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Hamden, CT 06518
(800) 949-0388
www.simione.com
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Mike's
Message |
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Dear Friend,
This week starts an exciting new chapter
in the Home Care and Hospice Marketing Solutions evolution. My
goal has always been to bring our clients the very best in marketing,
sales and customer service consulting, training and support. The
challenge was always to have enough time and resources to meet all of
the demand. Now as part of the Simione Consultants extensive
service menu, we are in the best position to provide you with all of
the services you need to make your home care or hospice program
extremely successful.
My good friend, Polly Rehnwall, is joining
with us to bring her exceptional talents to the mix. She and her
team have helped many organizations with referral center management,
marketing and sales consulting and training that has produced dramatic
increases in referrals. I am proud to now be able to work together
to bring you the best team available anywhere. Together we stand
ready to work with you to meet all of your needs.
Everything you have come to expect from us
is still available and then some! Watch for new services, books,
eBooks, training programs and more coming soon.
Thanks; let us know how we can help.
Best,
Mike Ferris
Director
Marketing, Sales and Customer Service
Consulting Division
mferris@simione.com
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Feature Article
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Marketing Through the Eyes of the Financial Manager
by
Michael Ferris
An important home care
best practice, for all types of home care agencies, is a strong
marketing program. The financial performance of the home care
agency is impacted by the success and the efficiency of the agency's
sales and marketing program. The financial manager must understand
the goals of the marketing program and work closely with the sales and
marketing department to assure its success. The marketing plan
must be well constructed and include a detailed budget. The
marketing department must be accountable for both staying within the
budget and producing the results.
As home care becomes
increasingly competitive, the need to adopt best business practices
intensifies. One of those practices is being effective in sales
and marketing program design, implementation and execution. The
need to increase the number of referrals coming in to the agency is one
of the most important items on management's to do list. Or, in the
case of older and more established agencies, it may be to simply protect
and maintain the level of referrals received.
There should be a
direct relationship between the level of investment in sales and
marketing to the volume of business generated. If the program is
properly designed, it should generate a positive return on investment.
The return on investment for a home care marketing program can only be
measured if there are systems in place to track the source of referrals
received by the agency. It is imperative that there be an accurate
system in place to track the source of the calls received by the agency.
Only then can an agency truly measure the cost effectiveness of any
component of the overall marketing program.
Creating a tracking
system begins with an accurate process to track the origin of the calls
received by the agency. In most agencies, this is accomplished by
having those that have first contact with callers keep a log of the
calls received and where the caller heard about the agency. The
design of the form used to track the inquiries -- and especially the
ease of use -- will create better adoption. The need to track
should be a team effort with all in the agency interested in the success
of the marketing initiatives.
An area of current
interest is tracking the effectiveness of an agency's Web site.
Here are some tips:
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Track the number of
unique visitors on a regular basis to see any spikes in traffic
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Have a call to
action that makes it easy for the visitor to request information or
inquire about services (the easier you make it the more responses you
will receive)
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Track recruitment
advertising responses
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Include the Web site
as a source of phone inquiries on your tracking log
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In print
advertising, include an e-mail address for responses or inquiries --
not just a Web address
Once the agency has
the data to measure the effectiveness of a specific component of the
marketing program, it is important to make sure that the particular
element was executed in a fashion that would allow for success.
Proper execution cannot be assumed. When an agency measures the
results generated by a particular marketing effort it must also look at
the execution and design. A great example would be Yellow Pages
advertising. If the advertisement was not well designed, is it the
medium or design that is ineffective? This is where professional
marketing help can really pay for itself.
The definition of
success for the marketing program must also contain a measure of
financial accountability. Certainly those programs that are
demonstrably successful are easiest to fund in the future. Once
the marketing department is able to quantify the return on investment,
it is much easier to sell the financial manager on increasing the budget
for a specific portion of the overall marketing program. New ideas
and initiatives need to be carefully tested before budgetary inclusion
for significant future investment.
When analyzing your
marketing program, make sure that you continue to do those things that
have made your agency successful over the years. Never abandon
efforts that have been historically the cornerstones of your marketing
program until you know how successful they are. Don't stop doing
one thing just because you want to try something new. Keep doing
what has made you successful, measure and test. Sometimes an
existing marketing effort just needs to be updated or improved upon to
generate increased results.
When adding new ideas,
do so cautiously and monitor the success of these new initiatives.
Try new ideas in small controlled tests. Testing is crucial to the
efficiency and effectiveness of your programs. When making
changes, you must make only one change at a time to be able to
accurately test the impact of that change. Many times the
enforcement of the requirement to test new ideas will lie with the
financial manager.
