Abstract:
The direct and indirect costs of hiring a new physician are high. Finding and hiring the new employee is only the start of the process. Effective onboarding and integration into your organization helps expedite productive contribution, and sets the tone for long-term physician retention.
Hiring a physician is an onerous task. You decided on your needs, developed a job description, advertised, networked, and interviewed extensively. Eventually, you and your team settled on a candidate who looked like the right fit. An offer was made, negotiations took place, and ultimately a new member was set to join your team. You’re confident that your process was sound and that you’ve made a great selection.
There’s an unfortunate tendency to kick back at that moment and imagine that the future is secure and everything will work out. That’s a huge risk and makes it possible that all your work in identifying the new hire will come to naught. In truth, much of the most important work in making a successful hire remains to be done.
Until your fully onboarded physician is generating a profit, he or she is a direct and expensive cost.
Start your onboarding process immediately. Until your fully onboarded physician is generating a profit, he or she is a direct and expensive cost. At a minimum, transitioning physicians to employment is a 90- to 180-day process that requires attention to hundreds of details. Important steps can slip through the cracks, causing frustration and negative first impressions for newly employed physicians. In complex scenarios, it may take as much as a year to fully integrate a new member into your physician team. The solution: establish a well-organized onboarding approach that emphasizes physician service.
You need to:
Have a plan: What must be accomplished? From background checks and credentialing, to assigning parking spaces, and defining roles, a new physician is a major change, both for the practice and for the new hire. Formalize and share the plan with the new hire so he or she knows what is expected and what is going to happen.
Have a timeline: What steps need to be taken, by whom and by when, in order to have the new physician treating and billing?
Offer help: Don’t assume it “will all work out.” Your new physician must be welcomed into the practice, and must feel secure in their place within the structure. Don’t expect your new hire to simply figure it out. Provide concrete assistance in integrating into the new practice, community, and infrastructure. Be certain that it is clear who does what within the practice or group.
Onboarding usually consists of four main aspects: credentialing and employment; orientation; marketing; and staff integration.
Credentialing and Employment
Complete your reference and background checks. Unfortunately, candidates can lie about previous employment or education, and you do not want to leave any stones unturned when hiring a new employee. Follow-through now avoids unpleasant future surprises.
Without credentialing, your new physician will not be billing. Know what documents and information are going to be required, and provide a complete list to the new physician before he or she arrives in the office for the first day. There is zero reason to save this conversation for Day One. In a perfect world, the new physician will arrive with most or all supporting documentation in hand on the first day in practice, and your credentialing team can begin work immediately:
If possible, make laborious paperwork and similar tasks available in an online portal so that physicians can access these items separate from orientation; there’s no reason to delay these tasks until the new hire is physically in the office.
Commit to weekly follow-up calls to answer questions, introduce new topics, or share any news.
Send a welcome packet, which can include copies of key policies and procedures.
Provide a facility/physician directory so that the physician can start becoming familiar with referring physicians and campus amenities ahead of time.
Have required internal paperwork ready for completion as soon as your new hire arrives. It’s inexcusable to be identifying required documents only after your new employee arrives for his or her first day.
Orientation: The Welcome
No matter the experience level of the new MD, he or she is new to your practice, systems, and culture. You want the new employee to perceive the organization as being efficient and well run, and to adapt to your systems. It’s important to make the new employee feel a part of the organization as quickly as possible. Schedule the first day, and share the schedule in advance with the new hire:
When and where to arrive;
Whom to report to; and
An idea of the first day’s agenda.
Some other steps to take for the first day:
Assign a mentor. This is an individual within the practice who is tasked with guiding your new MD, answering questions, and facilitating their hitting the ground running in general. In a perfect world, this mentor is a peer. At a minimum, the mentor is a member of your management team. The seniority of the mentor makes the importance of the new MD clear to all.
Assign a direct support person. The mentor is tasked with big picture guidance, but your new hire also needs support in areas like business cards, or information on scheduling and credentialing. Choose one “go-to” person as support for these not-so-trivial tasks.
Meet the team. The mentor should be tasked with first introductions during a “walkabout” of the practice. Consider setting a couple of short, structured meetings with key management or other physicians.
Prepare the workspace. Your new hire’s office space should be ready to go—name on the door, phone extension assigned, and so on. Consider a “swag bag” containing corporate goodies (e.g., logoed coffee cups, briefcases, USB drives). Provide a phone directory with names, titles, and extensions.
Take the tour. Provide an overview of the practice’s physical space—kitchens, rest rooms, ancillary services, departments, and so on. Don’t hesitate to provide details on items like weekly lunches, coffee machines, or kitchen rules.
Schedule lunch. This can be a perfect way to start to build collegiality. Have some key members of your team scheduled to have lunch with your new hire on Day One.
Give the new physician a task. Your new MD’s first day should feel busy and productive. Be certain that your new hire doesn’t end up sitting in his or her office wondering what to do in the afternoon.
