MORE WITH less (Oh not again!) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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MORE WITH less (Oh not again!)

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MORE WITH less (Oh not again!) Kathleen L. Lewton, MHA, Fellow PRSA Steven V. Seekins, MPA, Fellow PRSA Kenneth G. Trester, Fellow PRSA Lewton,Seekins&Trester – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MORE WITH less (Oh not again!)


1
MORE WITH less(Oh not again!)
  • Kathleen L. Lewton, MHA, Fellow PRSA
  • Steven V. Seekins, MPA, Fellow PRSA
  • Kenneth G. Trester, Fellow PRSA
  • Lewton,SeekinsTrester
  • PRSA International Conference October 17, 2010

2
We come with (some) good news
  • Cutting budgets can be an opportunity . . . . to
    reinvent your work in a newbetter wayReally.
    Glass half-full and all that!
  • We are here with PRACTICAL counsel on how to do
    itAnd whats the alternative? Just say NO?

3
Overview Weve heard it all before
  • Tighten belts
  • Cut out the fat
  • Across the board reductions
  • Support areas (staff functions, aka fluff) take
    the first hits
  • And theres only one difference today . . . . .

4
This economic downturn is even impacting
healthcare
  • Provider organizations are desperately seeking to
    mitigate the effect of the financial crisis
    says HealthLeaders national exec survey
  • And they are walkin the walk
  • Cost reduction one of top 3 priorities of CEOs
  • They see hospitals really ARE closing
  • If NYC is a bellweather . . . . . small and large
    alike are going down
  • Rx companies are looking at less-than-robust
    pipelines, patents expiring, ever lurking threat
    of (more) government regulations
  • Docs ready to sell practices to best bidder

5
And even organizations that are doing OK . . .
. .
  • Are looking three or four years out and (if
    theyre paying attention), theyre worried
  • The cost slashing consulting firms are doing a
    lot of business
  • And they love to look at the expense side of the
    ledger first
  • Even IF you may avoid budget or staff cuts, you
    are surely being asked to do more, more, more

6
We could (and would) go on and on . . . .
  • The CEOs were hearing from are battening down
    the proverbial hatches
  • SO when the phone rings or the email arrives
    saying Tell me what youll do to cut 30 out
    of your budget . . . . . OR
  • Here are six more things we need your team
    to handle . . . . .

7
Is it mean to be leanORkeen to be lean??
8
More with less IS an opportunity!
  • Weve all been through this in the past
  • First reaction oh my, but not US?
  • Is it something Ive done? Or said?
  • But were doing SUCH great work!
  • Ive tried SO HARD . . .

9
Time to remember . . . .
  • Its not personal. Its business.
  • Thats how the CEO sees it, so if you react
    personally . . . . .

10
Yes, we CAN fight the fight
  • Make a great, and 100 accurate, case for the
    value of the work we do
  • Explain and explain why were different, should
    be exempt, are better than the others, help the
    others, etc.
  • But really do we want to be perceived as
    DIFFERENT than the rest of our management peers?
    Is that the way to the CEOs heart?

11
Because even IF its true . . .
  • What youre really asking for with that line of
    attack is
  • Take less from my division and MORE from
    somewhere else
  • Nursing?
  • And what we sound like is
  • Tone deaf, self-centered or truly clueless

12
I said we are in bad shape, and my PR VP said
but I still need this budget
13
The other scenario . . .
  • OK, Ill get a plan together.
  • And do you also want us to start working on a
    communications plan so we can be ready to present
    this to the organization?
  • THAT is music to the CEOs ears
  • PS You have to really mean it. You cant go
    back in two weeks with Heres why we really
    cant cut OUR budget.

14
SO . . . . . where do you start and what do you
do?
  • A practical 5-step
  • analytic approach

15
Our 5-Step Approach
  • Lock in the essentials that must stay (but may be
    revamped).
  • Then look at whats left and
  • Ruthlessly assess the high cost items
  • Analyze and evaluate remaining programs and
    prioritize the keepers
  • Identify NEW best practice efforts that you want
    to add
  • Finally go back over whats left on the table
    and ask How can we do this more cost
    effectively

16
  • Step One Identify, justify and recommit to the
    ESSENTIALS

17
LST Short List of Essentials
  • Customer satisfaction (and the culture change to
    get there, if needed)
  • Employee communications
  • Online/website core channel, front door
  • These have to stay -- but that doesnt mean as
    is all can be revised and revamped with an eye
    toward leaner, keener

18
Essential 1 Customer SatisfactionPR plays a
leading role
19
The core of any organization Customer
carecaring
  • Reputation is built on reality -- how we perform,
    how we take care of and build relationships with
    our core stakeholders,
  • Promotion builds awareness and supports
    perception but the foundation is performance
  • So marketing/PR must be integrally involved in
    this key arena of organizational performance, not
    just relegated to promotion or communications

