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CREATING YOUR PREFERRED FUTURE

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Title: CREATING YOUR PREFERRED FUTURE


1
CREATING YOUR PREFERRED FUTURE
  • Reginald Carter, PhD
  • Past President/CEO
  • Health Care Association of Michigan
  • Orgpro Learning Fest
  • Michigan Society of Association Executives
  • Frankenmuth, Michigan
  • July 18, 2007
  • 130-300 PM

2
PREFERRED FUTURE
  • Lions, antelopes and chipmunks
  • Define your antelopes and do not get distracted
    by the chipmunks
  • Plan back from victory rather than forward from
    the present
  • Transformational Change and Strategic Planning
    Newt Gingrich (2002)

3
PREFERRED FUTURING
  • Preferred futuring initiates a large paradigm
    shift, taking us from being powerless victims to
    being empowered and connected to our deep
    passions and motivated to work together to create
    a future we want. It means we are responsible and
    cannot blame others. But there is a tendency to
    resist this reality. For many of us, feeling
    helpless or victimized has been a way of coping
    with our sense of powerlessness.
  • Lawrence Lippitt, Preferred Futuring (1998) pg.67

4
GETTING TO NO
  • Defining your preferred future helps to clarify
    competing agendas and better use of scarce
    resources. It provides a critical reason for
    saying no to many opportunities to spend your
    resources helping others attain their preferred
    futures.
  • The larger the association the greater the
    requests to use your resources for other
    preferred futures.

5
AGENDA
  • Member versus association futures
  • Five lessons for creating the future
  • Exercise to help define your preferred future
  • Five examples of HCAMs implementation of their
    preferred future
  • Lessons learned
  • Resources

6
  • I GO WHERE THE PUCK IS GOING, NOT WHERE IT WAS.
  • Wayne Gretsky, hockey player

7
DIFFERENT FUTURES
  • The future of members is different from the
    future of an association of those members.
  • It is almost impossible from within an industry
    to perceive of a future that eliminates their
    major capital investment. IBM would have found it
    impossible to envision a world without
    typewriters. Nursing home owners have great
    difficulty in envisioning a world without
    nursing homes.

8
ORIGINS OF CHANGE
  • Almost all significant change is initiated
    outside a given industry.
  • It is just too painful to gain voluntary support
    among current vested interest members for a big
    change which places them at high risk.
  • Doing nothing also has its own risks.
  • The reason why members have a difficult time
    agreeing to a preferred future is that they have
    different expectations about the future. These
    expectations vary according to their business
    plan. Different segments of the same industry
    have very different expectations for the future.

9
GETTING TO YES
  • Any proposed preferred future can impact members
    positively or negatively based on their business
    plan.
  • That is why it is so hard to get to yes.
  • Some members who are negatively impacted by the
    adoption by an association of a preferred future
    may reassess their continuing in membership.

10
FIVE LESSONS FOR CREATING THE FUTURE
  • Imagination is the master of great strategy,
    implementation its servant
  • When it comes to creating value, imagination wins
    over forecasting and prediction
  • Ambitious goals act as catalysts.
  • Put a car in every garage (Henry Ford)
  • Rock- bottom prices to rural Americans (Sam
    Walton)

11
FIVE LESSONS FOR CREATING THE FUTURE
  • Do not listen to naysayers.
  • Create a compelling future which captures the
    dream, defines benefits to consumers, identifies
    core competencies and defines interface between
    company and consumer.
  • Gary Hamel and C.K. Prahalad, Competing for the
    Future (1994).

12
EXERCISE IN DEFINING YOUR PREFERRED FUTURE
  • I dream of a world where our members can
  • Our association will have to strengthen its
    competencies in
  • And forge partnerships with
  • To attract and retain members, our association
    will have to interact with and serve members in
    the following manner

13
HCAMs PREFERRED FUTURE
  • I dream of a world where HCAM members can be
    respected by the majority of the public, receive
    adequate payments and be judged on customer
    satisfaction and patient outcomes.
  • For this world to become a reality, HCAM will
    have to strengthen its competencies in defining
    quality, negotiating the necessary resources and
    communicating our successes and our legitimate
    role in providing high quality care.

14
HCAMs PREFERRED FUTURE
  • And forge partnerships with consumers,
    regulators, media, legislators, other provider
    organizations, payers, financial institutions,
    advocacy groups and physicians (basically
    everyone).
  • To attract and retain members HCAM will have to
    interact with and serve members with continuous,
    cutting-edge education, real results in the
    regulatory and legislative arenas and efficient
    ways of communicating with members.

