Employee Alignment with Leadership Philosophy = Great Customer Service

 By: John A. Corpus, Vice President Client Services, Legato Marketing & Communications.

New to the Legato team, I thought that I would write my first blog about connectivity in a healthcare organization: leadership being connected to the employees; employees connecting their responsibilities back to the organization’s overall mission/objectives; messages/campaigns/marketing being connected across departments and the system.

Having worked for a few Wisconsin healthcare entities over the last thirty-two years, I feel safe in stating that the healthcare environment is always evolving, each time in a more complicated manner.  Every few years, it seems that healthcare organizations are updating their missions/visions to ensure that they balance this change and properly reflect the nature of the organizations’ objectives and philosophy.

Unfortunately, there is a natural lag between “talking the talk” and “walking the talk” in every organization I have served in.  Now, the organizations that I am talking about are 1,000+ employees each in size, to which one might deem a lag as acceptable, but it is never a good thing to say one thing (as an organization) and do another.   And, those doing the saying are “leadership”, whereas the employees execute the “doing.”

Healthcare is a service industry: customer service is our main measure (patient satisfaction surveys). Sure, we look at outcomes and measures around varying procedures and for quality purposes, but success really comes down to how the patient FEELS about the healthcare organization.

My wife and I recently took our daughter into a retail clinic (nurse practitioner or physician’s assistant providing acute/episodic assessment and treatment in a retail setting) at noon on a Sunday.  The promise is “no wait, no appointment,” but what I found was one location with a one-hour wait, and a second location that refused to see my daughter, even though my wife called the triage line to verify the appropriateness of the visit.  The provider went so far as to grab a menu of services and point-out the line that indicates she would not see my daughter!

My wife called the triage line to voice our dissatisfaction.  The nurse on the triage line did not apologize, but did say that we could schedule an appointment with our doctor for the next day OR VISIT its competitor’s retail clinic.  And, we had to call back to a different number to schedule.

In calling to schedule the appointment, we were transferred twice to “scheduling for surgery.”  On the third transfer back, my wife finally reached a nurse who informed us that the ER has an urgent care service for kids each day starting in the late afternoon into the late evening.  The nurse listened to my wife’s reiteration of all that happened, apologized, and made an appointment for my daughter later that afternoon.  Everything was smooth sailing and excellent service from this point on.

In telling you this story, what is my message regarding this healthcare organization’s customer service?  Is the organization connected in its customer service message?  Imagine that I am a close friend, neighbor, or relative telling you this story: how will my telling of the story influence
your healthcare buying decisions?

The best ambassadors and representatives of your healthcare organization are your employees, especially those with patient/customer contact on a daily basis.  These employees will demonstrate the organization’s message in their service, but only to the extent and direct correlation of time and effort  – or lack thereof – spent on communicating, training, and aligning/connecting responsibilities and tasks with the organization’s objectives.

Some final thoughts:

  • As a C-level executive in your healthcare organization, are you confident that your employees are demonstrating your philosophy in their daily activities, especially when engaging patients/customers?
  • Is middle-management aligning its areas of responsibility with the organization’s philosophy?
  • Does middle-management translate the formal language of leadership’s philosophy into terms that the employees can understand?  The better the translation, the clearer the message, the more likely that patients/customers will walk away with a smile on their face.

Goodbye summer, hello open enrollment

By: Mike Milligan, President, Legato Marketing & Communications

As summer starts to wind down,  the cool winds blow in and the leaves change color, thousands of insured employees will face their annual Open Enrollment period.

Many healthcare marketers choose to ignore this opportunity to communicate with existing and potential new patients, relying on the human resources personnel at each company to accurately explain the benefit changes. The truth is, only something positive can come out of being proactive with both employers and employees. Here are a few things you can do to prepare for the upcoming Open Enrollment period:

1) Know the insurance plans. In some organizations, this might be the marketing department’s responsibility; in others, there is a separate development department that does so. Regardless, someone in your organization needs to know exactly which plans are in your marketplace and whether your physicians and services are included. Make sure the data is updated annually – it’ll serve as your roadmap.

2) Evaluate the changes. Remember that data from the previous item? Use it to uncover opportunities. The most obvious will be any that move from an exclusive panel to an open one.

3) Work cooperatively. If a major employer suddenly includes your providers after years of being out-of-network, start by connecting with the benefits specialist and see if you can provide any brochures or attend their benefits fair. Ask to provide health columns for the company newsletter. See if you can hold a lunch ‘n’ learn health education program on site.

