What is your agency doing to ensure that you have strong referrals coming in for the rest of 2009?

Posted by Mike Ferris on Tuesday, November 17, 2009 and posted in Home Health Care Hospice Sales

What is your agency doing to ensure that you have strong referrals coming in for the rest of 2009?

What has you pumped up right now?

Posted by Mike Ferris on Tuesday, November 03, 2009 and posted in Home Health Care Hospice Sales

Holiday Promotions

Posted by Mike Ferris on Monday, October 19, 2009 and posted in Home Health Care Hospice Sales

Tell us what holiday promotions you’re planning for this year. How does it compare to past years?

Breast Cancer Awareness Month

Posted by Mike Ferris on Wednesday, October 07, 2009 and posted in Home Health Care Hospice Sales

Tell us what you/your agency are doing for Breast Cancer Awareness Month.  We invite you to share with us your photos, campaign ideas, etc.

People Can Hear Your Smile

Posted by Mike Ferris on Friday, September 04, 2009 and posted in Home Health Care Hospice Sales

Make sure you smile while talking on the phone. To help you maintain a smile throughout the phone call, buy a small mirror. Place this mirror near your telephone in your office. Check the mirror often to make sure you’re smiling. When you’re on the phone, you can tell whether the other person is smiling and so can the other person. That being said, if looking at yourself in the mirror makes you uncomfortable, then put something that makes you smile in front of you!

Excerpted from LEGENDARY RESULTS: Managing Referrals & Increasing Admissions Vol 1: Referral Management by Michael Ferris and Polly Rehnwall

Differentiation—How to Know Where to Draw the Line!

Posted by Mike Ferris on Friday, August 21, 2009 and posted in Home Health Care Hospice Sales

Want to know why your best referral sources choose your agency?

Ask Them!  This is something that you should do often and using different methods. You should send them referral source satisfaction surveys, have the sales representative ask and senior management should call and visit.

Ask “What do we do better than any of the other agencies?” or “What are the two things you like best about our agency’s services?”

Once you know why they love you, then you can use this to develop your message. 

Do any of the following sound familiar?  Do you see some definite trends?

~ We have a multilingual staff.

~ We accept most referrals and do not “cherry pick” the easier and most profitable referrals. 

~ We process the referral quickly and easily.

~ They like the quality of care given to our patients. 

~ Our nurses are kind and caring.

~ Our staff is reliable, often going beyond their responsibilities to offer suggestions to the patient’s family or physician. 

~ Availability—24/7

~ Reliable—can count on us to do what we say we will do.

~ We are committed to providing professional, ethical, and quality service.

~ We follow-up with our clients on a regular basis to assess service effectiveness and to make revisions that reflect changing needs and wishes

Let us know what your referral sources love about your agency.

Web Marketing Secrets

Posted by Mike Ferris on Friday, August 07, 2009 and posted in Home Health Care Hospice Sales

The key to successful long-term Web marketing is to start an ongoing dialogue with the prospective patients or clients.  The goal for your electronic marketing and even traditional advertising should be to build a list of people interested in home health, hospice or private duty.  Then you can keep value added information coming to them on a regular basis.

This is the best way to leverage your Web site.  Make it easy for them to sign-up by putting the sign-up box on the first page in a prominent location.  Offer some item of perceived value, such as a free report, that will entice them to sign-up.  Make sure that they opt-in to your list and then keep building!

Tip: Put an e-mail address in your advertisements to enable interested people to contact you for information or the free report.  This will result in a much higher conversion ratio than just listing your Web address.

Note: If you are part of an integrated health care system or hospital based, make sure it is easy to find your agency’s information on the Web.  Too many times I find that these home health agencies and hospices are hidden on some hard to find page on the parent company’s Web site.  Get your own domain name and set up your own pages—the results will be startling!

Dealing with Doctors

Posted by Mike Ferris on Friday, July 31, 2009 and posted in Hospice Sales

It is important to recognize that dealing with doctors requires us to consider that doctors are different. They are typically direct and to the point, in a hurry, and interested in benefits. The first 60 seconds are important to make an impression and deliver a benefit in listening to you further. Be prepared! Anytime you schedule a meeting with a physician, have your plan for what you want to communicate and your goal for the outcome for this meeting. Also be ready for those chance meetings.

