Monitor Referrals, Marketing with Customer Relations Software
Published on the Aug. 9, 2012, DiagnosticImaging.com website
By Whitney L.J. Howell
Think for a moment. Can you immediately identify the physician or practice that sends you the most referrals? Do you really know how your marketers are spending their time to attract new business? If you don’t know these answers, your bottom line might not be as healthy as it could be.
Many radiology practices are turning to customer relations management (CRM) software to help gather the data that will shed light on these questions. This tool can track where your business comes from and where opportunities for new relationships might exist. And, in a competitive environment, knowing how to maximize your workload is crucial, according to many in the industry.
“Oversight for cultivating relationships with referring offices and physicians is critical,” said Gail Schwartz, healthcare category manager at Marketing Works, which makes Tracking Works CRM for radiology. “Many marketers keep notes from a visit in Excel sheets or on the back of business cards, and there’s no way of tracking what anyone is doing. With a CRM, you have a robust repository to input data, share it, and demonstrate the impact of marketing efforts.”
CRMs, priced roughly between $14,000 and $84,000 plus any monthly fees, are also growing in popularity. In 2008, global information technology and advisory company Gartner Inc. estimated North American spending on CRM software across all industries would balloon from $4.3 billion in 2007 to $7.6 billion in 2012. Schwartz confirmed there’s an increased interest in healthcare. Both hospitals and practices are investigating and implementing CRMs, even though many still don’t know how to best implement it for their own needs.
What CRM Software Does
On average, a typical imaging center can have between 700 to 900 referring physicians, and keeping track of all client contacts and past marketing efforts is difficult, said Glenn Weintraub, marketing and business development director for IDS, maker of AbbaDox CRM for radiology. Housing this information in a central location can tell you whether your referring physicians are satisfied with your services, where you can improve, and even where you rank amongst your peers in turn-around time, he said.
According to Weintraub, AbbaDox — a cloud-based CRM tool — meets these needs through an interactive dashboard that allows you to key in pertinent information regarding specific organizational processes, such as how many marketing calls or visits are made daily and how far in advance visits are scheduled. With this data in place, you can run a variety of reports on the types of cases referring physicians send over, draw trend analyses, and identify clusters of referring doctors.
“We can break down data by physician group to see which provider is the dominant referrer,” he said. “Through our various reporting processes, we identify what marketing efforts work to grow a business.”
In addition to running reports, Tracking Works CRM also allows you to categorize your referring physicians, Schwartz said. By dividing these doctors into groups, such as those who routinely refer and those who could refer more, you can best target your marketing efforts. Knowing where your growth opportunities are makes it easier to invest sales time with practices that aren’t yet sending you the maximum amount of referrals.
By helping you be proactive in your business relationships, CRMs can also pinpoint the reason behind any referral drop-offs, Schwartz said. For example, if you know a physician is on an extended vacation because you’ve stored data on those visits, you know not to exert any unnecessary marketing efforts.
Both AbbaDox and Tracking Works — two options among more than a dozen CRM systems — import at least a year’s worth of marketing data so practices don’t have to start from scratch with the software. They also offer training sessions that teach you how to use the tools in the mobile and office-based formats. The more you understand about your CRM tool, the less involvement you’ll need from your information technology staff, Weintraub said, freeing them up to focus on maintaining your PACS and RIS systems.
To read the remainder of the article at its original location: http://www.diagnosticimaging.com/practice-management/content/article/113619/2095814
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