February 12, 2009 - Lee Memorial Health System
Transcription
February 12, 2009 - Lee Memorial Health System
BOARD OF DIRECTORS PLANNING Committee of the Whole MEETING February 12, 2009, 2:00pm Lee Memorial Hospital Boardroom 2776 Cleveland Ave, Ft. Myers, FL 33901 ELECTRONIC BOARD PACKET ALL MEETINGS ARE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC AND THE PUBLIC IS INVITED TO ATTEND Any Public Input pertaining to an agenda item is limited to three minutes and a “Request to Address the Board of Directors” card must be completed and submitted to the Board Assistant prior to the meeting. LEE MEMORIAL HEALTH SYSTEM BOARD OF DIRECTORS PLANNING COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE MEETING Thursday, February 12, 2009 2:00 p.m. Lee Memorial Hospital Boardroom AGENDA 1. CALL TO ORDER (Linda Brown, MSN, ARNP Planning Chairman) The meeting of the Planning Committee of the Whole of the Lee Memorial Health System Board of Directors will be called to order. Matters concerning the business of Lee Memorial Health System consisting of Southwest Florida Regional Medical Center/Gulf Coast Hospital & Lee Memorial Hospital/HealthPark Medical Center and its subsidiaries (HealthPark Care Center, Inc., Lee Memorial Home Health, Inc., Cape Memorial Hospital, Inc. doing business as Cape Coral Hospital, and Lee Memorial Medical Management, Inc.) may be reported, discussed and recommended by the Committee of the Whole, then referred to the full Board of Directors for final action. 2. PUBLIC INPUT: 3. Consent Agenda (Approval) A. January 15, 2009 Planning Committee Meeting Minutes B. LMHS Strategic Scorecard for FYTD December 2009 4. Community Needs Assessment Report (Accept) Any public input pertaining to items on the Agenda is limited to three minutes and a “Request to Address the Board of Directors” card must be completed and submitted to the Board Assistant prior to meeting. (Jennifer Moody, Principal & Managing Director/AmeriMed Consulting - 30 min) 5. LMHS Marketing Program (John Wiest, Chief Financial Officer & Anne Rose, Executive Director/System Director/Administrator Business Development, Marketing, Communications, Lee PHO, Lee County Trauma Services District - 60 min) • • • • • 6. Branding Workshop Update (Follow-up from 1/8/09) Annual Marketing Plan (Review) Board Policy 10.36B: System Marketing Program (Review) Board 10.37B: Display of System Name and Logo (Review) Informal Marketing Forum (Kerry Babb, Marketing Liaison) (Verbal Update) FY 2009 System Strategic Priorities (Verbal Update) (Jim Nathan, President/CEO – 15 min) 7. Other Items 8. Date of the next REGULAR Planning Committee of the Whole: 9. ADJOURNMENT of PLANNING COMMITTEE Thursday, March 5, 2009, 1:00 p.m. Lee Memorial Hospital Boardroom, 2776 Cleveland Avenue, Fort Myers Bf/BOD/AGENDA/2009/021209 Planning Committee Agenda ___________________ L E E M E M O R I A L HEALTH SYSTEM BOARD OF DIRECTORS PUBLIC INPUT – AGENDA ITEMS: Any public input pertaining to items on the Agenda is limited to three minutes and a “Request to Address the Board of Directors” card must be completed and submitted to the Board Assistant prior to meeting. Refer to Board Policy: 10:15E: Public Addressing the Board Non-Agenda Item: Individuals wishing to address the Board on an item NOT on the Agenda, the Board office must be notified of subject matter at least seven (7) days prior to the meeting to allow staff time to prepare and to insure the matter is within the jurisdiction of the Board. Planning Committee of the Whole February 12, 2009 3. Consent Agenda: (Approval) A. January 15, 2009 Planning Committee Meeting Minutes B. LMHS Strategic Scorecard for FYTD December 2009 LEE MEMORIAL HEALTH SYSTEM BOARD OF DIRECTORS PLANNING COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE MEETING MINUTES Thursday, January 15, 2009 LOCATION: Lee Memorial Hospital Boardroom, 2776 Cleveland Avenue, Fort Myers, FL 33901 MEMBERS PRESENT: Linda Brown, MSN, ARNP, Chairman/Planning Committee; Richard Akin, Board Chairman; Nancy McGovern, RN, MSM, Board Vice Chairman; Marilyn Stout, Treasurer; Lois Barrett, MBA, Board Secretary; Stephen Brown, M.D., Director; Frank La Rosa, Director; Dawson McDaniel, Director; James Green, Director; Wayne Daltry, Community Representative/Planning Committee; Fred Pollier, Community Representative/Planning Committee; Marliese Mooney, Physician Leadership Council Consultant/Planning Committee MEMBERS ABSENT: Kerry Babb, Director; Jack Eikenberg/Community Representative/Planning Committee OTHERS PRESENT: James Nathan, CEO/President; Cathy Stephens, Board of Directors’ Liaison; Mary McGillicuddy, Chief Legal Officer; Donna Giannuzzi, RN, Chief Patient Care Officer; Chuck Krivenko, M.D., Chief Medical Officer/Clinical and Quality Services; Jon Cecil, Chief Human Resources Officer; CB Rebsamen, M.D., Chief Medical Officer/Ambulatory and Strategic Services; Gaile Anthony, Chief Administrative Officer/LMH; Larry Antonucci, M.D., Chief Administrative Officer/CCH; Doug Luckett, Chief Administrative and Ancillary Services Officer/SWFRMC/GCH; Mark Greenberg, M.D., System Medical Director/Clinical Effectiveness; Kevin Newingham, System Director/Planning and Strategy; Chris Nesheim, System Director/Care Management; Anne Rose, Executive Director/System Director/ Administrator Business Development, Marketing, Communications, Lee PHO, Lee County Trauma Services District; Karen Krieger, System Director/Public Affairs; Whitney Andreu, Director/Marketing and Communications; Sally Jackson, System Director/Community Projects; David Berger, M.D., Community Representative/Quality & Education Committee; Tuck Wilson, M.D., Physician Leadership Council Consultant/Quality & Education Committee; Jennifer Reed, Reporter/News-Press; Bob Johns, Guest; Peter Young, Guest; Isabel Firth, Administrative Secretary/Board of Directors; Beth Finney, Executive Secretary, Board of Directors NOTE: Documents referred to in these minutes are on file by reference to this meeting date in the Office of the Board of Directors on the Board of Directors website at www.lememorial.org/boardofdirectors, for public inspection. SUBJECT DISCUSSION PUBLIC INPUT There were NO “Public Input” items to be discussed. JAMES GREEN James Green requested to address the Board offering an apology regarding his recent incarceration due to missteps in his personal life. James said he was sworn in today and he wishes to continue serving LMHS and the community. He said he realizes this may not be a popular position however he will continue with his responsibilities as a Director of the LMHS Board of Directors. MEETING MINUTES PROPOSED FY 2009 SYSTEM STRATEGIC SCORECARD ACTION The meeting of the Planning Committee of the Whole of the Lee Memorial Health System (LMHS) Board of Directors concerning matters of the business of Lee Memorial Health System consisting of Southwest Florida Regional Medical Center (SWFRMC)/Gulf Coast Hospital (GCH) & Lee Memorial Hospital (LMH)/HealthPark Medical Center (HPMC) and its subsidiaries (HealthPark Care Center, Inc., Lee Memorial Home Health, Inc., Cape Memorial Hospital, Inc. doing business as Cape Coral Hospital (CCH), and Lee Memorial Medical Management, Inc.) may be reported, discussed and recommended by this Committee of the Whole, then referred to the full Board of Directors for final action was CALLED TO ORDER by Planning Chairman Linda Brown, MSN, ARNP at 1:08 p.m. MEETING CALLED TO ORDER Lois Barrett asked if anyone wished to make any corrections or deletions to the November 13, 2008 Planning Committee of the Whole meeting minutes. Kevin Newingham said in response to the last planning meeting there was a request to provide additional detailed information about the scorecard. He said the scorecard is a great tool to monitor the organization. He said the Senior Leadership Council recently proposed additional changes and targets for the upcoming fiscal year. Kevin began reviewing the Proposed FY 2009 System Strategic Scorecard (Exhibit 1). Marliese Mooney commended the System on having an incredibly low medication error rate. She said this is the lowest she has ever seen. Discussion ensued regarding the three levels of medication errors and the various causes of these errors. There was further discussion with regard to continuing awareness and education on the A motion was made by Lois Barrett to approve the November 13, 2008 Planning Committee of the Whole meeting minutes. The motion was seconded by James Green and it carried with no opposition. and FOLLOW-UP LEE MEMORIAL HEALTH SYSTEM BOARD OF DIRECTORS PLANNING COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE MEETING MINUTES Thursday, January 15, 2009 SUBJECT Page 2 of 2 DISCUSSION ACTION importance of reporting errors for future prevention. David Berger asked about employee satisfaction and turnover rates and if this correlates to responses provided in the Employee Satisfaction Survey. Jon Cecil said due to cost containment efforts the Employee Satisfaction Survey is now being conducted every other year therefore there is no employee satisfaction data to compare to the scorecard for 2008. Additionally, there is no data showing employee satisfaction by facility. Jon said there are anonymous sample survey’s completed by staff on a monthly basis which do appear to correlate to the regular Employee Satisfaction Results however there is no way to target a specific facility or department due to anonymity. Discussion ensued with regard to preventing costly turnover through successful recruitment and training. Discussion ensued regarding the Patient Satisfaction, HCAHPS Likelihood to Recommend, and the Physician Satisfaction Indicators. Jim Nathan clarified the patient satisfaction is measured by Press Ganey Reports and the physician satisfaction is measured by HCAHPS. He said the Press Ganey Report is a very specific report that generates an enormous amount of detailed information. Additionally, when areas are identified as problem areas, the System address them quickly. Discussion ensued with regard to survey sampling and statistical validity. FY 2009 SYSTEM STRATEGIC PRIORITIES Jim Nathan distributed and reviewed the FY 2009 System Strategic Priorities (Exhibit 2). He said this is a grocery list of items in no ranked order, providing a comprehensive view of System strategies for developing short-term plans and initiatives. He plans to bring strategy owners to future planning meetings for more in depth discussions. TIME SENSITIVE ITEMS Jim Nathan announced our local Legislative delegation hearing is being held on January 22, 2009 at Edison State College. He said this is an opportunity to present our ”financial wish list” to Tallahassee and he encouraged the Board and leadership to attend. OTHER ITEMS ADJOURNMENT (Wayne Daltry left the meeting at 1:43pm) A motion was made by James Green to approve the Proposed FY 2009 System Strategic Scorecard (Exhibit 1). The motion was seconded by Marilyn Stout and it carried with no opposition. There were no “Other Items” to be discussed. The next REGULAR Planning Committee of the Whole meeting will be February 12, 2009, 2:00pm, Lee Memorial Hospital Boardroom, 2776 Cleveland Avenue, Fort Myers, FL The Planning Committee of the Whole meeting was ADJOURNED by Planning Chairman Linda Brown, MSN, ARNP at 2:18p.m. Minutes were recorded by Beth Finney, Executive Secretary/Board of Directors Office __________________________________________________ Lois C. Barrett, MBA Board Secretary FOLLOW-UP LMHS STRATEGIC