15
IMPLEMENTING HCAMs PREFERRED FUTURE
  • New CEO (1996)
  • Ten Guiding Principles (1996)
  • Defining the Preferred Future (1998)
  • Implementing the Preferred Future
  • Consumer Guide (1996-2006)
  • Clinical Practice Guidelines (2000-2007)
  • Provider Tax (2000-2007)
  • New Physical Plant Model (2002-2007)

16
CONSUMER GUIDE
  • Family satisfaction (high)
  • Web-site and printed copies
  • Neutral third party research
  • All homes invited to participate
  • All homes listed
  • Detail on Medicaid and Medicare eligibility
  • Recommendations on choosing a nursing home
  • Updated every two years

17
AARP-BEYOND 50(2002)
  • Consumers perceptions of health care quality
    stand in stark contrast to the views of technical
    experts who warn of deficiencies. For example,
    although it is known that many people, including
    Medicare beneficiaries, do not receive
    appropriate care, the vast majority of consumers
    across all the age groups are very satisfied with
    the health care they receive. (page 105)

18
CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINES
  • Broad coalition
  • Timetable and process to implement American
    Medical Directors clinical practice guidelines
  • Joint training of regulators and providers
  • Decrease in survey citations and improvements in
    clinical quality in the short run with recent
    reversal of this trend

19
NEW PHYSICAL PLANT INCENTIVE
  • Governor Granholm initiative (2002)
  • 5 more to Medicaid rate paid to nursing home for
    creating predominately single room and bath. This
    provides an additional 182,500 for a 100 bed
    Medicaid home to be used for new physical plant
    expenses.
  • Change law to allow revisions
  • New model now available at Tendercare at Suttons
    Bay.

20
TEN GUIDING PRINCIPLES
  • One year to get to yes
  • Used to review proposed regulations, legislation
    and practices
  • Good public policy is necessary to get buy in
    from broad coalition necessary to create change
    in the best interest of consumer, not necessarily
    the provider members

21
PRINCIPLES
  • Substandard care shall not be tolerated.
  • Customer satisfaction is the most important basis
    for defining quality.
  • Customer satisfaction driven criteria should
    replace the current government regulatory model.
  • The consumers need for services should be
    assesses and the necessary resources committed to
    meeting their needs.

22
PRINCIPLES
  • Competition among providers should be encouraged.
  • Customers need to know the costs and outcomes of
    services in order to make informed choices.
  • Customers have the right to select their most
    appropriate services.
  • Legislation to address isolated problems is
    inappropriate.

23
PRINCIPLES
  • Legislation and public policies should be
    initiated only if based on outcome evidence
    information that enhances quality care.
  • Uniform standards should be promoted.

24
PROVIDER TAX
  • Governor Engler initiative in 2000
  • 440 million in 2006 from enhanced federal
    Medicaid funding for nursing homes and other
    state services.

25
LESSONS LEARNED
  1. Implementation of a specific initiative always
    results in members who are winners and losers
    even though the project helps movement to a
    preferred future.
  2. The first Consumer Guide embarrassed some low
    performing homes but encouraged transparency,
    improved care and provided an alternative
    definition of quality outside the regulatory
    framework.

26
LESSONS LEARNED
  • Members have different strategies for achieving
    success. An associations preferred future can
    conflict with individual members strategies.
    Leadership needs to be aware of these likely
    conflicts before and during the process of
    defining and implementing a preferred future.
  • The new physical plant proposed model and the
    Provider Tax split HCAM members on ideological
    and financial basis. It was probably inevitable
    that some members would be unhappy.
  • There is strong member and staff resistance to
    the risk of defining a preferred future and much
    uncertainty regarding the future. It takes
    courage to define a preferred future. Most
    members are more comfortable allowing other
    forces to define their future.

27
LESSONS LEARNED
  • Members may perceive an associations commitment
    to a preferred future as not in their best
    interest and decide to leave the associations
    membership. Three large chains did leave HCAM
    membership in 2005 and one has subsequently
    returned. None chose to belong to another
    competitor association.
  • HCAM did gain a whole new membership category
    (County Medical Care Facilities) because HCAM was
    perceived to be proactive and aggressive
    especially in the political arena.

28
LESSONS LEARNED
  • Be careful what you wish for you may attain it
    with a smaller but a more cohesive membership.
    Members join associations to achieve goals they
    could not attain individually.
  • Associations need to establish preferred futures
    which allow all members to envision what success
    would look like. It may be necessary to be less
    ambitious in establishing preferred futures in
    order to retain membership levels. HCAM, I
    believe, is a stronger association as a result of
    articulating a preferred future even with a
    smaller membership base.
  • Strong volunteer leadership is necessary to
    preserve a preferred future when it may cause
    association membership declines.

29
RESOURCES
  • Roger Fisher and William Ury, Getting to Yes,
    Penquin Books, 1981.
  • GARY Hamel and C.K. Prahalad, Competing for the
    Future, Harvard Business School Press, 1994.
  • Allen Liff, Learning How to Create the Future.
    Association Management, August 1997 (Pages
    54-62).
  • George Lakaff, Dont Think of an Elephant,
    Chelsea Green Publishing Company, 2004.

30
CONTACTING REGINALD CARTER
  • By mail at 1777 Colorado Drive, East Lansing,
    Michigan 48823
  • By phone at (517) 337-2266
  • By e-mail at reginaldkcarter_at_aol.com
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