The physician is many times not the person to determine where a particular patient will be referred for home care services. In most cases, the physician is going to “bless” the choice of agency and then someone else will actually make the referrals. For hospitalized patients, the doctor writing the discharge orders will either specify your agency or just discharge to home care and allow the discharge planner or social work to choose the agency. A few pointers in dealing with doctors:

~ No small talk please
~ Do not bombard them with copies of the same orders to sign
~ Service, service service when dealing with doctors
~ Make it easy to do business your agency
~ Always thank the doctors for referrals, especially the non-admits
~ Make your thank you’s personal and special
~ Always be professional
~ Be a good listener
~ Always follow-up quickly
~ Address any problems immediately
~ Build your custom service plan and deliver on it

Excerpted from Field Guide to Selling Hospice Services with Legendary Results by Michael Ferris

Invest in Your Sales People and Program

Posted by Mike Ferris on Friday, July 17, 2009 and posted in Home Health Care Hospice Sales

Investment in sales training will pay for itself many times over.  The best sales organizations in the world have regular and frequent sales training.  Those agencies that invest in sales training today will see impressive results tomorrow. 

There are many opportunities for sales training, including, but not limited to:

~ Home care- or hospice-specific sales workshops and conferences
~ Sales and motivational workshops and conferences that are not industry specific
~ State and national association meetings and conferences (a recent NAHC Annual Meeting had sales and marketing programs during every one of the educational sessions)
~ Teleconferences that are provided by home care- and hospice-related groups
~ On-site training and coaching
~ Books and books on tape or CD

Any sales training opportunities like those listed above will pay big dividends; a relatively small investment today will result in sustained long-term results.  Furthermore, the retention rate of your sales team may also increase as productivity increases and salespeople see continued results.

It is increasingly important for home care and hospice agencies to provide support for ongoing education for all of their professional staff.  Combine training for professional staff with that for your sales team when appropriate.  This support can be an important strategic advantage when recruiting and retaining existing staff.  It’s a win-win situation.

Excerpted from 101 Home Care Promotional Strategies that Deliver Legendary Results Without Busting Your Budget! by Michael Ferris

Unbeatable Combination

Posted by Mike Ferris on Friday, July 10, 2009 and posted in Home Health Care Hospice Sales

The most successful home health and hospice sales professionals are those that are the combination of:

* Passion
* People skills
* Knowledge
* Service

The only one that you can truly train is product knowledge!  People either have a passion for home health or hospice or they don’t.  They are good with and enjoy people, or not.  They either get service, or they don’t.  Nordstrom’s (famous for customer service) hires people that were raised to say please and thank you.  Then they train their sales people everything possible to know about the product they will be selling.  The same formula works in home health and hospice.

Hire the right people and then train them to be the most professional home health and hospice sales people.  Sales training is a lifelong learning process; the best sales people in all industries seek to improve themselves every day—no matter how many sales awards they have won! 

Set Goals and Seek Training

Anyone can set a goal, but training is what makes them possible to achieve.  Learning the skills necessary to execute on your plan makes the difference.  You can become great at anything, but not without practice.  The key then to greatness is practice.

If you think about it, most people never practice.  They don’t train and don’t seek coaching.  If you invest 30 minutes a day in something, you can become good at it, no matter who you are.  If you spend more time than that and really focus your efforts, you can become truly great.  Tiger Woods hits thousands of practice shots every week.  Piano virtuosos practice for hours every day of the year.  How serious are you and your sales team?

Simione Consultants’ fall Square One and AdmitRight Boot Camp sales training dates just announced!  Click here for more information and to register!

Two Ways to Grow Referrals

Posted by Mike Ferris on Friday, June 26, 2009 and posted in Home Health Care Sales

There are only two ways to grow referrals:

1) Gain referrals that would have gone to the competitor

2) Expand a referral source’s use of home health

Think about the process to gain each type of referral differently. When competing for referrals, you need to sell using competitive advantages. How you can make their lives easier is important. Know how you compare to the other agency they are using. Never trash the competition, but you should always make sure to know what is most important to the referral source and how you compare in those areas.

To expand a referral source’s use of home health services, you must first understand how they currently use them. Then ask good questions about the types of patients they serve and the ones that cause them the most challenges. This will enable you to present your services as a viable solution to them. These can many times be the easiest referrals to garner as they are ones that are currently going without. These referrals are good business and you are truly benefiting the community.

