Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius has emerged as a leading candidate for the Cabinet post of secretary of Health and Human Services. "I've got to believe she's on the short, short, short list," said Ron Pollack of the health advocacy group Families USA in Washington. "I think the likelihood is enormous."
One group that's celebrating the long-awaited bill expanding the State Children's Health Insurance Program: The Physicians Hospitals of America, which represents doctor-owned hospitals. The group was fighting a version of the bill that would have curbed expansion of these hospitals by prohibiting Medicare payments to new ones and restricting expansion of existing ones. The restrictions were the brainchild of California Rep. Pete Stark, who has criticized such facilities as cherry pickers of lucrative patients, among other things.
How do you grow—or at least protect—market share when money for new buildings, more docs, the latest equipment, and aggressive marketing campaigns is scarce?
To get through the current economic climate and, even more importantly, be positioned for success when the recovery comes, St. Vincent Carmel (IN) Hospital is going back to basics, examining the very core of who they are and what they can offer to their patients, community, referring physicians, employees and potential employees, and other stakeholders.
I was invited to visit St. Vincent Carmel and, during my visit, sat in on a vision statement and market strategy brainstorming session with the hospital's executive team. It was an eye-opener to watch as this group—representing a wide swath of departments and interests, including finance, operations, HR, nurses, physicians, and, yes, marketing and communications—scrutinized the hospital's strengths and weaknesses to determine what it is about their organization that differentiates them from their (many) competitors.
What are we doing right?
St. Vincent respects its employees, for starters (they're called "associates"). And they recognize that their internal audience is just as important to success as their external audience.
They put their resources into successful service lines, including Bariatric surgery and orthopedics.
They work hard to keep patients satisfied, responding to complaints and concerns quickly, using service recovery techniques, and offering luxuries (which are arguably the new necessity) such as private rooms that they describe not as "hotel-like" but as "home-like."
Volunteers in pink blazers greet everyone who enters the atrium lobby, where a player piano fills the air with soothing tunes, making visitors' first impression a true experience.
And they are in tune with physicians, examining their referral patterns and working to turn "splitters" into "loyals."
What could we do better?
Right off the bat, though, they agreed that one thing had to change: The old vision statement was outdated, unclear, and so wordy that it was rendered almost meaningless. It didn't really capture all the great things they do, their culture, how well they treat their patients in body and spirit, or the talent of their associates.
They questioned everything. What do our customers want and need that other healthcare organizations do not or cannot deliver? What is special and unique about our organization that differentiates us from our competitors? How can we communicate those differences in a crowded market? Are we focusing on the right service lines? How do we position our organization as the first-choice provider and employer? What is our brand image now and what more could it be? Why do physicians refer to us and how can we increase those referrals?
They wondered if the vision statement should explicitly state that they provide healthcare, for example. They decided that's a given. Does it need to say that they are a faith-based organization? Their name, after all, says that loud and clear.
Obviously, asking these question is just the first step—it takes more than one day to find answers, craft that vision statement, and communicate it internally and externally. But they made headway.
What's next?
Vision statements are notorious for producing a lot of talk, talk, talk but very little action. So it's tempting to leave them on that shelf, covered with a decade's worth of dust. But even if you don't re-envision your vision statement, you should be taking a look at your brand image, your culture, the way you want to do business, and the way you want to treat your patients and employees.
Why? One answer: On my way to the airport from the hospital, I told my cab driver where I'd been, and he said he had once been treated at St. Vincent when he broke both of his legs in a car accident. He'd also been hospitalized at competing hospitals and clinics. He talked briefly about his clinical diagnosis and never once mentioned the quality of his care. For most of the rest of the 45-minute ride he railed about his experiences with the healthcare organizations and his nurses, physicians, and physical therapists.
No matter what hospital you go to, he said, there are nurses who go above and beyond, and nurses who do not seem to care. His doctors were too negative, he said. They told him he would never walk again, even though he did eventually recover. And they never acknowledged his faith in God to heal him. He also talked at length about what it's like to be in the hospital—the atmosphere, the feeling you get when you walk in the door, the views out the window, the way people interact with you.
If you treat people the way they want to be treated, he said, you will get repeat business. It's true for cab drivers. And it's true for hospitals.
With so much attention on psychological marketing these days, perhaps the single most neglected trend out there is the move towards more hard-nosed information-based shopping and purchasing. New Info Shoppers are bigger than a microtrend: They represent a broad shift in the marketplace brought about by the Internet, higher education, and changing economic times, says this article from the Wall Street Journal.
If you start to use Facebook to network and informally promote your organization to your target markets, you will soon run into Facebook site rules designed to limit overt promotions. This blog posting provides some information about these limits and advice from three Facebook experts to help smooth your path.
Women age 55 and over are the fastest-growing U.S. demographic group on Facebook in the last three months, according to new data reported by Inside Facebook. The number of women on Facebook is growing faster than men in almost every age group, and women now make up 56.2% of users. Women over 55 have nearly tripled on Facebook since September to more than 717,000, and are nearly double the number of men in the same age group, according to the data.