4) Get creative. Did you find out there are political reasons your providers were out-of-network for all those years? Remember that some of those employees are probably waiting for this news so make sure they get it. Consider newspaper or radio advertising. Maybe it’s time to rent the billboard that every employee drives past to get to work. See if you can sponsor the placemats at nearby restaurants or the gas station toppers at the gas station across the street. Major changes will impact your company’s bottom line regardless of what you do – but consider the return on investment from acquiring new patients who will stay with you as long as their insurance allows them to. You might not see immediate results, but remember this is about building long-term relationships.

Open Enrollment can open the door to new opportunities for your organization. Opportunities to strengthen existing relationships. Create new ones. And build brand awareness. It happens every fall, so be prepared to make the most of it—every year.

Building patient loyalty the easy way.

By: Kris Whitton, Account Executive, Legato Marketing & Communications

After spending 15 minutes in line at a coffee shop, I was greeted with a smile and a quick apology for the wait. Even though it seems like a simple thing, it had big impact on how I regarded the organization—thoughtful, caring about customers. The woman behind the counter  probably wasn’t making a lot of money; yet she still made the effort to ensure her customers were well taken care of. I’ll return to that coffee shop.

I’ve worked for companies in several different industries, and I’ve noticed one commonality: the simplest of gestures can result in customer loyalty. This realization (I hope) makes me better at my job as an account executive, a role that depends entirely on client satisfaction. In the healthcare industry this is especially important. After all, caring is their job.

There are few things more important than patient satisfaction to increase repeat patient visits. Sure, promoting sophisticated technology, physician expertise, and hospital capabilities are important. And patients do want to know their hospital has them. But if asked, patients will not talk about the new technology; they’ll tell others about well they were treated. Word of mouth has always been powerful, but in today’s world of social networking, news travels much quicker and more broadly, and has the power to make or break any relationship – whether it’s an ad agency/client relationship or a healthcare/patient relationship.

I have created the following guidelines for myself to ensure I’m keeping my clients happy. Perhaps you can use them or be inspired to create your own.

Make sure your customer realizes your value. You need to know if your patients understand the extent to which your hospital performs and exceeds their needs for each visit. If your ER has an average wait time of less than 30 minutes – tell your patients. Then be sure to make good on this promise. Nothing ruins credibility like offering something you can’t fulfill.

Think about how you can provide additional value and benefit to your customers.  Talk to hospital staff who have daily contact with patients. Being on the front lines, they have the best perspective of how patients feel about your organization. You might discover there is a healthcare need in the community you’ve not seen. Maybe there is a lack of nutritious meals in the community. You can make your hospital’s cafeteria the go-to destination for healthy meals in town, not just a snack during hospital visits. Find out what patients most often ask for, then be sure to have it available.

Reward loyalty. Often companies offer rewards to draw in first-time customers. But what about current, loyal customers? Reward them for their loyalty and they’ll spread the word about your organization’s thoughtfulness. For example, create preventive health campaigns and send out direct mail pieces specifically targeted to your current patient base. You can demonstrate your attention to your patients’ personal healthcare by sending reminders when it’s time for annual screenings or exams letting them know it’s time for their annual screening or exam, such as mammogram or cardiovascular test.

In the end, it doesn’t take much to show your patients you’re genuinely interested in their health and wellbeing. And it can go a long way in building loyal relationships.

Why should you care about social media?

By: Barbara Vo, Account Executive, Legato Marketing & Communications

Because everyone’s doing it. They are. But, why? And are they using it as effectively as the medium allows for marketing? The greatest advantage of social media is that it facilitates a conversation between you and your current and potential customers. This doesn’t mean you should forego traditional media. Use it to start the conversation, and let social media help you continue it.

For instance, let’s say you create a print ad and a radio spot to promote a particular product or service. You develop these based on what you already know about your target audience. However, no matter how recent it is, the knowledge you have is the past. That information still is valuable, and you should have it; because it gives you a place to start talking. It’s like starting any conversation. If you know someone likes to fish, you begin talking about fishing. That person responds and you learn he doesn’t like all fishing; he likes to fly fish. You just got instant knowledge. That’s what social media can give you.

