Topic: marketing
The Innovation Shopper
Some will be the sort of folks who insist on using the latest and greatest. Others will represent large purchasers, searching for something that might work on patients who haven’t responded to other methods.
Topics: administration, customer service, marketing, systems, Why Some Programs Succeed
The Relationship Shopper
It requires a certain personality type – patient, reassuring, unpressuring – to engender trust and establish this sort of relationship in a business context.
Topics: administration, customer service, marketing, systems, Why Some Programs Succeed
The Price Shopper
A government or insurance buyer needs to make certain that a provider offers a particular service and meets particular standards of performance. They won’t necessarily require you to exceed those standards, or provide extras. They understand that we get what we pay for.
Topics: administration, customer service, marketing, Why Some Programs Succeed
Success in the Marketplace
Addiction treatment is never just a business. It’s a public trust. Our goal must be to fulfill that trust by providing the very best service we can to the people who need it. That doesn’t mean we can’t do very well from a business perspective.
Topics: administration, customer service, marketing, Why Some Programs Succeed
Why Some Programs Succeed: A Marketing Approach
Even among programs with a fine clinical program, dedicated staff, good administration, some are more successful at attracting customers than others. Marketing offers a key to understanding why.
Topics: customer service, marketing, Why Some Programs Succeed
Making Phone Contacts More Meaningful (Marketing)
In most cases, our only pre-admission contact with prospective patients and families is by telephone.
Topics: clinical management, customer service, marketing, referral
Why Don’t Physicians Refer People for Treatment?
A patient said he’d visited a local family clinic three times in the past year for drinking-related problems and the physician never once mentioned that he needed treatment.
Topics: assessment, clinical management, diagnosis, health care, marketing, physicians, recognizing addiction, signs and symptoms