SCORECARD SUMMARY FYTD December 2009 Indicators FYTD Trend* Favorable Period Direction Reported FY 2008 Actual FY 2009 Target Fiscal YTD Actual Current Period 2.59% 5.0% 2.38% 11.50% New Indicator for Dec-08 FY 2009 13.0% 10.8% 20.5% 13.40% Dec-08 1.61% 1.91% 1.66% 1.79% Qtr 1 0.22 5 3.10 3.10 Dec-08 4.52 4.60 1.23% 1.50% PEOPLE Vacancy Rate Dec-08 Total Turnover Dec-08 Year 1 Turnover Rate 2.65% QUALITY Mortality Rate - Acute Medication Errors(Level II) per 10,000 ALOS - Acute Surgical Infection Rate - Acute Qtr 4 4.56 4.62 1.56% SERVICE Patient Satisfaction HCAHPS (% Top Box) - Likelihood to Recommend COMMUNITY Public Image Medical Staff Satisfaction Uncompensated Care & Charity (in thousands) Philanthropy - Total Gifts Qtr 1 86.9 Nov-08 66.0% New Indicator for FY 2009 New Indicator for FY 2009 New Indicator for Dec-08 FY 2009 New Indicator for Qtr 1 FY 2009 FINANCE Operating Margin Dec-08 Cash/Debt Ratio Dec-08 0.3% Bond Rating Moodys / S&P ***** 64.1% New Indicator for Dec-08 FY 2009 Days in Accounts Receivable Dec-08 66.3% Dec-08 52.9% Net Revenue per CMI Adjusted Admission Dec-08 $6,568 Cost per CMI Adjusted Admission Dec-08 $6,545 86.3 86.3 65.4% 65.4% 15,721 5,835 1,279 1,279 3.8% 3.4% Establishing Baseline Establishing Baseline FY 66,723 FYTD 16,779 CM 5,615 FY 5,553 FYTD 1,500 CQ 1,500 FY 2.25% FYTD 0.6% CM -0.4% 61.0% A2 / A 59.00 Wages % of Net Revenue = at or better than target = below target - no immediate concern = below target - immediate concern 86.9 FY FYTD CM FY FYTD CM FY FYTD CM 59.0 51.5% 52.3% 53.1% $6,699 $6,591 $6,588 $6,540 $6,549 $6,611 52.6% A3 / A n/a 59.80 50.7% $6,516 $6,292 49.8% $6,396 $6,151 No Update *Trend FYTD or last 4 reporting periods ***** - Moodys has LMHS on a "Negative Outlook" watchlist Prepared by Planning and Strategy ______________ L E E M E M O R I A L HEALTH SYSTEM B BO OA AR RD DO OFF D DIIR RE EC CTTO OR RS S RECOMMENDED ACTION FOR BOARD APPROVAL (Action includes Acceptance, Approval, Adoption, etc) Keep form to one page, SUBMIT (thru SLC Member) ELECTRONICALLY to L Drive – Miscellaneous - BOD Presentations by Noon the Friday before you’re scheduled on agenda. DATE: February 6, 2009 LEGAL SERVICE REVIEW? YES__ NO X SUBJECT: Community Needs Assessment – Presented by AmeriMed Consulting (sponsored by Lee County Medical Society and Lee Memorial Health System) REQUESTOR & TITLE: Kevin Newingham, System Director Planning and Strategy PREVIOUS BOARD ACTION ON THIS ITEM (IF ANY) (justification and/or background for recommendations – internal groups which support the recommendation i.e. SLC, Operating Councils, PMTs, etc.) Board of Directors reviewed previous study in Spring 2005 SPECIFIC PROPOSED MOTION: Acceptance of report PROS TO RECOMMENDATION Provides a tool to help target efforts to meet community needs CONS TO RECOMMENDATION Lack of clear community strategy to address needs LIST AND EXPLAIN ALTERNATIVES CONSIDERED n/a FINANCIAL IMPLICATIONS Budgeted ____ Non-Budgeted ___ (including cash flow statement, projected cash flow, balance sheet and income statement) n/a OPERATIONAL IMPLICATIONS (including FTEs, facility needs, etc.) n/a SUMMARY Lee Memorial Health System and Lee County Medical Society engaged AmeriMed Consulting to complete a Community Needs Assessment to identify physician need by specialty. The study supports the IRS requirement for non-profit organizations to substantiate community need for new physicians in order to assist the physician community in recruitment efforts. The project methodology included a medical staff profile, quantitative and qualitative analyses including physician interviews and surveys. The Community need alone identifies immediate need of 74 physicians and a growth need of 78 for a total of 152 physicians in primary care, medical and surgical specialties. Succession planning identifies 257 physicians at risk for retirement and/or practice change for a total need of up to 409 new physicians within the next 3 years. Physician need increased 82% when compared to the FY 2005 assessment need of up to 225 physicians. BOD/Forms/Board (Action) Reporting Form - revised 6/16/08 cs Lee County Medical Society & Lee Memorial Health System Community Needs Assessment Prepared by: AmeriMed Consulting Why do a Community Needs Assessment? Not-for-profit hospitals are required by the IRS to substantiate “community need” for new physicians in the community if recruitment incentives (of any type) are offered The OIG also requires through Stark II that all hospitals receiving Medicare/Medicaid funding substantiate community need for recruitment to prevent the appearance of kick-backs for referrals Project Methodology Services or access desired by the community Community Need Desires and plans of physicians (both staff and non-staff) Hospital strategic plans and responsibilities to community & physicians Project Methodology Basic requirements to prove community need (hospitals must meet at least one of these): Demonstrate that there are not enough physicians in the community overall (not hospital specific) by use of comparative ratios Demonstrate inadequate access – inappropriate wait times across the community (not just one practice) or specific payor access issues that cannot be remedied with current resources Demonstrate potential loss of an essential community program (such as a trauma program or critical service line) – again, not hospital specific Demonstrate risk of loss of community services within the next three years (36 months) due to departures or retirement of physicians Engagement Goals and Project Methodology Assess service area medical market conditions – existing physician resources, patient demographics, etc. Determine the need for physician services within the defined service area – both current and project growth needs Examine staff physician services for key areas of focus such succession planning •Medical Staff Profile •Patientas Market Profile •Medical Market Profile •Hospital Profile •Quantitative Analysis •Recommendations Service Area Geography Patient Market Profile Service Area Demographics 1990/2000 historic, 2008 current, 2013 projected Growth & aging rates factored over trending period The service area gained over almost 158,000 residents from 2000 to 2008 Between 2008 and 2013, the area is projected to increase by another 101,000 residents – a 16% gain Median age in the service area is 43.6 – older than the national (36.7) median and FL (40.0) The fastest growing age category is age 65 to 74 Medical Market Profile Competitor Analysis Identification of competitor facilities & physicians who might be practicing in the area Physician Full-Time Equivalencies Phone calls made to all located physician offices to verify physician activity in the service area FTE values assigned by service area & specialty to 0.1 Medical Staff Profile Physician Focus Interviews Medical Staff Survey Conducted by Joelyn Howard with 21 physicians in June 2008 Confidential survey tool – 135 surveys returned to AmeriMed for inclusion in this report – 13% total return from 37 unique specialties Staff Analysis Identified demographic characteristics of the Medical Staff Medical Staff Profile Aging physicians & succession planning Research shows that almost half of physicians age 50 or over plan practice changes within a three year window Most common practice change noted by age 13% of those 50 to 55 plan to retire, 10% will close to new patients or cut back workload 14% of those 56 to 60 will retire, 13% will reduce hours per week to 20 or less 27% of those 61 to 65 will retire, 17% will work 20 hours per week or less Medical Staff Profile The gender divide in medicine Males see 102 patient encounters per week, females see 87. But… for office visits, males see 75 to females’ 70. In hours worked, males and females both average 30 hours a week in the office – women work a total of 49 hours (2 at the hospital and 16 with “other” activities), males a total of 57 hours (5 at the hospital and 20 “other). Males are more likely to be “self-employed” – 65.7% vs. 43.6% of females. Females are twice as likely to be “employed” – 60% vs. 30.7% of males. Medical Staff Survey 55% of all practices are closed to new Medicaid patients Responses by All Specialties – Acceptance of New Patients 100% 92% 92% 93% 87% 77% 80% Percent 55% 60% 45% 40% 20% 23% 13% 8% 8% 7% 0% Com m ercial Insurance Medicare* Medicaid *Pediatricians were excluded from Medicare responses. PPO Self Pay/No Insurance Payors Yes HMO No 63% of primary care physicians do not accept new Medicaid patients 19% of primary care physicians do not accept new Medicare patients Medical Staff Survey At least 41% of responding physicians plan to recruit within their groups, a considerable drop Anticipated Changes in Practice Over Next Two Years* from 2005 41% Add a physician 55% 39% No changes anticipated 34% 32% Add a physician extender 23% 10% Open an additional office 20% 6% Other 2% 5% 4% Retire/sell practice 4% Merge w ith an established practice 1% 2008 3% 3% Close an office 0% 2005 20% 40% Percent of Respondents 60% Medical Staff Survey Physician specialties most commonly reported as having new appointment waits in excess of ten days (by peers): •Dermatology (40 days) – reported 21 days •Rheumatology (34 days) – no response •Endocrinology (30 days) – no response •Psychiatry (52 days) – reported 14 days •Neurology (20 days) – reported 14 days •Cardiology (22 days) – reported 7 days •Internal Medicine (22 days) – reported 7 days •Nephrology (28 days) – reported 14 days •Pulmonology (21 days) – reported 10 days Italicized responses are same specialty response to new patient appointment wait time Medical Staff Survey Most frequently perceived recruitment needs: •Psychiatry (80%) •Rheumatology (75%) •Endocrinology (71%) •Dermatology (66%) •Family Medicine (65%) •Emergency Medicine (64%) •General Surgery (64%) •Internal Medicine (63%) •Critical Care Medicine (62%) •Infectious Disease (62%) Quantitative Analysis Physician-to-Population Ratios 6 published methodologies utilized Comparative analysis of specialties vs. established benchmarks Real-time US supply ratios – a “true” benchmark of physician distribution AMA & MGMA productivity data Recommendations Recommendations Current Needs – Those specialties identified as immediate needs based upon current staffing levels and accessibility within the service area. Growth Needs – Those specialties where recruitment will be necessary over the next three years to meet anticipated community growth Succession Planning Risks – Those specialties which include staff physicians at or above the age of 55 It is permissible to recruit proactively for any Current Needs – Primary Care Primary Care – Family Medicine (12) – up from 2 in 2004 Primary Care – Internal Medicine (12) – up from 5 in 2004 Primary Care - Pediatrics (6) – up from 2 in 2004 30 Total FTEs Current Needs – Medical Specialties Allergy/Immunology (2) - up from 0 in 2004 Dermatology (2) – same as 2004 Endocrinology (2) – up from 1 in 2004 Hematology/Oncology (1) – up from 0 in 2004 Nephrology (1) – up from 0 in 2004 Neurology (1) – same as 2004 Obstetrics/Gynecology (4) – same as 2004 Psychiatry (4) – same as 2004 Rheumatology (2) – same as 2004 19 Total FTEs Current Needs – Surgical Specialties General Surgery (6) – up from 2 in 2004 Orthopedic Surgery (2) – up from 0 in 2004 Otolaryngology (2) – up from 0 in 2004 10 Total FTEs Growth Needs Primary Care – Family Medicine (16) Primary Care – Internal Medicine (16) Primary Care - Pediatrics (6) Cardiology (4) Dermatology (2) Gastroenterology (2) General Surgery (4) Hematology/Oncology (1) Nephrology (1) Neurology (2) Obstetrics/Gynecology (6) Ophthalmology (3) Orthopedic Surgery (4) Otolaryngology (1) Physical Medicine/ Rehabilitation (1) Plastic Surgery (1) Psychiatry (6) Pulmonology/Critical Care Medicine (1) Urology (1) 78 Total FTEs Succession Planning Risks Primary Care – Family Medicine Hematology/Oncology Pain Management Primary Care – Internal Medicine Hospitalist Palliative Medicine Primary Care – Pediatrics Hyperbaric Medicine Pathology Allergy/Immunology Infectious Disease Pediatric Subspecialties Anesthesiology Maternal/Fetal Medicine Plastic Surgery Cardiac/Thoracic Surgery Neonatal/Perinatal Medicine Podiatry Cardiology Nephrology Psychiatry Dentistry Neurology Pulmonology/Critical Care Medicine Dermatology Neurosurgery Radiation Oncology Emergency Medicine Obstetrics/Gynecology Radiology Endocrinology Ophthalmology Rheumatology Gastroenterology Oral/Maxillofacial Surgery Urgent Care General Surgery Orthopedic Surgery Urology Gynecological Oncology Otolaryngology Vascular Surgery Up to 256.6 Total FTEs ___________________ L E E M E M O R I A L HEALTH SYSTEM BOARD OF DIRECTORS LMHS MARKETING PROGRAM John Wiest, Chief Financial Officer & Anne Rose, Executive Director/System Director/Administrator Business Development, Marketing, Communications, Lee PHO, Lee County Trauma Services District - 60 min ______________ L E E M E M O R I A L HEALTH SYSTEM B BO OA AR RD DO OFF D DIIR RE EC CTTO OR RS S RECOMMENDED ACTION FOR BOARD APPROVAL (Action includes Acceptance, Approval, Adoption, etc) Keep form to one page, SUBMIT (thru SLC Member) ELECTRONICALLY to L Drive – Miscellaneous - BOD Presentations by Noon the Friday before you’re scheduled on agenda DATE: 2/12/09 LEGAL SERVICE REVIEW? YES____ NO__X__ SUBJECT: Marketing and Brand Identity REQUESTOR & TITLE: Anne Rose, Executive Director/System Director, Business Development and Contracting, Lee PHO, System Communications, Administrator Lee County Trauma Services District PREVIOUS BOARD ACTION ON THIS ITEM (IF ANY) (justification and/or background for recommendations – internal groups which support the recommendation i.e. SLC, Operating Councils, PMTs, etc.) No action; workshop was facilitated on January 8, 2009 to obtain input regarding the development of a system brand identity. SPECIFIC PROPOSED MOTION: Direct the System Marketing Department to indentify and interview 2-3 brand identity firms; and to develop cost proposal for the brand research and brand definition components of work and to report back to the Board Of Directors in 60-90 days. PROS TO RECOMMENDATION CONS TO RECOMMENDATION Allows process to be fully developed for consideration. None LIST AND EXPLAIN ALTERNATIVES CONSIDERED The alternatives are to create multiple program/service identities. FINANCIAL IMPLICATIONS Budgeted ____ Non-Budgeted ____ (including cash flow statement, projected cash flow, balance sheet and income statement) No cost at this time. OPERATIONAL IMPLICATIONS (including FTEs, facility needs, etc.) Initial phase of interviewing firms will not impact the operations of the organization. SUMMARY The creation of a system-wide brand identity is consistent with the input from the January 2009 workshop and is consistent with the recommendations and goals established by the strategic marketing plan. Without a system-wide identity, individual services/programs will create their own unique identities. BOD/Forms/Board (Action) Reporting Form - revised 6/16/08 cs Naming and Branding Workshop Follow-up February 12, 2009 Anne Rose Executive Director/System Director Business Development and Contracting Lee PHO System Communications Administrator Lee County Trauma Services District Today’s Topics • Summary of January 2009 Branding Workshop • Overview of LMHS Strategic Marketing Plan Recommendations and Goals • Steps Toward Creating a Brand • Current LMHS Examples • Conclusions Summary of January 2009 Branding Workshop Four Discussion Points • Definition of Success • Challenges • Opportunities • Strengths Summary of January 2009 Branding Workshop • Summary of Answers to the Question: What needs to happen for you to feel we were successful? • Start the process of developing a new brand identity for LMHS that is simple, memorable, and conveys trust, confidence and quality. Summary of January 2009 Branding Workshop • Summary of Answers to the Question: What are the greatest challenges to be eliminated? • LMHS brand identity is muddled and there is not a clearly understood goal for the marketing, advertising and PR that provides that identity. Summary of January 2009 Branding Workshop • Summary of Answers to the Question: What are the greatest opportunities to be taken advantage of? • LMHS has built important halo services (trauma, neurology, oncology, children’s hospital) and an incredible network delivering easy access-now it needs to all be bound together in a cohesive identity. Summary of January 2009 Branding Workshop • Summary of Answers to the Question: What are the greatest strengths to be built upon? • LMHS delivers the access and quality, with a terrific reputation that serves as the foundation for a strong cohesive identity. Summary of January 2009 Branding Workshop Recommendations From Strategic Marketing Plan Adopted by LMHS Board of Directors February 2007 RECOMMENDATION: Lead with the LMHS System message and look, even when marketing a particular service line or program. RECOMMENDATION: Increase the visibility of the LMHS hospitals in marketing efforts. Lead with the “System”. RECOMMENDATION: Design marketing and communications from the view of the customer or target audience. RECOMMENDATION: Complete evaluation of Solucient demographic targeting tools and acquire, or select alternative tools. Recommendations From Strategic Marketing Plan Adopted by LMHS Board of Directors February 2007 RECOMMENDATION: Over time, implement a corporate identity and branding strategy. Both marketing and operations can benefit from branding, and the focus provided will help to get the best possible results from the marketing plan. This work should best follow and use the results of the transition workgroups for Corporate Culture, Community Health Visioning, Campus Specific Clinical Specialization, and Physician Relations. RECOMMENDATION: Encourage all senior leaders to participate in community organizations and support these LMHS ambassadors with strategic LMHS marketing messages to optimize word-of-mouth marketing potential. RECOMMENDATION: Marketing dollars should be consolidated and budgeted in the Marketing Department. Annual reassessment tied to strategic system priorities, as supported in the System Marketing Plan, will become a part of the marketing budget process. Strategic Goals from Strategic Marketing Plan Adopted by LMHS Board of Directors February 2007 GOAL A – Develop the System Corporate identity and reflect the System creative look and Messaging as the foundation of all marketing and communications. Maintain state-of-the-art in-house capabilities for full-service strategic marketing and creative production including video, photography, graphic design, web development, and writing. Design the new premier LMHS System marketing brochure. This will be the platform around which to coordinate and integrate other future materials. Design flexible templates for standard materials to reduce original custom design. Prominently lead with the System look and message on new design and modify design on re-orders. Service line, facility or program messages are secondary. Use the LMHS logo. Cease design of new logos. Consider eliminating all other logos in print/video materials as they are created, revised or replaced. No need to change existing signage at this point. Defer any discussion of changing system name or logo until corporate identity/branding work decision is made per #6 below. Establish standards for all future LMHS signage, both interior and exterior. Joint effort by marketing, facilities and operations. Again, no need to change existing signage until corporate identity/branding work decision per #6 below. Ensure annual marketing needs of the Key Business Strategies, Enabling Strategies, and annual Tactics are planned, prioritized, budgeted, implemented and evaluated using metrics from Goal C. After transition work is done, engage LMHS leaders to consider the benefits and value to the entire LMHS organization of pursuing a full branding effort to energize and focus internal and external customers on a new brand promise that distinguishes us and will endure and build loyalty across all various contact points in the system. Strategic Goals from Strategic Marketing Plan Adopted by LMHS Board of Directors February 2007 GOAL B – Cultivate a customer focus and understanding for both marketing/communications Operations. Identify and understand all desired audiences, their characteristics and preferences. Design effective community awareness marketing and communication to reinforce the LMHS System look and messages, including Healthy News. Evaluate Internal Communications strategies based on the results of the Internal Communications Audit and redesign to achieve desired results. Develop new means of targeting particular audiences including physicians (in collaboration with Sales staff and/or operations); demographic or geographic subsets, including new residents; and eventually, individual customers (both former/current patients and potential new ones) using techniques developed under Goal C below. Provide marketing guidance to support and measure results of bonafide customer loyalty programs, including SHARE Club. Maintain an effective public affairs program that includes media relations, and enhance support of strategic marketing efforts through earned media. Enhance the community relations program to encourage LMHS leaders to participate in community organizations consistent with the LMHS mission and needs of the strategic plan, and ensure that these LMHS ambassadors are supported with strategic LMHS messages to optimize word-of-mouth marketing potential. Develop strategic community/public relations plan. With IS, continue to review LMHS intranet and internet sites from the customer’s perspective. Consider content, navigation, style and opportunities to reinforce the LMHS brand. Use the “outside looking in” approach. Ensure the “System look” and marketing messaging is consistently incorporated into websites, in collaboration with department web developers. Develop more interactive transactions using the successful bill payment model. Consider audio and video options. Support the transition work groups with marketing and communications. Strategic Goals from Strategic Marketing Plan Adopted by LMHS Board of Directors February 2007 GOAL C - Seek and adopt metrics and methodologies for prioritizing, targeting, and evaluating Marketing work to ensure the marketing resources are used in the most cost-effective and results-oriented manner. Begin to use best practices, such as presented by The Advisory Board, to identify the most appropriate programs for priority marketing. (This should be used during the annual planning with service lines to determine what services or programs meet tests for capacity, profitability and marketability. Services that do not meet the screen are either folded into marketin for others that do, as appropriate; become candidates for mass communication means such as Healthy News or