Marketing directors
should keep their financial managers informed about the progress of any
marketing initiatives and share with them any data that are collected to
measure the success of individual initiatives. The sales and
marketing department should work very closely with the management team
to ensure that there are no surprises. Typically, financial
management will always be supportive of marketing activities that are
proven to increase referrals. Both departments need to understand
each other's issues and responsibilities.
Remember that the
rules of home care marketing do not apply to those efforts that are
targeted outside the organization. Inside sales efforts designed
to generate internal referrals and cross-selling of services must also
be measured. The investment in these marketing projects must also
be measured and subjected to the financial tests.
The most financially
successful agencies will be those that employ the best business
practices. The way that an agency manages its sales and marketing
programs will be an important determinant in this financial success.
The working relationship between the finance department and the
marketing department is one that should be carefully cultivated by both
departments. It is in both of their best interests. Happy
and financially successful marketing!
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Sales Training Corner
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Still a Few Seats Left for August Square One
Bootcamp!
The next Square One Bootcamp will be held
August 25 - 27 in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Reserve your seat now
as spaces are filling up quickly!
You have two registration options:
To lock in a seat with a $500 deposit,
click here.
To lock in a seat with your full payment,
click here.
"I am a veteran of healthcare sales and marketing with 20+ years
of DME and Home Respiratory experience. Simply stated, it's
refreshing to participate in a thoughtfully developed sales and training
program that offers new techniques while sharpening old skills. I
would highly recommend Square One Bootcamp for the novice as well as the
seasoned sales professional." -- Anthony Succo, Healthkeeperz
52 Week eSales Training Course
Our groundbreaking and highly-acclaimed 52
Week eSales Training Course is available for one to one hundred students.
It provides a weekly lesson (takes about 30 minutes to complete) that will
keep your sales team members' skills sharp. Students have said that
the course supported them in becoming better at their profession,
increased their referrals and forced them to review the basics. On
average, our 52 Week eLearning participants have increased their referrals
by over 31%!
"With the help of the 52 Week eSales
Training Course, I have been able to increase our accounts by
approximately 20% and have increased referrals and admits by an even
greater percent. Thank you, and my company also thanks you!" --
Barbara Edmisten, Highland Hospice
Special offer for Sales Leadership Letter
subscribers: Enroll up to 10 students for one low price of $599
(does not include audio CDs)!
Click here
to take advantage of this offer.
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Sales Tip
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Have you evaluated your referral process
lately? Periodically you should be reviewing your processes to
make sure that you are performing at maximum effectiveness. Once
the phone rings (as a result of the excellent sales effort), it is
important that the referral center be able to work with the referral
partner to make their life easier. They should be very good at
probing for additional needs, likes and dislikes and listening carefully
for new business opportunities. The inside sales team should work
closely with the outside sales team to manage these key account
relationships to generate maximum benefit.
As a sales person, you should be focused
on making sure that you are available to make the referral center
personnel's lives easier. If they view you as a trusted part of
their team and the natural go to person when there is a problem with an
account, you will be best able to deliver seamless, high quality
service.
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Sales Leadership
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Creating the Service Culture That Sells Itself
If our goal is a culture that is made up
of staff that do the right things for the right reasons, and do so
instinctively and culturally, then we must provide the support for the
early shining stars. You will have those employees who get it
faster than others and it must be easy for them to shine and they must
be recognized and rewarded. If not, then you will never gain the
momentum to achieve the complete transition. Recognition needs to
be immediate and visible.
Look at instituting a mentorship program
so that your top customer service providers can mentor others to assist
them in being great. As with all mentorship programs, you will
want to pair staff that are compatible and are in like positions.
Much of the work in building, preserving
and spreading the culture will fall to the sales and marketing team.
They are uniquely situated to be able to provide feedback from the
referral sources in the field. Any praise must be passed on to the
responsible party and to the rest of the organization immediately.
Negative comments should be handled in a manner that is dignified and
consistent with an organization that is supportive and responsible as a
team. Obviously, problems cannot and should not be swept under the
carpet but they must be handled in a manner that reflects the
organization's culture that rejoices whenever there is a problem.
The agency rejoices because there is a tremendous opportunity in every
problem that arises. And, because the alternative is definitely
not going to foment the spread of the customer service culture.
By being the best problem solvers we will,
by definition, make more friends and build stronger relationships than
our competition that is not good at it. Our service culture has
the opportunity to shine brightest when presented with a problem.