Through social media, you can learn more about your audience daily. With this information, you can quickly respond with marketing messages that are more specific to your audience’s likes, dislikes, and reasons why. And you do need to respond—quickly; show that you are listening to what they have to say. If your audience knows you’re listening, they’ll keep talking.

But make sure you’re speaking their language. Some like facebook, some like to tweet, others like to blog. Become fluent in all areas of social media. If you don’t understand it, don’t use it until you do. Social-ites can quickly smell the scent of ignorance. Once they do, you’ll have a difficult time getting them back into the conversation. That’s knowledge gone.

In addition to instant research, here’s a real-life example of another way social media can be valuable:

A construction company created a Twitter account for a project site to inform people about what was being built, when there would be road closures, and if there would be disruptive construction. One windy Saturday, a neighbor tweeted that something had fallen off of the building and was all over the street in front of the site. In fact, several people tweeted about the incident. The company saw these posts and immediately sent someone to the site to clean it up. Had the company not been informed via Twitter, the debris might have stayed in the street until the following Monday, causing unsafe driving conditions, and a possible public relations nightmare.

It’s also a way to monitor your public persona. Social media can be a contagious “word-of-mouth advertising,” spreading information about your company that is incorrect, inflammable, or damaging to your credibility. If you don’t respond, someone else will.

Go to Twitter and type in your company’s name. What comes up could give you good reason to care about social media. 

Interested in following us on Twitter? @legatotweet or @itsbvo

How your marketing team can boost employee recruitment and retention

By: Barbara Vo, Account Executive, Legato Marketing & Communications

Do you really know what attracts a job candidate—or keeps an employee happy? Salary and benefits. Right? Not necessarily. Of course they matter. But recruiting and retaining good employees is more complex—and perhaps surprising.

As a Gen X/Millennial, I know what’s most important to me in my job—and why I recently joined Legato. I want to be engaged, knowing I’m being heard and that I’m contributing to the success of the company. The environment here is open and encouraging to new ideas and fresh approaches.

This is the kind of message potential employees want to hear—and how current employees want to feel. Marketing can help deliver that message. After all, its role is to unify a company’s brand message and deliver it to the targeted audience so they will be motivated to “buy” your brand. Historically, your marketing department has been successful doing this for external customers; why not allow them to do it for your internal customers (employees), too?

As a marketing professional, my job is to find out what motivates people so I can deliver a relevant message. Understanding the motivators for different generations and backgrounds is the first step in successful recruitment and retention. The second, is delivering an attention-getting story about the advantages of working for your company—above and beyond compensation.

After all, your employees are your brand. Their actions and behaviors directly reflect the characteristics and personality of your company. Give them an environment that will make them flourish, and they will want to talk about the great place they work. The underlying message to external audiences? A great place to work, must be a great place to buy service.

We no longer work in silos where departments work independently of each other. It’s a more deliberate and integrated culture involving everyone in the company from the CEO to the facilities manager to the mail room clerk to the IT director. How to unify and present that integrated process is the challenge. Your marketing team members are the creatives who can help you achieve your retention and recruitment goals by delivering your compelling story.

Ditto. What they said.

Creative DirectorBy: Lisa Schneider, Creative Director Legato Marketing & Communications

If you’re sitting under the radar, marketing isn’t the career for you. Marketing professionals are hired to give recommendations that will move a company forward. Whether it takes a budge or a barge, something—or someone—has to give it a push. It should be you.

If you are just one in the “popular” crowd, what value do you bring to your organization? If you don’t express your opinion, eventually, no one will ask you. Mainly because people will think you don’t have one. Good-bye credibility—and effectiveness.

It’s important to listen to what others have to say, but you don’t have to agree. However, if you really do believe the group is right, say so. But back it up with why. The same is true for disagreement. Always have strong reasoning for your opinions.

Keep them listening. Management frequently hears what’s wrong with how the organization is being run. Pat them on the back by pointing out what is working well, then add how management’s great idea can be furthered for even more impact. Consider key decision makers your target audience. How can you best communicate your message so they will be interested in your product (your idea).

Don’t be afraid to challenge top management. Even if you aren’t telling them what they want to hear, they will respect you for speaking up. More important, you’ll respect yourself.

As the Mercury Rises

Legato Marketing Urgent CareSummer tourist season is prime time to market your urgent care and ER services. Think about all of the accidents, illnesses, and other mishaps summer can deliver. Bug bites, sun burns, rashes, swimmer’s ear, tumbles off of bikes and playgrounds, burns from campfires and fireworks—the list goes on and on.

