For all your private medical practice needs

pete@medicalhealthcaremanagement.co.uk

01902 280 442

Hilton Hall, Hilton Lane, Wolverhampton, WV11 2BQ

 

One of the most common remarks I hear from my guys is the number of patients they see in the NHS.

They literally have patients queuing up to see them.

Such a comment is normally followed by the opposite when discussing a consultant surgeon’s private practice.

They want to see and sometimes need to see MORE patients.

This, for me, confirms the absolute cultural difference between the public and private sector.

Different Approach

In the NHS, a consultant surgeon does not have to do much in order for patients to be delivered to them.

The precise and exact opposite applies in the private sector.

In the private sector a consultant surgeon, because fundamentally a private practice is a business, MUST do everything he or she can to attract a patient.

He must engage in pro-active marketing.

He must ensure it is known his practice is there.

First of all however he must comprehensively understand WHY a patient is choosing private.

It is not merely the case of  a patient wanting to be seen private because he or she has private medical insurance.

It is understanding WHY the patient has private medical insurance.

I, for one, dispute it is because private care is better than NHS care.

Ease of Access

More likely it is because the private patient wishes to be seen quicker.

Even so, a consultant surgeon MUST still engage in marketing of whatever description.

If the patient can be seen at the private practice quicker than at an NHS location but the patient is unaware the private practice exists then all bets are off.

Therefore a marketing plan is an integral part of a private consultant surgeon’s business plan.

And therein lies the reference to the first and absolute cultural difference between an NHS practice and a private practice.

It’s a Business

A Private Practise is a business.

In a NHS practice, patients will be delivered to the consultant surgeon without him even asking.

In private practice, patients will not just be delivered. They have to be attracted ti the business.

Note the use of the word BUSINESS.

Private practice is a business.

This is not the time to discuss which marketing strategies will and do work best for a private consultant surgeon.

Today is more concerned with highlighting that due to the differences between the NHS and the private sector.

A private consultant surgeon has no choice but to have a  marketing strategy.

Just as a consultant must have a robust infrastructure to support the business, it is equally as important to have a marketing strategy.

Look at it this way, if any business does not have a regular number of customers or clients (in the case of a medical practise PATIENTS) then inevitably the business will not succeed.

pete@medicalhealthcaremanagement.co.uk