New Supply Best Practices Webinar Announced!
Influence Your C-Suite for Positive Results!
Webinar Objectives:
What is Your C-Suite Thinking?
What Are They Really Thinking?
Solution: More and Better TLC
TEACH to Gain Respect
LEAD in the Right Direction
COACH to Gain Commitment
July 17, 2008 - 1:00pm EST.
Webinar Leader - Robert T. Yokl, President/Chief Value Strategist Strategic Value Analysis in Healthcare
Remember…The Webinar May Be FREE But The Information is Priceless
How Are You Selecting Your Value Analysis Projects?
First of all, don’t confuse new or renewal GPO contracts as being value analysis projects, because they are not. This is contract management in its purest sense, which is a whole other discipline that has its own rules and models.
What I’m talking about here is the way in which you selecting your VA projects, which can unearth millions of dollars of savings in your value streams. For the best results, you should establish criteria for the selection of your VA projects. Here are five criteria I would suggest you start with:
1. Dollar Threshold: No VA project should be undertaken on a product, service or technology that has less than a $25,000 annual spend. The reason: Your ROI would be very small, if at all!
2. Projected Timeline: If your VA project will take more than 90-days to complete it might be better to break the project into smaller projects. Projects that have long timelines tend to go off track. Keep your projects in bit size pieces!
3. Probability of Success: If you only have a 50% probability of success in implementing a project (e.g. orthopedic implant study) then delay the project until you have an 80% success factor.
4. Project Alignment: If your VA project is not supported by your management then I would delay it for another day. Why fight city hall – you rarely win!
5. Solution Clarity: If you already know the solution to a problem (e.g. defective material) then don’t initiate a VA project — just fix the problem. It will save you a lot of time and effort by doing so.
These are just a few ideas to get you on the road to selecting the best VA Projects using criteria vs. gut feel with the greatest possible ROIs.
Your Partner In Innovative Savings,
Bob Yokl
Robert T Yokl
Chief Value Strategist
Strategic Value Analysis® In Healthcare
P.S. My staff thinks I’m crazy to offer our e-newsletter subscribers a 30-day “test drive” on our Utilizer™ Dashboard and you only pay if it works! But I’m so convinced that once you try it you won’t want to live without it that I have turned a deaf ear to my staff’s objections to bring you this outrageous “pay if it works” guarantee. Email me to learn more about this special offer - bobpres@strategicva.com
P.P.S. Don’t forget to check out my new blog article “A Lean Way of Thinking! This will give you a new way of thinking about your workload.
Building Your Toolkit!
I spoke last week at the North Carolina Association of Materials Managers Annual conference on the topic “Value Analysis 2.0: New Rules, Systems and Models for Long-Lasting Savings Success”, which gave me an even more in-depth insight into the challenges that supply chain professionals are facing today.
I also had lunch with a few MMs and value analysis managers at the conference who wanted to know how they could uncover the big and robust utilization savings that I talked about in my presentation. This is when I realized that supply chain professionals aren’t building their toolkits with the precise tools to prepare them for the future of supply chain expense management, i.e. utilization management.
This is because the old tools that healthcare organizations have been employing (MMIS, ERP, and spend managers) for years won’t get this new work accomplished. That’s why we now need to embrace the new art and science of value analytics to search out our utilization misalignments and eliminate them. By doing so supply chain professionals can save 3%, 7% or even 12% in our supply expenses – beyond price.
If you would like to know more about this new and emerging discipline I would suggest that you download my new special report “Utilization Management: The Future of Supply Expense Management” that will show you what you need to do to build your toolkit to meet this challenges in the 21st century.
Your Partner In Innovative Savings,
Bob Yokl
Robert T Yokl
Chief Value Strategist
Strategic Value Analysis® In Healthcare
P.S. This is the last call (deadline May 31st) for applicants for our Certified Value Analysis Leadership Training program at our early bird rate of $1,192 ($211 discount). If you have been thinking about applying to this one of a kind program this is the time to do it. Otherwise, you will miss this discount period! Learn More
P.P.S. Don’t forget to check out my new blog article “Are You Really Practicing Value Analysis or Doing Something Else” (Revisited). This is where I talk about how I have found that value analysis coordinators, managers and directors aren’t practicing value analysis either. – to their disadvantage! Read Here
How to Plan, Reduce, Improve and Succeed Even With Limited Resources!
by Robert T. Yokl, President
We all know we need to do more with less since our healthcare organizations’ revenues are flat, reimbursement is meager and staffing is at a premium. Rather then wince over these realities let’s talk about how we can plan, reduce, improve and succeed even with limited resources.
It’s been my experience that there is always a better way to do things that can dramatically improve your situation, even with limited resources. I remember when I was hired for my first materials manager’s job at a children’s hospital in Philadelphia, I quickly found that my new employer was so cash-strapped that on some weeks we were told we would not be getting a paycheck. But that didn’t stop me from planning and implementing a new par level system, reducing my utilization cost with my new value analysis team, improving my supply chain operations with a new computerized inventory system and succeeding with very limited resources. I was even promoted after only a year on the job!
Success in anything, when its comes right down to it, is having the right ATTITUDE, not money, time or even resources to get the job done. Since my first job as a materials manager at that children’s hospital I just talked about, I have worked for some of the largest, and most affluent healthcare organizations in the country, but you know what, I really didn’t really get anything more done with more money, more time and more resources than I did when I didn’t have any of these things many years ago.
If you are looking to succeed as a supply chain professional, don’t let any constraints, of any kind, hold you back from your planning, cost reductions, and improvements even if you have limited resources, since they really don’t matter if your have the right ATTITUDE to succeed!
P.S. If you would like more powerful savings ideas like this one I would recommend that you sign-up for our “no cost” weekly Savings Beyond Price™ e-Newsletter at www.Strategicva.com. You will also get a copy of my e-book “Your Target Blueprint for Supply Chain Management Success”, as a bonus.
It’s Only Money Right?
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