Be strategic. Think about the areas most frequented by these potential patients and get your name out there. Consider the following:

Campgrounds. Most have “tourist centers,” where campers register for campsites and ask about area events and places of interest. Get simple brochures or two-side cards right in front of them. Include only the necessary information for a quick read—hours open, phone numbers, addresses, etc.

Parks and beaches. Go guerrilla. Get college or high school kids to walk around and hand out “quick info” cards. Snag some inexpensive water bottles—or Frisbees—printed with your logo and ER and Urgent Care hours/phone numbers. Look at all possible areas your information can be placed.

Parades and summer festivals. Make a parade float and have someone toss out small first aid kits with your ER/urgent care info included. Have the kits available at First Aid stations and at festival tables.

Take a different approach to reach your seasonal residents—your “summer patients.”

• Put door knob hangers on their front doors offering a free first aid kit they can pick up from your urgent care center—or put the kit right inside a bag to hang on the door handle.

• Send a “welcome back” postcard with a refrigerator magnet that has urgent care hours, address, phone number.

Summer visitors could be family and friends of your year-round residents. If you’ve taken good care of them, those year-rounders will look at
your hospital with a renewed sense of pride to have such a great health care resource right at home.

I’m Fired!

LegatoBlog Fire AlarmFire yourself. Then rehire yourself on the same day. Approach your job as if it were your first day, and ask a lot of questions.

What would you do differently? Are there processes that could be improved? How could you make your job more enjoyable? Are there hurdles that
are keeping you from being productive or efficient?

Whether you’ve been in a position for 20 years or two, it’s easy to become comfortable in your role. But with that comfort comes blinders that
keep you looking only in one direction. Stepping outside of your comfort zone allows you to see your job from all sides.

You’ll also get a fresh view of those around you. Would you keep the same employees? Is there someone you haven’t noticed who is quietly and
diligently doing her job well? Is there another person who’s really vocal, but not producing as well as you thought?

You may be surprised at what you’ve been missing and how easy it could be to make a change—or changes—that will have a major impact for you and your employer.

The “fire yourself” technique also can work for your personal life. Are there things you can change to be a better parent or friend? Are you a clear communicator? How can you make life more enjoyable for yourself and others?

But don’t just be a casual observer. Take what you’ve learned and act on it. Whether it’s in your career or your personal life, you’ll be amazed at how even the smallest change can make a big difference.

Board to Death

It’s summer and time to travel. Will the roads have you board to death?

Legato Marketing & Communications_board to death billboardBillboards. They are all around us. But how many of them have you actually “seen?” For the most part, outdoor advertising is just visual noise, making it almost impossible to distinguish any one “note.”

We want people to know everything they can about our organizations. So, we put it all on our billboards. Long headline. Daily hours. Location. Web address. Phone number. Graphics. And a really big logo.

Ironically, the more we say, the less it says. If outdoor boards are crammed with information, the eye doesn’t know where to focus, and your key
message is lost. How much can you read when traveling past a board at 65 mph?

Try this on your travels. Critique the outdoor boards as you drive by them. Which ones grab your attention and which don’t? What information
have you absorbed? How many would you not even see if it weren’t for this visual exercise? Then ask yourself “why?”

Be a one note advertiser. When it comes to billboards, less really is more. So how do you get there? Here are just a few tips.

1) Do the five second test. If you had only five seconds to tell someone one important message about your organization, what would you say?

2) Print out the final outdoor design on a 8 1/2 x 11 sheet of paper. Display it at the end of a long hallway. What can you see and read?

3) Keep it short. An outdoor headline should be able to communicate your message with no more than seven words.

4) Keep it simple. Keep it clean. With so much outdoor clutter, the only boards noticed are those that are clean. A good outdoor board has one compelling graphic, a short catchy headline, your logo and web address.

If you have more to say, use other media. You can tell a longer story with print, radio, tv, and web. Each of these mediums has limits on them
as well for effective messaging. What are they? Be your own focus group. Do you get the message quickly and clearly? If the answer is no, go back to the drawing board.

Are patient testimonials losing power?

Well, if done right, patent testimonials can still have impact.  Learn more on my recent post on the Wisconsin Healthcare and Public Relations and Marketing Society (WHPRMS) site:

Click here to read: http://bit.ly/fW2mea

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