Marketing
Update your website and collateral materials. Obtain a photograph and biography of your new MD. Arrange to have the new hire photographed in the same style as the existing MD portraits. Have the biography rewritten to complement and mirror the existing style for bios.
All your collateral materials must be updated as quickly as possible. This includes letterhead and brochures. If the new MD doesn’t appear in brochures, he or she will feel unrecognized and will remain invisible to patients and referral sources. You must fully commit to marketing the new MD equally with the existing team. Only in this way will the new MD rapidly become a component of the revenue stream. Only in this way will the new MD feel truly a part of your practice.
Use your social media accounts to introduce the new MD, and plan follow-up stories and events that will also appear there. Be sure that the MD updates his or her personal social media to reflect joining the practice. This includes LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, etc. A complete and up-to-date LinkedIn profile is particularly important. Be sure to claim and update the MD profile on physician rating sites such as Healthgrades and RateMDs.
Issue a press release to local media and to hospitals in the area. Many of them have their own publications and will appreciate you doing the “legwork” to create content. Repurpose the press release in your own publications (e.g., newsletters, website).
Consider hosting events for local referrers. You can mix purely social events, such as dinner or a wine-tasting, with more professionally oriented events where the new MD may present an overview of his or her specialty or field of expertise.
Get the new MD out in the community. Schedule drop-ins at potential referrers’ practices, where the MD can introduce him- or herself “MD to MD.”
Schedule and collaborate on speaking engagements for your new MD. Many hospitals run regular patient information events, or you can create and publicize your own. Service clubs also often are in need of credible speakers for their regular events.
Remember that, in the end, personal relationships matter for referrals. MDs refer to other MDs that they know and trust, either by reputation or, more importantly, by personal interaction. Focus on building your new MD’s social and professional network.
Staff Integration
The practice management and hiring team knows why the new physician was brought into the team, so make sure everyone else in the practice realizes what the new physician has to offer. Build anticipation with your staff by alerting them that the new MD arrives on “X” date. Alert the clinic staff, hospital staff, referral groups and any other contract groups you work with that a new physician will be joining the practice.
Track the progress of paperwork, reviews, and meetings at various points—pre-boarding, week one, 30 days, 60 days, 90 days, one year—throughout the onboarding process. The more time spent on checking in with the new physician, the more likely it is that you will be able to retain your employee over the long term.
It is important to remember onboarding continues throughout the physician’s first year of practice.
The mentor you assigned in the beginning serves as a social and professional sounding board over the course of the early months and beyond. This can help ensure any concerns are identified, but make sure those issues are addressed. The new physician should feel like he or she is moving forward in the onboarding process.
It is important to remember onboarding continues throughout the physician’s first year of practice. During the first 90 days of relocation, it is not uncommon for the physician to feel unsure in their new environment. In order to prevent an early exit interview, I always recommend “stay interviews.” These are not performance evaluations, but, rather, informal and casual one-on-one meetings conducted 30, 60, 90, and 180 days after the physician begins practicing. The focus of the conversation should be about how the doctor feels they “fit in” with others in the practice or hospital, both clinically and philosophically. I also recommend “stay interviews” with the physician’s family to see how they are acclimating to their new home and surroundings.
What about Practice Acquisition?
A relatively recent phenomenon is the acquisition of existing practices by larger organizations. Here, too, onboarding plays a vital role. Whether the new MD is a seasoned veteran, or fresh out of fellowship, the ultimate aim of physician employment is to successfully blend both personal and business objectives in a mutually satisfying process. Employers will receive less than full value on any employed physician who is not contributing toward this goal, and an unhappy physician typically has options that would allow them to leave for greener pastures.
Well-executed onboarding can set the tone and tenor for a successful and decades-long relationship.
Onboarding efforts need to focus on aligning physicians with clinical integration objectives in quality, patient care, and cost control.
First, establish measurement processes within acquired practices. Physicians and practice staff will need the right workflows, processes, and IT tools to reliably capture cost and quality metrics. Second, create feedback systems to keep physicians focused on system goals. Provide regular dashboard reports with key performance indicators in productivity, patient volume, budget performance, and clinical quality outcomes. Most importantly, establish organizational milestones for cost and outcomes goals. Physicians need to understand how they can help the system develop disease management initiatives.
Conclusions
Effective onboarding is the one of the key steps in physician retention. The time alone to recruit a new physician is typically 200 hours from start to finish. Some estimates of the total cost of recruiting, onboarding, and deploying a physician range up to $500,000. It makes sense to establish strong, open lines of communication with the physician and family from the start to avoid any misunderstanding.
Physician turnover can kill a practice. Well-executed onboarding can set the tone and tenor for a successful and decades-long relationship. When done poorly, it can just as easily cast the seeds of doubt and dissatisfaction from the beginning, and lead to unsustainable turnover. You must dedicate real time and resources to the process to maximize the benefits.
Topics
Communication Strategies
Motivate Others
Action Orientation
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