websites or are not specifically marketed.) Continue to explore and select targeting methods for direct marketing to the most desirable audience for cost effective penetration. Decide if the recently demonstrated Solucient tools are to be acquired. Use the selected tools and evaluated their effectiveness. Adopt a messaging philosophy that includes the system, doctor, service and patient as key components. (Refer to Exhibit 2.) Identify means of tracking ROI for all marketing projects going forward. Complete the LionShare New Residents Program ROI contract and report results. Work with IS to complete necessary work to do in-house cross matches for inpatient, outpatient, emergency department and LPG utilization for identifiable target groups, e.g. new residents, SHARE Club, outreach screenings. Use existing reports on Lee County resident market share and volumes. Research other best practices for cost-effective ROI. Work toward the use of IS database or web-based technologies to support this quantitative effort. Utilize support from other LMHS departments including Strategic Planning, Decision Support, IS, Finance and Organizational Effectiveness as appropriate. Consider Marketing representation on major IS projects to gain insight in patient/customer data for potential marketing use. Consider long term benefits of individualized customer relations and marketing through CRM products, either commercially available, or tied to the long term IS strategy for centralized patient records for all LMHS. Steps towards creating a brand Brand Research • Interviews with key audiences • Review Strategic Background • Touch point Analytics • Competitive Analysis Brand Definition • Brand Promise • Company name • Brand Attributes • Product Services • Brand Personality • Tagline Development • Brand Positioning • Branded Ingredients • See “Family” attachment for hospital specific example Brand Architecture Brand architecture development • None • See “Family” attachment for hospital specific example Identity Design • Design of the Graphic Identity (Logo) Naming Conventions • Photography and (strategic framework Image style to guide naming decisions) • Identity Standards and Guidelines • Core Message Strategy Current LMHS examples • None Name Creation • Brand Management Current LMHS examples • See attachment A • See attachment B • See attachment C Attachment Family Friendly faces: We greet everyone with a warm welcome and a friendly smile Awesome attitude: We pledge to be positive, flexible, gracious, and respectful to all Motivated: We act with high energy, enthusiasm and take initiative to exceed your expectations Integrity: We act with absolute honesty, integrity, and fairness in all that we do Listen with your heart: We treat everyone with compassion, respect, sincerity, and kindness You: We consider you to be the most important part of our family Current LMHS examples Attachment A Name Tag Line (s) Lee Memorial Health System The Heart of the Community Caring People…Caring for People Lee Physician Group Quality Care with Respect and Compassion The Children’s Hospital of Southwest Florida Current LMHS examples Attachment B X X X X Current LMHS examples Attachment C Graphic Element “Circle of Care” The “Circle of Care,” is a graphic element that ties our graphic design to Lee Memorial Health System’s continuum of care. Conclusions • Creation of a system-wide brand identity is consistent with: - Input from January 2009 workshop - Recommendations and goals established by the Strategic Marketing Plan • Without a system-wide identity, individual services/programs will create their own unique identities LEE MEMORIAL HEALTH SYSTEM MARKETING PLAN FEBRUARY 8, 2007 BOARD OF DIRECTORS PLANNING COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE FINAL DRAFT Updated Org Chart (Exhibit 1) and owners (Exhibit 3) on January 15, 2009. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction……………………………………….……..……..2 Executive Summary………………………….…..……………..3 Environmental Scan……………………………….…….……...4 Global Marketing Trends..………………………….…………10 Marketing Recommendations………………….……….……...11 Strategic Goals……………………………………….………...14 Exhibit 1, Marketing Organization Chart………………...….…19 Exhibit 2, S·D·S·P Messaging Philosophy……..………….……20 Exhibit 3, Marketing Strategy Timeline………………………...21 1 INTRODUCTION Lee Memorial Health System (LMHS) is operating under a Marketing Plan that was developed in 2001 and needs an updated plan to support its Strategic Plan. The development of this plan is important to guide both the Marketing Department and those throughout LMHS who rely on marketing support. The basic approach used to develop the plan was to gather information on the current situation, evaluate challenges and opportunities, and make recommendations for changes to better achieve the stated goals and strategies of the LMHS Strategic Plan. This Marketing Plan is designed to be adapted to changes in the LMHS Strategic Plan through annual updates. Research focused on the special study commissioned by LMHS in 2005 with Birdsall Voss & Associates, dba bvk. This fully integrated marketing communications consulting firm has a national client base and more than 30 years of experience in healthcare. They were selected to review existing research, interview internal leaders, assess both the LMHS and competitors’ marketing communications materials and strategies, test new messaging with our consumers, and assess the current LMHS brand architecture. The bvk study included their in depth review of the Percy & Company Baseline Image/Positioning Studies from 2003-2005, which assess “top-of-mind” hospital awareness in the LMHS market; Market Share Summaries prepared by LMHS Strategic Planning staff from 2004-2005; Employee and Patient Satisfaction Surveys from 2004-2005, and the KIWI Report from 2005, for Key Information and Workforce Indicators. All current 2006 reports were reviewed to update any trends. Recent research by The Advisory Board on marketing best practices was reviewed and discussed with staff at The Advisory Board and/or the hospital involved with the case study. Interviews were conducted with all members of the Senior Leadership Council and with other persons the SLC designated, including leaders from Strategic Planning, Organizational Effectiveness, WAVE, Information Systems, Service Line Leaders for Key Business Strategies and Enabling Strategies, the 2006 Chairman of the Board of Directors and Board Marketing Liaison, and all staff members in the marketing department including the former director. In-depth observations of marketing department staff, operations, processes and day-to-day working activities were conducted through daily personal observations and interaction over two months. Ideas for a new strategic direction and specific possible improvements were shared informally with many of those interviewed above, as well as with staff in both the Marketing Department and the sales function under Business Development. Some of the strategic suggestions are already being tested, including the effort to more closely align the Sales and Marketing staff behind the business plan. Sales staff has also begun to test the recommended tools from The Advisory Board for prioritizing marketing work. Thus, the beginnings of collaboration have begun, and the first steps have been taken to transform the LMHS marketing function from a focus on production of communications to a more strategic system wide marketing organization closely aligned with the business plan. 2 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The purpose of this system wide marketing plan is to align the resources and output of the marketing program with the Mission, Vision, and Strategic Plan of Lee Memorial Health System to ensure the resources are directed to garner desired growth and profits, and to increase positive internal and external customer relationships. The plan is designed to provide a new strategic direction for the marketing staff and the departments they support and to increase the LMHS position as the premier healthcare provider in Southwest Florida. This plan is a substantial beginning for a multi-year effort that will allow LMHS to apply the most advanced marketing principles and practices that can have a significant impact on LMHS’s image and its business success. This plan envisions a major redefinition of the marketing function, increasing both its efficiency and its effectiveness. Once implemented, with appropriate staffing roles and some re-allocation of existing marketing resources, it will have the following impacts: • • • • • • Marketing communications and marketing department activities will align with the LMHS Strategic Plan and will capitalize on LMHS’s substantial equity and unique position in the market as a system of care. The role of marketing will expand to include participation in developing strategic messages that will benefit the entire system, not only individual business units. Criteria will be in place to determine what marketing communications are undertaken and to ensure that all marketing communications are created in a strategic framework. Processes will be in place to ensure that marketing messages are closely linked to customer needs and interests for the benefit of the system. Marketing communications and programs will be measured and evaluated based on ROI or other measures based on outcomes, not merely activities. LMHS will invest in developing its brand to establish a brand-proposition for the system that will be the overarching value and the foundation for all marketing communications. It is important to note that these significant redirections are the first step toward developing the nuts-and-bolts marketing (including messages, media, resources and programs) that will be implemented by the marketing department annually. These changes are essential strategic departures from the current way of doing business. They will allow LMHS, with its unique public and community responsibilities, to perform effectively against its regional competitors. 