Building a Supply Chain Business Case for Change!

I have found that the best way to get your supply savings ideas (especially those big creative ones) approved by your senior management, customers and stakeholders is to make a formal written business case for change.  Why? Because too much is left unsaid, misunderstood or lacking in logic when you try to verbalize your savings ideas on complicated issues that need to be internalized before they are put into practice.  

I have followed this same advice in my own career where I have proposed big business changing savings ideas at every healthcare organization I have worked in my supply chain management employment. For instance, I have proposed (in writing) a new supply value analysis program at every healthcare organization that I have worked and NEVER once have my proposals been turned down by senior management, customers or stakeholders.

I once decentralized the centralized buying function that had been in place for 46 years at my multi-hospital system and then replaced it with a GPO model based on a written business case for change that saved my healthcare corporation millions of dollars — almost on day one.

I proposed in writing, and eventually received approval from my board of directors, to move forward with a group purchasing program for their 27 long-term care facilities where I was Vice President of Support Services. This reinvented the way they had done business for decades.

I’m sure you get the idea! Developing a written business case for change in order to introduce, test the waters and then to gain approval on your big and even little supply savings ideas is a powerful instrument for the changes you believe are mission critical to your healthcare organization.

Here’s how it works! This business changing and decision-making instrument begins with a written document that would give the background of the problem or opportunity and description of what you want to accomplish. It would describe how it benefits your organization, how it fits into your organization strategic plan, the risk and rewards, the resources required, the responsibilities and the timing and the operational and financial considerations.

Your business case for change doesn’t need to be elaborate, but it does need to be thorough, concise and well thought out. Most importantly, it needs to be your tool of choice that you employ when you want to “change the way we do things around here”.

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