When we stand out in this area, we will really impress and win over our
referral sources. Studies have shown that the strongest
relationships are those between a company and a customer where there has
been a problem and it has been resolved to the customer's satisfaction.
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Ask Polly
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Selling Private Duty Services
The myth of no money
By Polly Rehnwall
"But they could never afford it!"
How many times do we hear this when we ask if the admissions nurse
discussed private pay with the family needing additional aide or
caregiver services? Without ever seeing a financial statement, we
assume that just because someone lives in a modest home they could never
pay for extra personal care.
Our solution? We
either tell them that they need to go to a nursing home (that's usually
right after they told you that dad said he never wanted to go there) or
we add excessive aide and volunteer hours, draining resources from other
patients for families that really need them. It's not a
solution, it's a cop out.
It isn't that people don't have the funds.
It's that we don't have the savvy to talk about the value private
care can add. Because we've always been able to offer no
cost care, talking about money is foreign and outside our comfort zone.
Fix #1: Have your team
read The Millionaire Next Door to help them understand how the
guy driving the ten year old car in a less than stellar neighborhood is
the one with all the dough.
Fix #2: Talk about the
fact that people buy things that are emotionally meaningful to
them, whether it's a new Harley, a massage, or the security of
someone caring for a loved one.
The "gotta do it all" barrier
Another barrier is that we feel we
have to do it all if we take the patient on hospice care.
Most hospices have thankfully abandoned the "no caregiver, no admission"
philosophy by figuring out a way to help the family identify a caregiver
when there is no obvious candidate. But we've done a terrible job
of helping our teams understand that just because the benefit
provides an aide and volunteers doesn't mean that it covers all extra
care needs.
Step 1: Get goal agreement
The first thing we need to do is get
agreement on the desired goal of care for the patient. If their
goal is to never go to a nursing home, then you've got goal agreement.
Now it's time to come up with a plan to make it happen.
For example, if the patient lives with a son or daughter who works
full-time and can't be there during the day, you can give them a variety
of solutions (see the following examples).
Step 2: Focus on needs
The key to selling private duty is to not
sell it, but to offer it as the solution to an identified need or
goal. If the son or spouse expresses concern about not
leaving the patient alone, then focus on their need to feel secure about
their loved one's care. Some examples:
Security needs: "Bob,
it sounds like you really want someone to be here with your mother
while you're at work. Many of our families feel the same
way. They use paid, professional caregivers to make sure
that their loved one is well cared for, and it will make it a lot
easier on you and your wife."
Stress reduction:
"What's important right now for you, Mary, is to take care of
yourself too. You can't help your dad if you're totally
stressed out trying to juggle all of this. Let's add some
outside professional help for the next few days so that you can
get some rest and get things settled down a bit.
Step 3: Discuss the cost
When the family asks what it costs,
don't go down the laundry list of dollars and hourly minimums.
Stating that, "It's only $18 an hour with a two-hour minimum and an
extra $2 an hour on the weekend" is not helpful. Instead say, "Mom
can be cared for right here at home for the 8 hours you're working for
under $150/day if you need the aide all day. Many of our
families tell us that that's the best investment they made, not
only for their mom, but for themselves."
If there are multiple siblings,
divide the cost into dollars per day: "For the three of
you, it's only $24/day each for your mom to have someone here from
10-2."
Endorse it: As a
trusted advisor, you're in a position to not just offer a service, but
to actively advocate for it. You know how insecure some families
are about providing care at home, so tell them to try the service
for the first few days and see how it helps.
Step 4: Offer additional options
Lifelines: Depending
on the patient's condition, a lifeline may be just what's needed to meet
the security needs of the patient and family. Medication reminders
and dispensers can also help for those living alone.
Friends: Remind them
that people want to help. That's why friends and family offered it
when dad got sick. Giving them the chance to help is the best gift
of all.
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Questions
and Answers
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Reader Questions and Answers
In each Legendary Sales Leadership Letter,
we answer your questions.
Send them to us or call (800)
653-4043 and we'll make sure
that yours are answered in a future issue.
Here are this week's questions answered:
Question:
What are some good topics for community
education when you have covered grief, loss, advanced directives,
hospice coverage, stress relief and pain management? Most of our
referrals come from the community and we want to keep the topics fresh
and interesting.
Answer:
Several things come to mind in response to
your question:
1) Disease specific end of life programs
can be very helpful to the community. It also enables you to get
the local chapter of that disease's association or organization
involved. This will enable you to expand the number of people that
are attending. You can also involve some of the specialists for
this group of patients in your programs.
2) Ask the organizations, groups or
facilities that you are delivering the programs to for topics they would
like to see covered.
