As the healthcare industry recognizes the value of non-medical home care services, many providers offer both medical and non-medical services. Industry leaders say that agencies that provide the continuum of Care can benefit from dividing their sales team by service.
Executives shared that view and other winning sales and marketing strategies on April 10 during a panel discussion at Home Health Care News Capital + Strategy Forum in Washington, D.C.
“A home health sell is very different than a home care sell and is very different than hospice,” panelist Wanda Coley, president and COO at Wilmington, North Carolina-based Well Care Health, told conference attendees. “[We’ve been] trying to divide those sales teams so you can speak to the customer at that level.”
Panel moderator John Griscavage, CEO of San Francisco-based PlayMaker Health, agreed.
“In my experience, it’s a very different sale,” he said. “The several-hour conversation, holding the hand of the family member, is very different than the more transactional nature of home health.”
As those conversations have grown more sophisticated over time—with clients and referral sources focusing more significantly on factors such as readmission rates and quality scores—Well Care has updated its sales teams to match.
“Most recently, we separated our teams,” Coley said. “We did have our sales teams selling the care continuum.”
Well, Care provides home care and home health services to patients in eastern North Carolina. It’s also working to roll out hospice offerings.
“What we found was home health took most of the [sales representatives’] time,” Coley said. “They were incentivized more on the home health, so that’s what they sold. Private duty or home care received less attention, so we separated our marketing teams. We eliminated marketing on the home care side and rolled it into a branch manager role.”
The move has allowed sales representatives to hone in on selling home health, maximizing referrals. Coley said that Care’s hospice line will also have its own sales team.
Panellist Tim Hanold—CEO of Richmond, Virginia-based CareAdvantage, which offers medical and non-medical services in the mid-Atlantic—also lauded separating service lines. His company has also recently taken a similar approach to the market, allowing CareAdvantage to customize content for different areas.
“Previously, we took a broad-brush approach to our digital marketing platform,” he said. “We needed to outsource it and use a company called Five19 out of Richmond. They have these different tactics that allow us to be more hyper-local across the mid-Atlantic. That’s native video, unique blog content, and things that speak to our different markets.”
Meanwhile, panelist Lesly Cardiac—senior vice president of marketing and public relations at Sunrise, Florida-based Interim Healthcare—says the home care and hospice franchise is also embracing local marketing.
While maintaining brand consistency is a priority, the company is exploring new ways to allow local offices to make their own locations.
“It’s a balance game,” Cardiac told attendees. “Consumers are local. They want local marketing, and local marketing is now becoming hyper-local marketing. … Where the opportunity lies is that the industry may look at the franchisor from a marketing perspective a little differently. Maybe the way they view us is more providing the infrastructure to allow the markets to make it their own and adapt to their market’s needs.”