KPI To Improve Your Competitive Edge.
Hedgehog Concept By 2006, our firm was a multimillion dollar company servicing more than 20 very different specialties. As the company partner responsible for billing/coding expertise in each specialty, and conveyance of such to our staff, it was a daunting task to truly master so much material. In retrospect, it is clear that we could never be truly great (certainly not best in the world) at 20-plus specialties. We made the very difficult decision to release a couple million dollars of business to focus on a single type of client. We did this gradually; we released clients not in the desired vertical only as we sold similar volume/cash-flowed new business in the target market. We helped released clients find a safe landing spot with another partner. It was hard work but, ultimately, worthwhile. Cost and Revenue Per Claim. Through our national association, we gained access to benchmarking data as well as exceptional consultants. We hired a couple of these consultants to visit our firm during our “hedgehog concept” transition. Each, within their first hour in the office, asked us this simple question: What is your revenue (i.e., how much do you make) per claim and what does it cost you to produce each? In other words, for each unique visit, encounter, surgery, etc., what is your revenue and expense? We had never calculated this and felt foolish as it was obviously one of if not the most critical KPI for us as a billing firm. To calculate, simply take the total of the firm’s payments or expenses and divide each by the total number of unique visits, encounters, or surgeries. The quotient is obviously the KPI you want to know. For instance, $3M in revenue from 500,000 unique claims means you divide $3M by 500,000. The quotient (i.e., $6) is your revenue/payment per claim. Hopefully, your costs are less than $3M, and for the sake of example, let’s say it is $2.5M. The quotient from $2.5M divided by 500,000 (i.e., $5 is your expense per claim). The profit of $1/claim may be good or bad depending on projections and efficiencies within your firm. Knowing this figure for your firm helps you make decisions about pricing future contracts and knowing, per client, which is most versus least profitable. Blended Encounter Rate (BER). Our firm’s clients report standardized data to the feds regarding their total “encounters,” which translates to a unique visit or service (e.g., a sick visit versus annual versus a surgery-only encounter). They also have a fixed compensation rate for the majority of payments. Most client CFOs know their predetermined rates, but few know the BER across all payers. To calculate, take total payments for a client and divide it by the client’s total encounters/visits (unique deliverables). The quotient is the BER. For example, $3M in payments from 30,000 encounters results in a BER of $100. At our firm, we are able to determine opportunity to make clients (and our company) more money based on how each client’s BER compares to the state average. These are public data due to the federal and state funding that requires transparency in this regard. Niching down into a single specialty allows for the development of expertise around compensation methodologies and expectations versus trying to understand those for more than 20 different specialties. If you work in an E&M-centric specialty, BER may work well. If not, find “the” service, case, or whatever item by which your BER can be benchmarked. Trailing Average Charges, Payments, and Visits. In our early years, clients raised issues for us versus us letting them know of troubling trends we were seeing. Today, predictive analytics and business intelligence are all the rage. While knowing an increase or decrease in charges and/or visits/procedures will likely result in a corresponding bump or decline in payments, alerting your clients to this expectation (before they experience it) goes a long way in demonstrating expertise and moving from “vendor” to true “partner” status. Using a rolling three-month average (from the immediately preceding three months) is ideal versus just going month to month as a monthly anomaly in any category can derail or at least confound expectations. Days of Accounts Receivable (DAR). This seems a pretty basic benchmark, but finding a number that demonstrates good versus great performance can be elusive. Working in our vertica, we know 60-70 percent of payments come from two payers with clearly defined payment timelines of less than 30 days. We expect to get DAR below 30 days for nearly all clients and even have some performing well below 20 DAR. Set realistic expectations for short- and long-term goals so you and your clients benefit from low DAR meaning more money is collected faster.
Reporting Across Disparate Platforms Today, we work on more than a dozen unique PM platforms. Whether EPIC, eClinicalWorks, NextGen, Athena, Allscripts, or any other, the reporting from each varies dramatically. What helped our firm move from “good” to better (when do you really get to “great” status?) was developing proprietary software that standardizes reporting across all platforms. The product ingests ERAs (i.e., 835 files) that are standard from all payers and from each PM it also absorbs a current receivables report so any claims not arriving at the payer would be represented. Reporting is robust as data may be evaluated by payer, state, PM, specialty, POS, etc. The data analytics are enlightening and include but are not limited to:
Billing Only vs. RCM There is no shortcut to success in RCM. Intelligence, persistence, transparency, and old-fashioned hard work can move any firm from good to great. Carefully selecting and continually monitoring KPI that benefit you and your clients will allow you to measure your successes and shortcomings with amazing clarity. Lastly, maximizing available technology to improve performance and profitability will have a lasting positive impact. Make the commitment to begin the transition from good to great and watch your client relationships blossom while your profit soars. Ray Jorgensen, CPC, is cofounder of RevenueHealth Systems, the nation’s leader in revenue cycle analytics, workflow, and consulting services. Ray is a nationally recognized healthcare expert and sought after speaker having personally trained thousands from all 50 states on coding, billing, and reimbursement in addition to authoring two books and dozens of articles. You can contact him at RJorgensen@gopmg.com or 401-616-2099. Learn more about RevenueHealth at revenuehealthsystems.com
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