3) Some of the topics you listed are ones
that should be delivered several times a year, so don't make your list
too long or the cycle will be too long in between the topics.
Don't be afraid to repeat topics; people need to be reminded and new
people will come to hear the topics.
Question:
We have a doctor that is a huge potential
for one of our marketers but he cannot seem to get any face time with
her. Any ideas?
Answer:
My advice to your marketer: First,
you should establish this doctor as one of your project accounts.
Then you should create your plan of attack and find out as much as you
can about him. Find others of your referral sources that know him
and ask them to set up an meeting together with you. Work all
possible angles. Make sure that you know from the referral clerk
what is important, how they select an agency, and who they are currently
using. Verify that it requires the doctor to make the selection of
the agency.
Finally, try some things that are unusual.
You can send lumpy mail with something of interest in the envelope.
You can deliver personalized items that would only be useful to the
doctor. There is a story that Tom Hopkins tells about delivering a
small wastebasket that has one of your brochures and letters crumpled up
in it. Put a note on it that asks for the opportunity to meet with
them that addresses the fact that they seem to be throwing all of your
information away without meeting with you. Be sure that whatever
you do, it is appropriate and consistent with your personality.
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About
Us
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Marketing, Sales and Customer Service Consulting Division
Supercharge Your Referrals, Revenues
and Profits!
Headed by two industry powerhouses --
Michael Ferris and Polly Rehnwall -- Our Marketing, Sales and Customer
Service Consulting Division is designed to give you the easiest
experience possible by providing the most comprehensive solutions to
supercharge your referrals, revenues and profits!
If it only took one phone call to deal with all
your marketing and sales needs, would you make it?
In an environment of growing competition and shrinking margins, you have
to increase volume and improve market share in order to be successful.
That means having a skilled sales team, quality marketing strategies and
a customer service model that improves your conversion of referrals to
admissions.
With every type of solution we
provide, you won’t just beat the competition -- you’ll establish your
competitive advantage for years to come!
Our
Proven Process:
-
Evaluate and assess talent, model
and process
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Design customized solutions
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Assist with implementation
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Coach your staff
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Train your sales people
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Support your organization's
continued success
Delivering optimal results begins with an
evaluation of your sales, marketing and customer service program in
order to design solutions custom tailored to your agency and your area.
Our experts know home health and hospice, bringing
years of marketing and sales experience and best practices to you.
Customized Solutions:
Have one or a few specific needs? We can guide you through
creation and implementation quicker and with more success than anyone
else. Below is just a small sample of our capabilities:
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On-site Sales, Marketing, or
Customer Service Consulting and Training
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Referral and Admission Management
Consulting and Training
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Square One Sales Bootcamp
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Marketing Program Development
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Interview Sales Candidates Video
training / Corporate Videos
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Collateral Materials, Sales Letters,
and Advertising Consulting
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Mystery Shopping / Market Analysis
With just one phone call, you can tap
into all the resources and knowledge of the home care industry’s
touchstone consulting powerhouse -- Simione Consultants.
We have an ability no other company can offer -- the only
one stop shop to handle all your marketing and sales needs.
Home Care Consulting Pioneers
Simione Consultants, LLC was the first organization of its kind
dedicated entirely to home care -- a commitment we continue to
maintain today. For more than 40 years, we have demonstrated
we understand and are responsive to the changing and diverse
business needs of home care and hospice organizations.
Value Driven, Success Outcomes
More than 800 home care organizations
have trusted the team of experts at Simione Consultants, LLC to get
them through the challenges of yesterday and today, and to gain the
leading edge for tomorrow. We provide expert assistance to
hospital-based and hospital-affiliated agencies, visiting nurse
associations, hospices, small proprietary agencies, and large
national chains. The size, capabilities and commitment of our
uniquely qualified consulting staff offer unparalleled industry
insights and innovative yet practical solutions. Our track
record of engagements with successful client outcomes is unmatched.
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Closing Thoughts |
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Thanks to all of my friends and clients for the opportunity to work with
and learn from you. I know that we will have even more fun and
great success in the years ahead. Just let me know how I can help.
Thanks for all that you do for your
agency, its patients, your community and our industry. Without
sales, the rest of the organization struggles to succeed.
Your work to provide a steady and predictable growth in referrals is
greatly appreciated. Stay in close touch with your passion for
home care and/or hospice and keep up the great work!
Good luck and Happy Selling!
This
newsletter and all content and information contained herein are the
property of
Simione Consultants
and may not be
reproduced in any form without the express written consent of the
publisher.
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