August 8th, 2014 by Elma Jane
The U.S. Defense Department is planning to issue a requests for bids on a multibillion dollar electronic health records or HER system by the end of September. The department issued its third draft of a Request for Proposals to industry early last month, conducted a briefing for vendors later in June and received responses to the draft earlier this month. The objective of the program is to modernize DoD’s EHR system and to make records accessible to the Department of Veterans Affairs, as well as to private medical providers. The goal of the planned system is to improve the quality of care from a clinical standpoint, while contributing to the seamless movement of medical records among key care providers. DoD has titled the project the (Defense Healthcare Management System Modernization Program) or DHMSM. DoD has shaped the contracting process to ensure that the project is well defined and properly managed from the start and it has sought feedback from the vendor community and other health IT experts. That accounts for the three draft RFPs, the meetings with vendors and consultations with Healthcare Organizations. This deliberative approach could help DoD avoid the pitfalls of the ill-managed Affordable Care Act launch.
Posted in Medical Healthcare Tagged with: Care Act, Department of Veterans Affairs, DHMSM, DoD, electronic health records, health experts, Healthcare Organizations, HER, industry, proposals
June 17th, 2014 by Elma Jane
Sales is like acting: You may have something great to offer, but no matter how hard you try, some people just aren’t going to like it. Just as actors don’t nail every audition, a salesperson won’t close every deal or chase down every lead. Dealing with this kind of rejection day after day can really wear your sales team down if they don’t have the right mindset.
One of the most crucial skills you can help your sales team develop is the ability to effectively manage adversity and overcome rejection through the power of positive thinking. With rare exceptions, a salesperson faces more losses than wins. As a sales team leader, you’ll need to find a way to keep your group motivated and focused on overcoming the many obstacles they’ll face in the course of cold calling and pitching proposals.
Inspiring optimism in your sales team isn’t always easy, but you can do it with the right techniques.
Encourage team members to share success stories. Gather the team and have all sales people share stories about how they overcame obstacles and reversed setbacks. By learning how other team members succeeded after initial adversity, sales professionals can learn to be more optimistic in their own thoughts. You can also review one of the most impressive wins your team had for the quarter and outline what enabled that sales representative to win the deal. This is a great way to build confidence in the company’s product and service, and do some team building at the same time.
We’re not 100 percent in control of our circumstances, but we can control the attitude with which we confront them. A prospect can tell in just a few minutes if you are confident and passionate about what you are selling and if you are prepared. Your confidence often breeds confidence in the prospect, which more often than not leads to winning the sale. By choosing to see the glass as half full, we can position ourselves for greater success.
Meet one-on-one with your sales staff. It’s important that your sales team recognizes the direct connection between their attitudes and their results. As a leader, you can help by assessing individual performance and talking through how each person’s perceptions affect his or her results. Different techniques will appeal to different individuals, so it’s best to take a personalized approach.
Retrain worn-down employees. Constant rejection when making a few dozen calls a day can take its toll on even the most optimistic person. The first sign that sales representatives are struggling comes when they claim that the product is too expensive or does not provide the functionality customers are looking for. Those sales people then expect rejection from every additional call. This may mean they require more training on what differentiates the product from the competition. If this is the case, it’s best to get those representatives off the phones and into a training session, where you can fine-tune their approaches and rebuild confidence.
Posted in Uncategorized Tagged with: customer, lead, product, proposals, sales, Sales Representatives, sales team, salesperson, training