3 ENVIRONMENTAL SCAN System Background Lee Memorial Health System is the leading provider of healthcare in Southwest Florida, having served the citizens of Lee County and surrounding communities for four generations. After closing on the purchase of Gulf Coast and Southwest Regional Hospitals, the system now includes five acute care hospitals, a rehabilitation hospital, children’s hospital, trauma center, skilled care center, and a network of outpatient centers, employed physician offices, wellness centers and home health care. As the largest community-owned healthcare system in the area, LMHS is governed by a publicly elected 10-member Board of Directors and is the largest public system in Florida that receives no direct tax support. LMHS is committed to providing high quality, cost effective services. Since opening its doors in 1916 as Lee Memorial Hospital, LMHS has been at the forefront of helping Southwest Florida residents live happier, healthier lives. This commitment to community goes beyond hospital walls and the tens of millions of dollars in uncompensated care annually that is provided to those unable to pay. It is reflected in the System’s support of area organizations, promotion of community health education programs, focus on the overall growth and development of the area’s children, and dedication to helping our senior citizens live full, productive lives. LMHS is a progressive, financially sound healthcare provider. With the acquisition of HCA-owned Gulf Coast and Southwest Florida Regional hospitals, the system has more than 8,000 employees, 4,400 volunteers, and 1,000 physicians on staff. LMHS is a member of Voluntary Hospitals of America, Southeast Region, the Safety Net Hospital Alliance of Florida and the Florida Hospital Association; and is accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. The focus on quality at LMHS has resulted in numerous awards and recognitions including the Solucient 100 Top Hospitals®, Employer of Choice, and the Franklin Award of Distinction for the best patient care management system in the entire nation. LMHS Mission Our mission, as approved by the Board of Directors, is to continue to meet the healthcare needs and improve the health status of the people of Southwest Florida by: • Providing quality primary, secondary and selected tertiary healthcare services in a personalized, convenient and cost-effective manner with a dedicated healthcare team; • Meeting or exceeding customer expectations and addressing the spiritual and emotional needs of patients and their families; • Promoting wellness, healthy lifestyles, community health education programs and a collaborative community effort; 4 • Maintaining a financially viable delivery system with multiple care sites to generate the resources needed to make essential healthcare services available to all, including those unable to pay; and • Remaining a not-for-profit community healthcare leader and resource. LMHS Vision Our vision is to become the best patient-centered healthcare system in Florida, through balancing quality, access and cost. This vision is supported by: • A commitment, by the Board of Directors, medical staff, management, employees and volunteers to excellence in the provision of care and service to our patients and community; • The recognition that although we do not provide all possible services, we will strive to provide the highest quality in the services we offer and will evaluate new services based on community need and their economic viability; • The recognition of the importance of our medical staff. We will strive to maintain open communication and a spirit of cooperation between the Board of Directors, the medical staff, and management • The recognition of our employees. We also recognize the importance of open communication, competitive compensation and quality training so that all employees are able to perform at a level of excellence. LMHS Strategic Plan The strategic plan promotes excellence in each of these five categories: • Quality • Service • Community • People • Finance. The supporting organizational enabling strategies include: • Operating Efficiency • Continuum of Care • Customer Relationships • Physician Relationships • Facilities Development • Safety/Quality • Foundation • Workforce Development. • Information Management The Key Business Strategies represent areas of strategic focus that are vital to the continued financial success of the organization and are organized around major service lines: • Ambulatory • Neurosciences • Cardiovascular • Oncology • Children’s Services • Surgery. 5 Lee County Regional Market Scan LMHS operates in one of the fastest growing regions of the nation. Lee County’s population is already 585,608 and continues to be one of the fastest growing regions in the country, with the Cape Coral-Fort Myers metro ranking in the top ten metros for growth nationally the last several years. In 2004 and 2005 the Census Bureau ranked Cape Coral as fifth fastest growing city in the United States. Inc. magazine ranked us 9th in the nation for medium sized markets best suited for entrepreneurs (2005). Forbes magazine ranked us second among the Top 150 cities for job growth (2005). The housing market has ranked number one in the nation for any metropolitan area for the last two years. The Milken Institute determined Cape CoralFort Myers to be the best performing city for job growth in 2004. The Boyd Study found us to be 5th in the nation as a desirable corporate headquarters location in 2004. During the decade of 2000 to 2010, official projections show our population growing nearly 50%, from 440,888 to 648,400. Recent trends indicate this may be low. The Lee County age 18-24 year old population is growing about twice as fast as that of the state of Florida and faster than that of the U. S. averages. Lee County Public Schools have students representing 159 native countries that speak 98 different languages. Our age 45–64 year olds represent 25% of the population. Those in this age bracket, in the middle and upper incomes, are most likely to be the quality conscious consumers anticipated to be likely users of published healthcare data on price and quality. They are also typically in need of a greater number of health care procedures than the younger population. According to The Advisory Board this new type of consumer is more independent in thought and willing to take time to sift through hospital information to make health care decisions. As LMHS continues to prepare to publish both pricing and quality data on the web for transparency and public accountability, this market segment should be kept in mind. Currently, 26% of the national adult population indicates they are likely to use hospital ratings to choose a hospital, and 18% goes so far as to say that they would change hospitals if quality ratings for an institution they patronize were to fall. (See “Utilizing Quality Data in Hospital Marketing Strategies”, The Advisory Board, May 31, 2005.) According to an analysis of IRS data by Gulfshore Business magazine, more of Lee County’s non-Floridian new residents in recent years migrated, in descending order, from Cook County, Illinois (Chicago area), Cuyahoga County, Ohio (Cleveland area), Oakland County, Michigan (suburban Detroit), Fairfield County, Connecticut (suburban New York City, NY), and Anne Arundel County, Maryland (suburban Baltimore-Washington, D.C.). While no individual county represented more than approximately 3% of the annual growth, the historical ties for our region to the Midwest and Northeast continue to be strong. This can be important in seeking to understand new residents’ health care benchmarks from personal experience. From a marketing perspective their health care experience sets expectations our system must meet or exceed. 6 In addition to full-time residents, we have a significant base of part-time residents and more than two million visitors per year. Two-thirds of our visitors come primarily from the Northeast or Midwest, and more than ten percent come from foreign countries. We are, therefore, an international market. The top non-Florida cities from which most of our visitors traveled mirror that of our permanent population: New York, Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, Minneapolis, Cleveland, Detroit, Indianapolis and Providence. The substantial increases in our population are important to consider for several reasons. First, very soon, one third of our residents will have been in the area fewer than ten years, and they will all have a base of experience in healthcare from their previous markets, not our local market. We must seek to understand the implications of this ongoing comparison as we design our own marketing and service delivery, and include in our competitive set the hometown hospital systems our new residents experienced. We do not know how many of our residents, either full-time or part-time, seek care outside of the State of Florida, but it may be a substantial number, particularly when the care can be scheduled at their convenience. Second, our remarkable regional growth has helped LMHS to experience continued inpatient growth each year, even though our our 2006 market share for Lee County hospitals before the acquisition had decreased somewhat from a high of 68.34% in fiscal year 2002. In a November 2005 report to the LMHS Board of Directors, the Strategic Planning Department found that from 2002 to 2004, while the number of Lee County resident discharges from any Florida acute care facility grew by 4.5% overall, the LMHS market share saw a loss of 1.0%. A total of nearly 7,500 cases went outside of Lee County, a 7.3% increase from the prior year. This trend demonstrates the competition on the Lee County borders. This analysis documented the annual impact of a 1% market share loss in key service lines of over $1.2 million in contribution margin and additional loss in margin. While the acquisition of Gulf Coast and Southwest Regional Hospitals results in about 95% LMHS in-patient market share for Lee County hospitals, attention should also be given to the resulting 85% market share of Lee County residents’ hospitalizations. About 11% of our Lee County residents now go outside of the county for their hospital care in Florida. This out-migration represented 46,455 hospital days, or 15% of the total days for Lee County residents in 2005. Clearly this is an opportunity for LMHS. In addition, we do not know what percentage of Lee County residents go outside of the State of Florida for care. As growth continues, we need to focus on those expansion areas at the county borders: • The Bonita market will continue to be split with NCH on the Collier County border. • The Lehigh market will continue to grow dramatically at build out, and Naples-based HMA, the owner of Lehigh Regional Medical Center, does have the resources to continue to expand there should they so choose. • Cape Coral (expected to reach more than 400,000) will grow significantly toward the northern Lee border and we will face competition from Charlotte County hospitals. 7 • The new Babcock Ranch community (anticipated to reach 45,000) will be built along the Charlotte border, with most of the land in Charlotte County, and competition from both HMA- and HCA-owned hospitals in Charlotte County will continue. Competition remains keen for the non-acute services in Lee County, where LMHS has a more modest market share. Should the anticipated regional growth slow significantly, targeted market share on the Lee County borders and in ambulatory services will become increasingly important to our future, as regional competition continues in the health care sector. Third, the cost of living increases tied to increased recent property valuations have had an impact on the affordability of the region. We now have a 103 composite score on the ACCRA cost of living model prepared by chambers of commerce nationally, with 100 being the average for the U. S. While we are higher than the nation as a whole, we are still positioned as very attractive and affordable to most of the Northeast and Midwest metros reporting much higher scores. Very recently, our housing boom has abated, and as speculators retrench, residential permitting shows a significant reduction in construction compared to recent years. This market adjustment will serve to stabilize real estate pricing and absorb the inventory of available properties. Many property owners have sold, or are attempting to sell, to take advantage of value increases and are relocating to more affordable locations out of this market. This may be an indication that in the future our region will attract those with higher incomes who will find the cost of living affordable, as opposed to those who are on modest fixed incomes. On the other hand, it may be an indication that growth will slow or stagnate. We will need to follow the implications carefully to fully absorb these