Thursday, April 23, 2009

Don't let the Aliens Control Your Direct Access to Physical Therapy!


This is totally awesome! Now we can't lose!
Don't let the Aliens your Direct Access to Physical Therapy!

Monday, April 13, 2009

Lowering Healthcare Costs

IT’S A GRAY AREA:
Lowering costs of health care

I will get this fact out of the way at the beginning: My wife is a physical therapist, and she owns and manages her own physical therapy practice in the City of Orange. So maybe I have a bias.

Having said that, I want to call your attention to a change that should be made that will reduce the costs of effective health care and increase the general fairness of the health-care system. What is that change? Allow “direct access” for physical therapy in California.

What does that mean? Today patients who are covered by health insurance can go for evaluation and treatment to their chosen chiropractor, acupuncturist, marriage and family counselor, or psychologist and have those visits reimbursed by their health insurers without being first required to obtain a prescription from a physician. But to go to see a physical therapist, patients must first obtain that prescription. This, of course, requires patients to spend extra time and money before they can obtain their physical therapy.

How did this disparity occur? Click here for more.

Monday, July 21, 2008

The Golden Rule

"Treat others how you want to be treated."

That's BS.

Okay, before you click off this blog, let me explain. I had lunch with a friend today who just read a management book.

"It was a lot more spiritual than I thought. Compared with a lot of the stuff we talk about, which is more nuts and bolts," he explained.

I wondered if we have been having the same conversations. We certainly do talk nuts and bolts; he does our billing, so it's more like dollars and cents. Our conversations are often practical and technical. But our more memorable conversations, for me at least, get to be a little more big picture, more global.

So, the first quote above was the take home message from the book he read.
It might work out well in a spiritual sense and it is a great message. But in business it hasn't worked for us.

My business partner and I started out trying to design our business with that very principal in mind. We designed it the way we would want it to work if we were customers or employees of the company. What we learned, often the proverbial hard way, is that what we like and what motivates us is not always the same as our customers and employees.

Think of it this way. Do you think Ray Kroc wanted a burger? Do you think Henry Ford wanted a Model T? I don't know if they did. But their customers did. They knew their customers.

And that's the key. Know your target audience. Michael Gerber calls it marketing. Others call it market research. But learn all you can about your customers and potential customers, what motivates them, excites them, frightens them and worries them. Learn their hopes, dreams, aspirations and fears. Then address those through your business.

So, instead of "Treat others how you want to be treated." You can "Treat others how they want to be treated!"

It's not about you. It's all about your customer.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Emails & Contact

Right after putting up the last post and mentioning contact with patients and clients to keep your services in their mind and let them know that they matter to you, I stumbled upon this article, It's no LOL: Few US doctors answer e-mails from patients. If you don't use email to correspond with patients, it's worth the read.

On our clinic websites, www.SFPhysicalTherapy.com and www.WestBayPT.com, we have all of our therapists' emails listed. We also put them directly on our business cards, the ones we hand out to patients. It makes for an easy way to interact with patients, send them occasional updates and reminders, and provide them another level of access. The remarkable thing is that it has hardly ever been abused.

And as Dr. Sands puts it in the article, "Any message that takes more than two volleys back and forth should not be done by e-mail." At that point you just pick up the phone or recommend that the patient come in to see you.

If you are not using email to communicate with patients, consider it and maybe run a short pilot. You might be surprised at the results.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Lifetime Market Value

For most healthcare providers, thinking in terms of Lifetime Market Value is new. In a system where everything we do costs money, it is essential to have an understanding of the issues Mr. Straight brings up below.

Lifetime Market Value can be applied to any business, healthcare or otherwise. How many times do you get coffee in a week? I probably buy a coffee 3-4 times a week. I'm simple and only get the cheap, small kind. The coffee costs $1.55 and I also tip the servers. I'm out of town a bit, so let's say I buy my coffee at my favorite store at $1.55 each time, 3 times per week for only 40 weeks out of the year. I'm worth at least $186 per year to the coffee store.

