To succeed in business, you have to focus on sufficiently satisfying, that is, satisficing, the needs and expectations of your customers and on reminding them of that fact.
Tag: anesthesiology
Why Trying To Protect Your Group’s Position Is Destroying Your Future – Medical Group Minute
Adopting a purely defensive position can never advance your or your medical group’s future.
Understanding Valuation Isn’t Sufficient to Solve Your Economic Problems Any More Than Knowing the Recipe for a Tagine Makes You Moroccan – Podcast
There’s lots of advice out there suggesting single track “cures” to the cash crunch that many medical groups and facilities are experiencing as a result of the coronavirus economic crisis.
What Can The Owner of a Plumbing Company Teach Medical Group Leaders? – Medical Group Minute
Hiring for skill is not even half the battle for your group – it’s the price of admission.
To Serve Man – Medical Group Minute
Many medical groups, certainly many hospital-based groups but, increasingly, even office-based groups, view themselves as simply providing a “service” for the hospital.
Why Your Medical Group Might Be Headed Down the Cliff, and How to Stop It – Podcast
This is a perfect metaphor for the false belief that there’s a strong foundation holding up the structure of your group. In reality, the truth can be much different.
The Federal Cure for Surprise Medical Billing is Worse Than the Disease
Ah, the buffet of public spending Congress has rolled out in this glorious year 2020. But you, doctor, weren’t so lucky.
Who Really Owns Your Medical Group? – Podcast
Walmart is famous for its slogan “Save Money. Live Better.” It’s no surprise that the slogan is aimed at the customer. But what about the supplier?
What Do You Call A Hospital With Irrelevant ORs Other Than “Bankrupt”? – Podcast
Evolutionary psychologists say that the reason we see a stick on the trail ahead of us as a snake is that it’s far better for our survival to see sticks as snakes than snakes as sticks.
More On What Do You Call a Hospital with Irrelevant ORs Other Than “Bankrupt”?
Quick quiz: If a patient or a payor has the choice of having a procedure performed (A) on a hospital inpatient basis, or (B) on an outpatient basis, then, assuming it’s safe to perform that procedure on that patient in either setting, at which setting will it be performed?