current market conditions and relate them to LMHS marketing. Fourth, from the perspective of health care payer mix, we have seen that our region is among the leaders in the state of Florida in the percentage of uninsured, with approximately 25 percent of our population under the age of 65 lacking any health care coverage, and many more with inadequate coverage. Analysis of data reported to the Florida Department of Financial Services by Florida health plans provides useful insights. According to the Center for Practical Health Reform in Jacksonville, Florida, during the 8-year period between 1996 and 2004, the number of small employers in Florida offering coverage fell from 266,000 to 123,000, or a drop of 53% (143,000 employers). While the overall Florida population grew by 3 million during this period, the enrollment in small group plans dropped 42% from nearly 1.8 million to just over 1 million, or a total decline in the small group market alone of 760,000 lives. Increases in premiums have impacted the affordability of coverage for employers and workers alike. During the last five years, premiums have increased 5.5 times general inflation, 4.0 times workers’ earnings and 2.3 times business income growth. Recent research by the HHS Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality found that even large employers, with at least 1,000 workers, report drops in enrollment of workers eligible for health plans from 87% in 1996 to 80% in 2004. Researchers note that this trend underscores recent cost shifts as employers have sought to offset premium increases by 8 requiring larger contributions from workers. This continued pattern of employers reducing health care coverage of employees, either by dropping their plans altogether, or by pricing the employee share so high that it is not affordable for lower wage working families, has increased the burden on LMHS for covering these costs as a safety net healthcare system. As the Marketing Department improves its ability to target specific market segments, it will be desirable to target increased utilization by payers with means, wherever possible, to balance the impact of uncompensated care. Global Marketing Trends Changing marketing trends are defining new relationships between organizations and their customers. These transitions are driving this strategic plan, and can help LMHS to focus on better understanding and retaining customers, targeting market segments and even individuals rather than relying predominantly on mass communication, utilizing broad-based internal and external partners to further the marketing effort, fully understanding both the local and global market, and utilizing the full power of the Internet to support marketing and communication efforts. The three tables below summarize the most significant trends: (Philip Kotler and Gary Armstrong, “Marketing: An Introduction) Connections with Customers Old Marketing Thinking Be sales and product centered Practice mass marketing Focus on products and sales Make sales to customers Get new customers Grow share of market Serve any customer Communicate thru mass media New Marketing Thinking Be market and customer centered Target market segments or individuals Focus on customer satisfaction & value Develop customer relationships Keep old customers Grow share of customer Serve profitable customers, “fire” losing Develop customized products Connections & Marketing Partners Old Marketing Thinking Leave customers satisfaction & value to sales and marketing Go it alone New Marketing Thinking Enlist all departments in the cause of customer satisfaction & value Partner with other firms Connections With the World Around Us Old Marketing Thinking Market locally Assume profit responsibility Marketing for profits Conduct commerce in market places New Marketing Thinking Market locally and globally Social & environmental responsibility Marketing for nonprofits Conduct e-commerce in market spaces 9 Applying these insights, over the next several years, LMHS marketing has the opportunity to improve the targeting of market segments and develop long-term profitable customer relationships. We can strengthen the partnerships we have with other departments and with the community to achieve our System goals. And we can better prioritize and measure results to improve the cycle of marketing. LMHS MARKETING RECOMMENDATIONS Marketing Purpose: To create and deliver messaging to inspire brand loyalty and advance the strategic future of LMHS. Marketing Department Mission Statement: To be the leading healthcare marketing expert by delivering full-service, cost effective and results-oriented services. The above Mission and Purpose Statements are the working drafts created during the Marketing Department’s 2006 strategic planning retreat. The marketing model in use now focuses on in-house expertise to market individual components of LMHS and create broad-based community awareness of these components. The current role of the Marketing Department is linked to its production of collateral material and communication products on request, including both print and video. The new marketing model will leverage the expertise of the staff to drive marketing approaches for LMHS and to tie these approaches to the strategies that have been adopted by LMHS. By aligning marketing with the business plan, an entirely new level of marketing strategy can be developed. The following SWOT analysis of marketing summarizes the current situation for LMHS marketing. The recommendations that follow play to the department’s strengths, overcome its weaknesses, capitalize on its opportunities and weaken its threats. These recommendations are also reflected in the new Marketing Strategic Goals and timeline that follow. 10 Marketing Department SWOT Analysis Strengths In-house creative talent Award-winning materials Standards for production $4 million budget overall Full service department Good free-lance support Strong local vendor support LMHS quality programs/services Community growth Dominant market share Community awareness products Weaknesses Lack of prioritization criteria Lack of marketability screens Lack of marketing plan Lack of ROI methodology Key vacancies strain remaining staff Lack of System focus Silos force isolation of marketing products Staff as “order takers” Lack of hospital marketing Lack of Brand recognition Lack of targeting tools Opportunities Synergy with Sales staff Market to physicians Use bvk observations Complete Branding Standardize System logo for synergy Apply screens to prioritize marketing Develop ROI methodologies Use marketing staff as team Marketing as strategic advisors to others Growth in Outpatient services Develop System marketing Threats Physician expertise not recognized locally Can’t distinguish LMHS from competition Regional competitors expanding Cost of living may slow growth Top-of-mind awareness dropping Employee satisfaction scores down Unknown impact of consumer choice Increase in uninsured Residents go outside of Lee County LMHS has the opportunity to create much greater synergy across various marketing efforts to benefit the entire “System”. By emphasizing the System as the overarching principle that ties all the services and programs together, the opportunity to create a “halo effect” to carry over positive attributes of one part of the system to others, can be realized. RECOMMENDATION: Lead with the LMHS System message and look, even when marketing a particular service line or program. There are few resources given to market the acute care hospitals. They have lost their identity in the myriad of service line messaging. These are the most visible opportunities to connect with our customers, strengthen the desired brand and strengthen the System. 11 RECOMMENDATION: Increase the visibility of the LMHS hospitals in marketing efforts. Lead with the “System”. It is critical to note that, generally, marketing materials from the websites to various print brochures tend to communicate from the internal LMHS structure or hierarchy, rather than looking from the outside in, as consumers would, and connecting all related components within the system for a full service view. Sometimes the related services report to two or even three different departments, making successful integration of the marketing package even more difficult. This change would be a vast improvement in our ability to connect with the customer and demonstrate how we can meet their needs. Also, marketing messages frequently focus on educating the community on technical details or attributes, facts and figures about the multiple programs of LMHS. Again, this complexity creates confusion in the marketplace and does not connect to a central message or messages. It does not result in synergy across the various messages, and it does not establish clearly the benefits or value to consumers. Research shows that presenting marketing messages that tout the benefits to your customers, rather than the attributes of a program or product itself, will result in better connection and market penetration. Each marketing message should close with an appropriate call to action for the target audience. RECOMMENDATION: Design marketing and communications from the view of the customer or target audience. Marketing staff has just begun to identify and evaluate tools to better define target audiences based on profiling or geographic subsets. This new initiative, in cooperation with the Strategic Planning staff, should continue and be broadly adopted for better targeting and more cost effective marketing. Solucient has such tools available and a decision needs to be made about applicability for purchase. Other LMHS resources should be evaluated to assist in this targeting work, including Decision Support and IS. RECOMMENDATION: Complete evaluation of Solucient demographic targeting tools and acquire, or select alternative tools. LMHS has not conducted System branding work to clearly establish the corporate identity, so neither marketing nor operations has reaped the benefits of knowingly supporting a brand promise that builds customer loyalty and focuses all staff on supporting the brand in each of their customer interactions. When a company establishes its corporate identity and uses it for marketing, the focus can help to re-create or kindle a desire for their brand and help to build customer loyalty across the entire spectrum of products and services represented by the brand. RECOMMENDATION: Over time, implement a corporate identity and branding strategy. Both marketing and operations can benefit from branding, and the focus provided will help to get the best 12 possible results from the marketing plan. This work should best follow and use the results of the transition workgroups for Corporate Culture, Community Health Visioning, Campus Specific Clinical Specialization, and Physician Relations. Over $325,000 is spent annually for supporting other community organizations. While the Marketing Director and the Business Development staff do historically meet monthly to go over the allocations, there has not yet been a strategy to optimize these relationships as spheres of influence for LMHS. In fact, there are situations where funds are granted annually and no LMHS representative is actually on the board or a major committee. Those that do, in fact, have representation from LMHS are not supported with a formal program of marketing messages and priorities. They can and should be. Word-of-mouth is one of