We can complicate things with up-sells and cross-sells, all the tactics they use as a business to get me to spend more money when I'm there, and I often do. My real value might be closer to $250-$300 per year. And I bring friends sometimes or my kids or wife, and even if I'm not the one buying that day, the coffee store still gets their revenue.

And the servers? If I only tip $0.45, the change left over from my coffee purchase each time, then I'm worth at least $54 to them this year, too. And I often leave them more than that.

So, I'm worth a base of at least $350 per year to the coffee store and their employees. But I bring others. I buy a sandwich sometimes. I'll buy my kids a yogurt or milk, or sometimes the fruit salad, which all serve to raise my value to the store. And I'll go there for the next 5 years, as long as my office is where it is. So, I've turned my $1.55 a day habit into a Lifetime Market Value of about $2,000 for this one store. And this started out as only coffee, and the small, cheap one at that.

You can use this type of analysis to take a look at pricing, services offered, how much an average client spends, how many referrals you get from clients, and then make better decisions about where to devote your resources.

A great article that addresses this in the context of customer retention is at http://www.marketingprinciples.com/customer-retention-plan. Staying in touch is a huge step toward retention.

Do the exercise for your practice, whether you are an internal medicine physician, an orthodontist or a podiatrist. Estimate the services you provide to an average patient over the course of treatment or on an annual basis. Multiply by the number of years, recurrences or new care episodes, and then multiply by the number of friends or family they will send to your practice. Now think about what you do to stay in touch with that patient and what you can do to help them recommend you to their friends and family.

Marketing and maintaining contact doesn't have to be expensive, it just needs to be focused.

Please contact me with questions or comments on this or any of the articles at sturdy@rocketmail.com.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

What’s a Patient Worth?

I wanted to first thank Jerry and Sturdy for the opportunity to post on their exciting new practice business website.

I’m David Straight, PT and my passion is helping physical therapy private practices with marketing especially through the use of the Internet. My company provides physical therapy private practices with top quality and affordable:
· Websites
· Newsletters
· Survey systems
· Search engine listing
· Pay-per-click advertising
· Corporate identity – logos and stationery

I wanted to talk about a concept that isn’t taught in school and is often overlooked by new practice owners and seasoned PT professionals alike. It is the concept of “lifetime market value”.

Lifetime market value describes the value of a patient or referral source over the lifetime of your business. Let’s think of this concept in terms of a patient. When one patient comes in your door and you see him/her for one course of treatment, you may make, say $800, for the sake of this discussion. If you treat that patient well, exceed their expectations, they may come back to you 3 to 4 times over the lifetime of your business. In essence, that patient is really worth $3200.00. You can quickly see why it is so important to provide the best service possible and the potential rewards for you hard work.

Let’s take the concept a step further. The patient goes back to the doctor and talks you up. That same patient also tells two friends. The lifetime value of that patient could then be worth tens of thousands of dollars.

How does this concept relate to what my company, www.e-rehab.com does? We provide you with a website that will provide a great image of your practice, answers FAQ’s, and describes how patients can benefit from PT. Our newsletter system welcomes patients to the practice even before their initial evaluation and stays in touch with them after discharge.

The Five Second Marketing Plan
If you want to be successful in a service business, here is a marketing plan that is sure to lead to success:
1. Realize that your patients are customers and they have expectations!
2. Exceed those expectations.
3. Look for ways to improve your service every day.

My parting thoughts are that you need to realize the lifetime market value of your customers (your patients), provide great and dynamic customer service, and if you need help using the most powerful communications tool to do this (i.e. the Internet) give me a call.

David Straight, PT, MPT, OCS is the President of www.E-rehab.com. He can be reached at 800-468-5161, email: dave@e-rehab.com or on the web at www.e-rehab.com .