Greetings!
Are you
experiencing feature creep?
How many of
the products, services and technologies (PS&T) that you are buying
are really new, original and innovative? Or, are they the
recycled versions of PS&T’s that have been around for years with
a new feature added here and there?
Feature Creep:
Drapes, gowns, gloves, dressings, face masks, hand soaps, instrument
milks, custom packs, instrument cleaners, safety syringes, and
sterilizer controls are examples were ramped feature creep is
occurring at your hospital.
My rule of
thumb is that if a proposed PS&T can’t generate a 5% increase
in savings or quality improvements then I shouldn’t be buying it
just because it is pretty, unique or even cheaper than what
I’m purchasing now.
Maybe it’s
time for you to have a new rule to guide your purchase
requests too.
Your Partner
in Supply Chain Savings,
Robert T.
Yokl
President &
Chief Value Strategist
P.S.
Is Your Supply Chain Coming To A Major
Crossroad? Are Looking for A Definitive Way To Lead Your
Organization to The Next Level of Supply Chain Performance?
|
Are
new strategies, tactics, tools, and techniques required to
dig deeper and broader for supply chain savings?
Supply
Six
Sigma
CLICK
HERE TO LEARN MORE
|
Three Ways To Look For Actionable Business Intelligence In Your Data
“Many Hospitals
Have Mastered The Art of Collecting Data, But Don’t Know What To Do
With It.”
Supply chain professionals have
spent millions on databases to collect their purchasing and
inventory data to identify unfavorable patterns and trends, spot
problems and to recognize new savings opportunities.
Now that hospitals systems and
IDNs have mastered the art of collecting data, do they know
what to do with it? If you fit into this category of not knowing
what to do with your data, here are three ways to look for
actionable business intelligence in your data:
1.
Know What You Want
If you are
going hunting you need to know what you are hunting for (i.e. bears,
elks, reindeers or tigers) in order to find them. It’s the same
with data mining, if you don’t know what you’re looking for
with your data you might never find it.
As an
illustration, if you are targeting to reduce your utilization
misalignments (wasteful and inefficient consumption, misuse or
misapplication of your PS&T) then you need to arrange your data by
commodity groups that represent like things (i.e. custom packs,
laundry chemicals, plumbing supplies, office supplies, etc.), not by
vendor, manufacturer or customer. Otherwise, you will corrupt
and distort your data with things that you aren’t looking for
and have no interest in.
2.
Organize In Clusters
You need to
organize your data in smaller clusters of similar
information, such as, utilization data, inventory data, orthopedics,
pacemakers, stents, etc. Then you will be ready for the hunt,
because you will now be working with data that has the same profile,
characteristics and exclusivity. If you are working with the whole
university of data that you have been collecting, you will only
confound your data mining efforts.
3.
Create a Dashboard
To observe
patterns and trends over time a “dashboard” is the ideal tool
to use for this purpose. It will automatically show you a stop
action movie of how your targeted clustered data elements are
reacting over time. For instance, are your surgeons utilizing more
high impact orthopedic implants than you budgeted for this month or
are more feature rich pacemakers being purchased than you
anticipated?
All organizations are on overload
with data. The amount
of corporate storage space in terabytes of data is up 57%,
just in the past three years, and is expected to rise by 430% by
this year as reported by Fortune Magazine. But these statistics
don’t mean that our data-sleuthing is getting any better.
To get better
with your data-sleuthing you will need not only to master
data collection, but to also master how to look for and find
actionable business intelligence in your data.
DID
YOU KNOW…
The Father of
Six Sigma was Bill Smith, Vice President of Quality Assurance at
Motorola in the 80s, who built a better mousetrap to improve any
organization’s quality and reduce their cost at the same time.