the top factors in health care decision-making. The opportunity exists to create an army of LMHS ambassadors in these community leadership roles. Other corporations do this well, and reinforce their brand in the process. These representatives can also be called on to be messengers when word-of-mouth communication and leadership spheres of influence are needed. They should be supported by a strategic community/public relations plan. Such an effort may best grow out of the community health visioning process now under development. RECOMMENDATION: Encourage all senior leaders to participate in community organizations and support these LMHS ambassadors with strategic LMHS marketing messages to optimize word-of-mouth marketing potential. MARKETING BUDGET The total Marketing budget for FY 2005-06 is approximately $4 million. (See Exhibit 3, Marketing Budget 2005-2006.) This includes about $1 million in salaries for the above personnel, $1.4 million in the department budget for marketing programs and service lines, $0.3 million for supplies and expenses, and another $0.3 million for the Relationship Management budget, which is actually staffed and housed in the Business Development Office. The relationship between Business Development and Marketing is now under review for increased synergy. An additional $1 million for FY 2006 marketing and communications has been identified in various departments’ individual budgets, the largest being in the Foundation and Human Resources. This represents one-quarter of the total marketing resource base. Many of these projects are run through the Marketing Department and handled by marketing staff, but billed to the other departments because they were not budgeted in marketing. This may not be an inclusive list so total dollars likely are greater. 13 Last year, of the 764 jobs completed, 32% were charged to other departments. In the first half of FY 2006, the overall volumes are similar, and 38% are being charged to other departments. This indicates that there is a high demand for numerous smaller projects that were not budgeted in the Marketing Department as planned, high priority items, and these are demanding a significant part of the total marketing resource, in terms of staff time for individual creative design and production. Within the current fiscal climate, the overall $4 million marketing resource should be adequate to support marketing needs. If a new strategic direction is pursued, as priorities with the best return on investment are defined, some reallocation should be expected to support the new strategic direction and the 5-year System Marketing Plan. RECOMMENDATION: Marketing dollars should be consolidated and budgeted in the Marketing Department. Annual reassessment tied to strategic system priorities, as supported in the System Marketing Plan, will become a part of the marketing budget process. CONCLUSION The Marketing Department and other departments of LMHS that utilize marketing will all benefit from the System 5-Year Marketing Plan. This plan considers and reflects the bvk findings and recommendations. The plan includes a proposal to complete a full corporate identity and branding initiative in the future, and to address the bvk ideas for nomenclature and system architecture as part of that effort. With the work in process following the acquisition of Gulf Coast and Southwest Regional hospitals, we will defer any immediate consideration of those items related to re-naming the system, facilities, programs, etc. and the resulting architecture. The results of the transition work for specific campuses on clinical specialization, the organizational culture work, the physician issues, and the community health visioning work will all be valuable in supporting a better foundation to discover/establish the corporate identity. Following that, consideration may return to nomenclature and architecture. MARKETING STRATEGIC GOALS Marketing is a component of the Customer Relationship enabling strategy within the framework of the LMHS Strategic Plan. Additional marketing elements can be found in the individual plans for Key Business Strategies and other enabling strategies. When final, the marketing plan details should be incorporated into these other plan components as appropriate. Staff in the Marketing Department can next develop the tactics and detailed timetable to support implementation. This will require annual updating. Marketing at LMHS includes roles for many distinct specialties: sales, public affairs, media relations, community relations, strategic marketing, communication (internal and external), creative design and media production including video, graphics, A/V, 14 photography, writing, web design, and other technologies. It requires ongoing support and interdependent roles from the various operating departments, and most notably, IS, Strategic Planning, and Organizational Effectiveness. Many of the goals in the System Marketing Plan can only be accomplished with this ongoing support beyond the Marketing Department. GOAL A – Develop the System Corporate identity and reflect the System creative look and messaging as the foundation of all marketing and communications. 1. Maintain state-of-the-art in-house capabilities for full-service strategic marketing and creative production including video, photography, graphic design, web development, and writing. 2. Design the new premier LMHS System marketing brochure. This will be the platform around which to coordinate and integrate other future materials. Design flexible templates for standard materials to reduce original custom design. Prominently lead with the System look and message on new design and modify design on re-orders. Service line, facility or program messages are secondary. 3. Use the LMHS logo. Cease design of new logos. Consider eliminating all other logos in print/video materials as they are created, revised or replaced. No need to change existing signage at this point. Defer any discussion of changing system name or logo until corporate identity/branding work decision is made per #6 below. 4. Establish standards for all future LMHS signage, both interior and exterior. Joint effort by marketing, facilities and operations. Again, no need to change existing signage until corporate identity/branding work decision per #6 below. 5. Ensure annual marketing needs of the Key Business Strategies, Enabling Strategies, and annual Tactics are planned, prioritized, budgeted, implemented and evaluated using metrics from Goal C. 6. After transition work is done, engage LMHS leaders to consider the benefits and value to the entire LMHS organization of pursuing a full branding effort to energize and focus internal and external customers on a new brand promise that distinguishes us and will endure and build loyalty across all various contact points in the system. GOAL B – Cultivate a customer focus and understanding for both marketing/communications and operations. Identify and understand all desired audiences, their characteristics and preferences. 1. Design effective community awareness marketing and communication to reinforce the LMHS System look and messages, including Healthy News. 2. Evaluate Internal Communications strategies based on the results of the Internal Communications Audit and redesign to achieve desired results. 3. Develop new means of targeting particular audiences including physicians (in collaboration with Sales staff and/or operations); demographic or geographic subsets, including new residents; and eventually, individual customers (both 15 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. former/current patients and potential new ones) using techniques developed under Goal C below. Provide marketing guidance to support and measure results of bonafide customer loyalty programs, including SHARE Club. Maintain an effective public affairs program that includes media relations, and enhance support of strategic marketing efforts through earned media. Enhance the community relations program to encourage LMHS leaders to participate in community organizations consistent with the LMHS mission and needs of the strategic plan, and ensure that these LMHS ambassadors are supported with strategic LMHS messages to optimize word-of-mouth marketing potential. Develop strategic community/public relations plan. With IS, continue to review LMHS intranet and internet sites from the customer’s perspective. Consider content, navigation, style and opportunities to reinforce the LMHS brand. Use the “outside looking in” approach. Ensure the “System look” and marketing messaging is consistently incorporated into websites, in collaboration with department web developers. Develop more interactive transactions using the successful bill payment model. Consider audio and video options. Support the transition work groups with marketing and communications. GOAL C - Seek and adopt metrics and methodologies for prioritizing, targeting, and evaluating marketing work to ensure the marketing resources are used in the most cost-effective and results-oriented manner. 1. Begin to use best practices, such as presented by The Advisory Board, to identify the most appropriate programs for priority marketing. (This should be used during the annual planning with service lines to determine what services or programs meet tests for capacity, profitability and marketability. Services that do not meet the screen are either folded into marketing for others that do, as appropriate; become candidates for mass communication means such as Healthy News or websites; or are not specifically marketed.) 2. Continue to explore and select targeting methods for direct marketing to the most desirable audience for cost effective penetration. Decide if the recently demonstrated Solucient tools are to be acquired. Use the selected tools and evaluated their effectiveness. 3. Adopt a messaging philosophy that includes the system, doctor, service and patient as key components. (Refer to Exhibit 2.) 4. Identify means of tracking ROI for all marketing projects going forward. Complete the LionShare New Residents Program ROI contract and report results. Work with IS to complete necessary work to do in-house cross matches for inpatient, outpatient, emergency department and LPG utilization for identifiable target groups, e.g. new residents, SHARE Club, outreach screenings. Use existing reports on Lee County resident market share and volumes. Research other best practices for cost-effective ROI. 5. Work toward the use of IS database or web-based technologies to support this quantitative effort. Utilize support from other LMHS departments including Strategic Planning, Decision Support, IS, Finance and Organizational 16 Effectiveness as appropriate. Consider Marketing representation on major IS projects to gain insight in patient/customer data for potential marketing use. 6. Consider long term benefits of individualized customer relations and marketing through CRM products, either commercially available, or tied to the long term IS strategy for centralized patient records for all LMHS. NEXT STEPS In order to be successful and to achieve the positive results described, these strategic initiatives must have the full support of LMHS leadership and the board, not only to begin the process, but also to maintain it. The following approach is suggested. 