Excerpted from Field Guide to Selling Home Care Services with Legendary Results by Michael Ferris

Telephone Sales Skills

Posted by Mike Ferris on Friday, May 15, 2009 and posted in Hospice Sales

All sales people should have good phone sales skills. They must be able to make good calls to both existing accounts and prospective accounts. In hospice sales there is much less phone work than in other fields of sales; nonetheless, always be as effective as possible. Many of the skills that you have learned to be effective in person are also effective when used on the phone.

Some other dimensions to understand when using the phone include:

- Leaving voice messages
- Getting through the screener
- Creating a bond by phone
- Capturing attention

Use the telephone as an extension of your time and to leverage it. Most of the time you will not want to call ahead for appointments as this is not usually the best approach. That being said, there are times when this is the only way to get in front of the right people at a specific account.

The most common use of phones in the sales process is to follow-up with contacts to make sure that they received information that was dropped off, that things are going well, to deliver promised information, etc. These calls should be planned before dialing the phone and are an integral part of the process. Planning is paramount.

Finally, you will want to use the phone to thank referral sources from time to time. This enables you to leverage your time and vary the method of thanking the referral source.

Excerpted from Field Guide to Selling Hospice Services with Legendary Results by Michael Ferris

Make Quality Calls

Posted by Mike Ferris on Friday, April 24, 2009 and posted in Home Health Care Hospice Sales

Full-time home care and hospice sales people should be able to consistently make at least 50 quality sales calls each week.  This is important because the one thing that will directly equate to more referrals is the number of face-to-face sales calls.

The focus is on making quality calls—not the quantity of calls.  Some days and weeks will result in more calls depending on other activities scheduled.  The best way to stay ahead is to constantly work to make as many quality calls as possible.  Meetings and office time are the biggest barriers to making more calls; for this reason, they should be scheduled outside of prime selling time.

With good time management and organizational skills, the home care sales representative should be able to manage 20 - 25 “A” accounts along with the balance of their territory.  You should maintain and complete a weekly call report.  It should be completed at the end of each day.  This will give you and your manager a clear snapshot of your activity for the week just ended.  Be honest in your completion of the report as it is a tool that will help you to be better.

Have the tenacity of a bulldog.  Once you determine that there is a qualified prospective referral source, stay on them until they start using your agency.  Then keep working until you are their preferred agency.  After that, protect them against all competitors.

Excerpted from Field Guide to Selling Home Care Services with Legendary Results by Michael Ferris

Focus on the Basics

Posted by Mike Ferris on Friday, March 20, 2009 and posted in Home Health Care Hospice Sales

Basic sales skills training are applicable to all members of the sales team, no matter their position or experience.  Make sure that your program has a keen focus on the basics and some repetition of this training on a regularly scheduled basis.  These are the building blocks.  They are easily forgotten as bad habits are adopted.  The basics include:

  • Introducing oneself
  • Prospecting
  • Qualifying
  • Presenting
  • Handling objections
  • Closing
  • Relationship management
  • Planning
  • Goal setting

    Excerpted from Field Guide to Selling Hospice Services with Legendary Results by Michael Ferris

  • Hospice Sales Tips

    Posted by Mike Ferris on Friday, February 06, 2009 and posted in Hospice Sales

    This week’s hospice sales tips are in regard to building strong relationships with skilled facilities (SNFs) and assisted living facilities (ALFs).  By maintaining very strong relationships with these facilities in your service area you will grow a predictable hospice patient census.  Here are the keys to growing these important referral sources:

  • Assign a facility specialist to cover the sales and communication with each of the facilities you serve.  Have them ask what will make you the preferred hospice in the facility.  Then earn their business EVERY day by delivering the solutions to fit their needs.
  • Work closely with your home health division (or an agency you partner with if you don’t have a home health division) to provide a comprehensive solution for the discharge planners, social workers and clinicians at the facility.
  • Be visible in the facility.  ALL of your staff should be visible and should maximize your exposure in the facility.  Many times this will drive the referrals.  The sales person should be in the facility as often as is required to meet their needs and check up on how things are going.  This could mean 3 times a week or even daily visits.

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