Managing Your Practice

Seasonality


 

Did you notice that your practice slows down in February? In fact, if you plot your patient census over a few years, you may find that it dips every February. And you will discover other slow periods, perhaps in December, and busy months during other parts of the year.

Dr. Joseph S. Eastern, a dermatologist in Belleville, N.J.

Dr. Joseph S. Eastern

Seasonality is yet another of those basic business concepts that most physicians have never heard of, because of the conspicuous lack of business training in medical schools. Seasonal fluctuations exist in one form or another in every business, including private medical practices. Why are people more or less willing to spend money at certain times of the year? Analysts usually blame slow business during January or February on reluctance to buy products or services after the holiday season. They attribute summer peaks to everything from warm weather to an increased propensity to buy when students are out of school, and summer slumps to vacationing customers. It is not always easy – or necessary – to explain seasonality. The point is that such behavior patterns do exist.

It would seem that this behavior would be easy to change, by running some ads, or doing an e-mail blast; but unfortunately, altering a seasonal pattern is not an option for a small private practice. It can be done, but it is a deep pockets game requiring long, expensive campaigns that are only practical for large corporations.

For example, soup was traditionally consumed during the winter months since time immemorial. After years of pervasive advertising extolling its nutritional virtues (remember “Soup is Good Food”?), the soup industry succeeded in convincing the public to use their product year-round. Obviously, that kind of large-scale behavior modification is not practical for a local medical practice.

Does that mean there is nothing we can do about our practices’ seasonal variations? Not at all; but we must work within the realities of our patients’ seasonal behavior, rather than attempting to change that behavior outright.

First, you need to know what that behavior is, because it varies from practice to practice, even within the same state or city. Plotting your seasonality is easy; you can make a graph on Excel in a few minutes. Ask your office manager or accountant for month-by-month billing figures for the last 2 or 3 years. (Make sure it’s the amount billed, not collected, since the latter lags the former by several weeks at least.) Plot those figures on the vertical arm and time (in months) on the horizontal. Alternatively you can plot patient visits per month, if you wish; I do both.

Once you know your seasonality, review your options. Modify your own habits when necessary. If you typically take a vacation in August, for example, that’s not a great idea if August is one of your busiest months; consider vacationing during predictable slow periods instead.

Though I have said that you can’t change most seasonal behavior, it is possible to “retrain” some of your long-time, loyal patients to come in during your slower periods for at least some of their care. Use insurance company rules as a financial incentive, where possible. Many of my patients are on Medicare, so I send a notice to all of them in early November each year, urging them to come in during December (one of my light months) before their deductible has to be paid again.

If you advertise your services, do the bulk of it during your busiest months. That might seem counterintuitive; why not advertise during slow periods to fill those empty slots? But once again, you cannot change seasonal behavior with a low-budget, local advertising campaign; physicians who attempt it invariably get a poor response to their ads. So don’t try to move the mountain to Mohammed. Advertise during your busy periods, when seasonal patterns predict that potential patients are more willing to spend money and are more likely to respond to your message.

In short, then, try to “flatten” your seasonal dips by persuading as many existing patients as possible to return during slower seasons. You can then encourage new patients to make appointments when they are receptive to purchasing new services, your seasonal peaks. Once in your practice, some of them can then be shifted into your slower periods, especially for predictable, periodic care.

Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at dermnews@mdedge.com.

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