20
Up Close Customer satisfaction
  • Customers are expert endorsers their
    opinions based on experiences and their
    satisfaction drives word-of-mouth endorsements
  • Todays picture isnt pretty
  • Banks, airlines, pharmacies, hotels, Netflix,
    Pampers the blogosphere is rife with UNHAPPY
    CUSTOMERS
  • As prices increase, crankiness and expectations
    increase and poor service results in REALLY MAD
    people

21
Culture change may be required
  • Customer satisfaction often requires true culture
    change, and PR/marketing staff are the culture
    change warriors
  • McKinsey study of execs in companies that
    successfully implemented change
  • Clear, comprehensive and compelling communication
  • Define and share clear goals
  • Communicate a compelling story
  • Acknowledge success regularly and publicly

22
PR Culture Changers
  • CEOs of top performers in the quality and
    customer satisfaction arena say it has to start
    at the top
  • Ideal place for PR/marketing to step up and help
    CEO make it happen
  • If you have a crisis, leverage it
  • If you dont have a crisis, lead by inspiration,
    persuasion, threats . . . . .
  • Use communications, research and planning skills
    to ensure that data is translated into action

23
The public relations role also includes
  • Culture management
  • Keep the platform burning
  • Provide measurement tools
  • Manage the customer research
  • Shoppers
  • Other feedback mechanisms (Web, callbacks)
  • Spread the message
  • Successes AND failures/challenges
  • Metrics outcomes and benchmarks
  • Keep it on top managements agenda

24
Make it stick - even if youre big, complex
decentralized
  • Cant be Change Initiative du Jour
  • New processes to support new cultures
  • HR policies and practices critical
  • Reliable tracking systems
  • Accountability mechanisms
  • Disciplined, methodical rollout plan with
    standardized communications
  • Benchmark against national peers, AND your own
    market competition

25
Essential 2 Internal CommsCreating a motivated
workforce
26
Employee Communications A core sustainable
strategy
  • Employee behavior drives QUALITY,customer
    satisfaction, market share, efficiency and more
  • Employees can support or undercut all messages to
    other stakeholders

27
Workforce communications
  • Require multiple channels
  • Education/literacy variations
  • Employee preferences
  • Repetition important
  • AND Face to face with supervisor remains 1
    preferred channel
  • Publications, e-mail, videos, etc., can be used
    to reinforce, explain details

28
Case in Point The Huddle
  • Organizational problem
  • Low employee satisfaction with intradepartmental
    communications
  • Low employee satisfaction with trust
  • Bottom quartile patient satisfaction
  • Serious financial losses

29
Solution The Huddle Breakthrough
communications tool
  • Systematic process for assuring group discussions
    every day
  • Simplicity 5 to 10 minute meeting
  • Consistency everyone, everyday, every shift
  • Interactivity discuss customer service standards
  • Motivational reinforce personal values
  • Fun engender team spirit

30
Do you rely on huddles for information?
31
Patient loyalty scorescause and effect?
32
Other major gains
Pre Post Change
Consumer Top-of-mind Awareness 36.3 44.2 ? 7.9
Consumer Preference 31.2 41.6 ? 10.4

Market Share 35.3 38.9 ? 3.6
Profitability -2 1 ?3pts
33
Chain of success starts with satisfied employees
34
Essential 3 Web PresenceIts the foundation
35
We really dont need a slide here
  • We all know we live in a www. World
  • But how many sites are truly best in class?
  • Easily, easily navigable
  • Eye-catching and easy to READ
  • Great copy thats exciting
  • CURRENT and instantly updated
  • If not, why not?
  • Facebook friends and tweets dont make up for a
    HOME page thats not top notch

36
Now that we know whats staying . . . .
  • . . . . .How to sort out the rest

37
Once the essentials are nailed . . .
  • The hard part starts
  • What stays as is
  • What stays but is downsized or restructured
  • What goes on the auction block (back to the
    departments who should be doing it)
  • What goes in the dark of night
  • Whats given a decent public burial
  • And whats added

38
There IS an upside opportunity to lose dead
wood, streamline, enhance
  • Yes, some of this will be painful (we all love
    our four color glossy magazines)
  • BUT this is also an opportunity to get rid of
    things you have hated for years
  • If youve always done it for TEN years
  • And to ADD best practices youve wanted to add
    but couldnt get extra budget for
  • Slash enough and theres suddenly money available

39
Recap Steps 2-5
  • Step 2 Assess the high ticket items
  • Step 3 Rank order the rest of the list using a
    defined, rigorous process
  • Step 4 Determine what youd like to add
  • Step 5 Go back and look at every program with
    your Is there a better, cheaper way to do THIS
    radar

