?

It is a given that everyone will need health care or the services of a hospital.  What isn’t a given is that everyone will chose your organization. 

I recall what I deem as a successful marketing trip was one I made to a small physician’s office along with some members of my professional team.  I arranged this luncheon meeting with the physician and his staff because I was puzzled why this physician rarely used our clinic.  We were the closest office to what I assumed was his patient population and we had plenty of openings for new patients.  Along with my staff, I brought a great lunch for everyone there. 

After the usual discussions about things we had in common—e.g., weather and my presentation—I could see that the physician had one eye on the door and was preparing to develop his excuse to depart.  Earlier walking through the hallways to get to the meeting room, I had noticed wall hangings of local Native American Indian art.  Taking the conversation in a new direction, I mentioned the physician’s art and that I had worked as an archaeologist as an undergraduate student and told him about some of our sites, findings, and my dealings with the local tribes.  The physician’s eyes lit up and we talked until it was impossible for him to ignore his afternoon patients. 

On the drive back to my office, I wondered what would be the results of this unusual meeting.  As I was preparing to leave the office to my next appointment, the office medical secretary reported that we had two new referrals from the physician we had just visited less than an hour before.  Clearly this marketing trip could be easily measured and was time and money well spent.

A slam dunk for this referral-directed marketing approach!

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Gone now are the days that community hospitals could expect their community to go to them for help.  Also gone are patients accepting a referral from the family physician without question or without an Internet search for other options. 

It is now the norm that people will do their own referrals (thank you very much!) for the best care at the best prices and they are willing to drive the extra miles if need be.  This approach of taking more responsibility for one’s health care seems to reflect the desires of both the ever-increasingly-better-informed patient and their health care payer.

This, of course, demands a paradigm shift in the traditional approach of marketing health care to maintain what market share you have now and what you need to do to grow new business.  A successful marketing plan can no longer be strictly focused on physicians and nurse case managers as it once was when professional referrals drove new patients and revenue.  Health care marketing is more challenging now and demands a multi-faceted and all-inclusive approach.  Fortunately there are successful examples out there. 

In an earlier piece I discussed the importance of taking one’s organization’s mission, vision, and values to the streets and articulating them in the form of storytelling.  This is a powerful and meaningful approach that has been proven to stick in the minds of physicians and patients alike.  This is brand management in action and helps differentiate your organization from your competition.  And like an effective mission statement, keep your message to whomever you are seeking to make a connection; also, make it concise and easy to remember.

Regardless to whom you are directing your compact and easy-to-remember message, along with knowing and living the values and mission of your organization, make sure you have your facts straight.  Making stuff up and hoping you don’t get caught is not even an option with everyone having easy Internet access.  Always verify your data and take as long as you need to be satisfied with your resources and your information.

Retailers have long recognized the importance of reaching out to their customers and then holding onto to their business.  This is a new lesson for us who have been focusing on the traditional referral sources of providers and hospital discharge planners; intermediaries or gatekeepers, if you will.  Retailers know they have to connect directly with customers by:

  • Raising awareness of services with print ads in newspapers and magazines, billboards, television commercials, and mailers.
  • Making it easy for customers to connect with information on location, hours, and a telephone number via Internet website and Smart Phone. 
    • I would recommend going one step further and provide a prominent telephone number that connects customers to an individual that has been trained to answer all questions that may come up.  Furthermore, post that person’s name and position to truly begin a relationship.  Wow your customers and differentiate yourself from your competition with the best service even before they step in the door.  Don’t ever go cheap when positioning the right people to take calls and give out information.
    • Providing consistent and timely follow-up to everyone and with every call.

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Measuring the success of your marketing efforts is a must! 

If you can’t show a return on your investment, why bother?  Depending on the nature of your marketing campaign here are a few ways you can measure its success by:

  • Increase in referrals for services
  • Increase in website hits
  • Increase in revenue trends
  • Increase in public awareness of your services via polling.

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I have always found marketing to be fun, especially when meeting people face-to-face. 

I take time to prepare myself for how I want to present and I get to know my product or service so that I can talk about it with knowledge and pride.  I have, however, learned to read my audience and be ready to find a unique way to find a thread of connection and be ready to run with it.  You never know when you may have to talk about marathon times or the Hopewell along the Grand River. 

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