1. Review draft with SLC and obtain support. (Completed October 31, 2006) 2. Review with LMHS President and obtain support. (Completed December 5, 2006) 3. Review with Board Marketing Liaison and obtain support. (Completed January 24, 2007) 4. Present to Board of Directors and obtain support. (To Planning Committee February 8, 2007) 5. Share plan with Marketing Department. (Completed January 15, 2007) 6. Share plan with all departments that use or support marketing. (Scheduled for Leadership Update March 28, 2007) 7. Consolidate the FY ’07 overall marketing budget, estimated at $4 million, in the Marketing Department. Reprogram as necessary to support the new strategic direction. (TBD) 8. Develop marketing synergies with Sales staff for physicians, employers, and community organizations. (In process) 9. Consolidate marketing and communications from Gulf Coast and Southwest Regional Hospitals and begin integration of marketing for the newly defined market. (In process) 10. Evaluate organizational structure and staffing needs to meet the demands of the 5-Year System Marketing Plan. Consider re-design of positions to support new needs. (In process) The marketing function at LMHS can be transformed to a discipline that helps the system compete in an increasingly complex environment. These initiatives establish new directions that will lay the foundation for logical, predictable, strategic allocation of precious resources well into the future with greater return on the marketing investment. A more flexible marketing program focused on customers will be ready to support any changing business needs. Complete execution of the plan should result in increased awareness and utilization of the Lee Memorial Health System and greater profitability. 17 Exhibit 1 MARKETING ORGANIZATION CHART 18 Exhibit 2 S•D•S•P Messaging Philosophy All marketing communications materials will employ System • Doctor • Service • Patient messaging philosophy. This framework allows for cross-selling opportunities. It leverages four components to send one key message and several sub-messages to the target audience. Specific messaging can provide either “inside-out” or “outside-in” interpretations depending on the audience, e.g. physician vs. consumer. It enables a consistent marketing framework for marketing and communications materials. • • • • System o Continuum of Care o Ability to meet all of the patients’ needs o Raises overall profile of the health system o Allows for differentiable service marketing and overall branding at the same time Doctor o Lends credibility to the service/product that is being targeted o Leverages relationships with the physicians o Brings the physicians to the consumer o Partnering Opportunities o Explains why the physician chooses LMHS for his/her patients’ care o Provides expert opinions Service o Explains the service/product/facility we are targeting o Needs to be audience focused o Discusses differentiable factors o Quality & Excellence must be highlighted Patient o Need to indicate why the service/product being marketed is important to them o Provides “Outside-In” viewpoint o Closing Statement is of utmost importance 19 Exhibit 3 Marketing Strategy Timeline Purpose of Marketing: To create and deliver messaging to inspire brand loyalty and advance the strategic future of LMHS. Mission of the Marketing Department: To be the leading healthcare marketing expert by delivering full-service, cost effective and results-oriented services. Goals: A – Develop the System Corporate Identity and reflect the System creative look and messaging as the foundation of all marketing and communications. B – Cultivate a customer focus and understanding for both marketing/communications and operations. Identify and understand all desired audiences, their characteristics and preferences. C - Seek and adopt metrics and methodologies for prioritizing, targeting, and evaluating marketing work to ensure the marketing resources are used in the most cost-effective and results-oriented manner. Key Measures: 1. Lee County Resident Market Share 2. Customer Satisfaction 3. Employee Satisfaction 4. Return on Investment 5. Community awareness/preference 20 Exhibit 3 Marketing Strategy Timeline Goal Strategies Owner A – Develop the System Corporate Identity and reflect the System creative look and messaging as the foundation of all marketing and communications. 1. Maintain in-house expertise 2. Design premier System marketing piece 3. Lead with the LMHS logo, review/eliminate other logos, no new logos 4. Standards for new signage 5. Support marketing for Key Business Strategies, Enabling Strategies and Tactics under the System·Doctor·Service·Patient messaging philosophy Anne Rose Anne Rose Whitney Andreu Whitney Andreu • • Whitney Andreu Whitney Andreu Service Leaders 6. Complete Corporate Identity and Branding Strategy Anne Rose Jim Nathan SLC • New standards set and used • Annual Plans • Priority Screens results • Budget • Marketing materials • Results of evaluation Brand promise completed Internal and External Roll Out Brand Audit Goal Measure New materials, Brand audit, Fewer logos 21 Measure • Budget and staffing plan Completion of new piece, standards for new look New materials developed Expected Completion Date Ongoing 2/07 Ongoing 2/07 1/07 Ongoing Annual Ongoing Annual TBD Exhibit 3 Marketing Strategy Timeline Goal Strategies Owner B – Cultivate a customer focus and understanding for both marketing/communications and operations. Identify and understand all desired audiences, their characteristics and preferences. 1. Effective community awareness Marcom (e.g. Healthy News) 2. Use Internal Communications Audit 3. Use targeting tools for audience segmentation 4. Support and evaluate customer loyalty programs 5. Effective public Affairs, both Media Relations and earned media support for marketing 6. Recruit and support LMHS leaders as community relations liaisons Anne Rose Brandy Church Whitney Andreu Anne Rose Brandy Church Whitney Andreu • Community preference • • • 12/06 Ongoing Ongoing Whitney Andreu Karen Krieger • • • Implementation of changes. Post audit reviews. Documentation of new targeting methods SHARE Club ROI Other ROI Value of placements and earned media specifically tied to ongoing marketing Sally Jackson • Annually 7. Websites reflect System look, message and customer focus 8. Transition Marcom Community preference, ROI Anne Rose Mike Smith • Sr. leaders participate in community organizations Strategic Community Relations Plan Benchmarking of other websites Anne Rose •Successful Transition Goal Measure Measure • 22 Expected Completion Date Ongoing 1/08 Ongoing Ongoing 1/08 Ongoing 1/08 Exhibit 3 Marketing Strategy Timeline Goal Strategies Owner C - Seek and adopt metrics and methodologies for prioritizing, targeting, and evaluating marketing work to ensure the marketing resources are used in the most cost-effective and results-oriented manner. 1. Use “Circuit Breaker” tests per Advisory Board model Anne Rose Whitney Andreu Goal Measure Measure • • 2. Select new targeting tools Anne Rose 3. Adopt S·D·S·P messaging Brandy Church 4. Develop ROI measures for all marketing work Anne Rose Whitney Andreu 5. Research in-house data support potential 6. Evaluated CRM potential, either vendor or in-house IS with central patient records Anne Rose Anne Rose Mike Smith • • • • • • • • Immediate review of work in progress Use annually in service line planning Decide on Solucient tool Consider other needs Reflected in new materials LionShare contract SHARE Club IS crossmatch capabilities Create reports and use for marketing decisions Gain familiarity with products/results; build marketing needs into IS ongoing system projects New metrics, resulting ROI, targeted market share, Lee Residents market share 23 Expected Completion Date 1/07 Annually 1/07 Ongoing 1/07 1/07 10/07 2/07 1/10 TBD LEE MEMORIAL HEALTH SYSTEM BOARD OF DIRECTORS POLICY MANUAL no. 10.36B supersedes no. 10.36A ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- category: title: General Operations System Marketing Program --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- original adoption: revision date: 09/26/97 review date: 02/12/09 07/31/98, 07/26/02 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PURPOSE: To establish and provide for Board oversight of System marketing and public communications efforts. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- POLICY: The System President or his designee shall be responsible to design and implement a program for marketing of the System’s services to the public, purchasers of those services, and others who may use or direct the use of the System’s services. Coincident with the marketing program, there shall also be a program of public communication complementing and reinforcing the marketing program, to inform the public and those who may use or direct the use of the System’s services, of the System’s mission, goals, philosophy, status, and needs, with the purpose of maintaining and enhancing the reputation and image of the Lee Memorial Health System in Lee County, Southwest Florida, the state of Florida, and the United States. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PROCEDURE: 1. The marketing and public communications program and plans shall be in writing. Portions thereof which are exempt from public disclosure under the Laws of Florida shall be treated as confidential. All other elements of the program shall be open to public inspection and discussion. 2. The program and plan documents or summaries thereof shall be routinely and periodically distributed to directors when created and as amended or updated. Background documents and detail shall be available to directors on request. 3. Information deemed confidential shall be clearly marked and shall be treated as such by those that have been given access to the information. 4. The marketing and public communication program shall be reviewed and approved by the Board at least annually. 10.36B POLICY 10.36B System Marketing Program.doc Page 1 of 1 LEE MEMORIAL HEALTH SYSTEM BOARD OF DIRECTORS POLICY MANUAL no. 10.37B supersedes no. 10.37A --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- category: title: General Operations Display of System Name and Logo --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- original adoption: revision date: 07/25/97 review date: 02/12/09 07/31/98, 07/26/02 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PURPOSE: To provide for prominent use of the Lee Memorial Health System name and logo relative to the Lee Memorial Health System facilities. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- POLICY: The Lee Memorial Health System name and logo and characteristic color combinations shall be prominently displayed on all exterior signage and appropriate interior areas of all of the Lee Memorial Health System facilities, unless the Board approves a deviation from this policy. 10.37B POLICY 10.37B Appr 7-26-02.doc Page 1 of 1 Planning Committee of the Whole Feb 12, 2009 Informal Marketing Forum (Kerry Babb, Marketing Liaison) (Verbal Update) There is no documentation for this item. FY 2009 Key Strategic Focus Financial Focus Public Image Clinical & Operational Effectiveness LMHS 2009 Priorities Physician Relationships Organizational Clarity 3 ___________________ L E E M E M O R I A L HEALTH SYSTEM BOARD OF DIRECTORS OTHER ITEMS ___________________ L E E M E M O R I A L HEALTH SYSTEM BOARD OF DIRECTORS DATE OF THE NEXT REGULARLY SCHEDULED MEETING PLANNING Committee of the Whole MEETING THURSDAY, March 5, 2009 1:00pm Lee Memorial Hospital Boardroom 2776 Cleveland Ave, Ft. Myers, FL 33901