40
Step Two Look at the high cost programs
  • CRM Highly expensive not always effectively
    used. Can you do just as well buying segmented
    mailing lists?
  • Ratings services (pay2play) Expensive, seldom
    worth the investment. Consumers dont use them,
    and everyone can get some sort of high rating,
    thus leveling the playing field.
  • Consultants Often theyre first to go, but
    carefully evaluate their value in resetting
    strategy or outsourcing project work.
  • Sponsorships Rigorously assess ROI. If a
    sponsorship has no purpose but to gratify
    someone, assign the cost to that someones
    budget.
  • Publications Do they really have a purpose
    anymore? Havewe maximized what we can
    communicate for free? Can we do more
    face-to-face communication?

41
Step Three Assess and prioritize (How to retain
your sanity, your employment status and your
peers)
  • Hint use a PROCESS,
  • not a dart board

42
Look at your to do list strategically
  • Assessment and analysis
  • Know your audiences and how to best reach them
  • Identify how each project you do ties
    specifically to key business objectives
  • Ask around interview the key players and find
    out what they need, want and expect from PR
  • Clues to what you can broom away
  • Also fodder if they end up saying dont cut
    anything (because no one is willing to give up
    anything)
  • Do THEY agree on corporate business objectives?

43
By going through this process
  • You build and maintain credibility and support
    from the rest of the management team,
  • Youre seen as a canny innovator whos clearly
    trying to craft win-win solutions in lean times

44
Then start sorting
  • Create a set of criteria to assess each program
    or project your department now handles
  • Adds a level of objectivity to the process and
    helps you sort through it all

45
Marketing and Communications Prioritization
Methodology
Program Priority Decision
Publicity
Marketing
Key Client Business as Usual
Included in Strategic Plan
Not Included in Strategic Plan
Potential
No Potential
OUT (3)
IN (7)
IN (8)
IN (1)
Marketing can Impact
Low Marketing Impact
High ROI
Low ROI
OUT (3)
KEY 1 Will do major program 2 Planning
support may do 3 Wont do 7 Publicity
effort only 8 Key client business as usual
Low Backing
High Backing
Resources Available
No Resources Identified
No Resources Identified
Resources Available
IN (2)
IN (1)
IN (2)
OUT (3)
46
For example
47
Criteria to consider
  • Does this program/project
  • Have a champion (CEO, Board?)
  • Support market growth (raise funds, recruit
    students, etc.)
  • Enhance our reputation
  • Build relationships with a key audience
  • Highlight a niche thats unique to our
    organization
  • Contribute to employee morale
  • Have a measurable impact

48
This process gets you to
  • The point where you have looked at everything you
    are doing with a rigorous eye, using facts and
    data
  • And you have numbers to help you rank order the
    list
  • That helps when someone says we MUST keep doing
    18, because you can say OK, then 4 has to go

49
Step Four Whats shall we add?
  • What new channels/tactics can you create/enhance
    to deliver their message to the right audience
  • Social media
  • Blogs
  • Thought leader programs cost almost nothing,
    and if you make 200 key opinion leaders
    insiders youre reaching 20,000 people
  • Community-based events
  • Affinity groups
  • AND . . . . . . (yall share your ideas now)

50
Step 5 One last lookCan we do it cheaper?
  • Take your final list the essentials, the
    keepers in priority order, and the new additions,
    and look at each tactic, askingIs there a way
    to do this less expensively?
  • Online vs.printed
  • Market to docs vs consumers or consumers VIA docs
  • Face to face, the cheapest channel of all . . . .

51
Having completed the five steps . . . .
52
Now you have a PLAN
  • Begins with the Essentials
  • Omits high ticket items that dont deliver real
    value
  • Rank orders programs and projects, eliminating
    the low rankers to make more time for . . . . .
  • New programs
  • AND everything has been scrutinized for cost
    efficiency and effectiveness

53
So sell it . . . . .
  • It meets needs within budget constraints
  • Its based on best practices, proven effective
  • Youve built in metrics and research dollars to
    ID results!
  • Have an expert or expert opinion available to tee
    up or back up your plan
  • Pre-sell it to key peers so they get it and
    will speak up in support
  • Youve created a better program, with more
    content and results, for the same or less money .
    . . AND youre free from the things that never
    worked!

54
Stay in touch
  • We welcome phone or email questions and dialogue
  • Klewton_at_LSTLLC.com 917 734 5376
  • Sseekins_at_LSTLLC.com 818 378 6664
  • Ktrester_at_LSTLLC.com 313-515-0321
  • www.lstllc.com
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