Clicks-and-Mortar: Health Care's Future
By Kim Bellard, April 27, 2017
The woes of the
retail industry are well known, and are usually blamed on the impact of
the Internet. Credit Suisse projects that 8,600 brick-and-mortar stores
will close in 2017, which would beat the record set in 2008, at the
height of the last recession. And then there's health care,
where the retail business is booming.
In a recent Wall
Street Journal article, Christopher Mims set forth Three
Hard Lessons the Internet is Teaching Traditional Stores. The lessons are:
1.
Data is King
2.
Personalization + Automation = Profits
3.
Legacy Tech
Won't Cut It
It's easy to
see how all those also apply to health care.
But health care
is different, right? Patients want to see their physician. That
physical touch, that personal interaction, is a key part of the process.
It's not something that can be replicated over a computer screen.
Yeah, well, the
retail industry has been through all that. Retail once primarily meant
local mom-and-pop stores. They knew their customers and made choices on
their behalf. But it was all very personal.
Still, though,
when Amazon came along, booksellers were adamant: no one wants to buy
books sight unseen! When that truism was proven false, other sectors of
retail had their turn in the Internet spotlight, and the last twenty
years of results haven't been pretty for them.
It turns out
that the personal touch isn't quite as important as retailers liked to
think.
So why hasn't
health care been more disrupted by the Internet? Well, for one thing,
when you buy a book online, your state doesn't require that you buy it
from a bookstore that is licensed by its not-so-friendly licensing
board, as is true with seeing doctors over the internet.
Strike one for
disruption.
·
Data is King: Health care
collects a lot of data, and will get even more with all the new sensors.
The big tech companies know their customers very well and tailor
interactions accordingly; health care must as well.
·
Personalization + Automation = Profits:, We're stuck in waiting rooms, filling out forms we've already
filled out elsewhere. That is not a personal experience that can survive
in the 21st century. It has to be smoother, faster, and friction-less.
·
Legacy Tech Won't Cut It: EHRs that no
one likes. Claims systems that take weeks to process a claim. Billing
processes that produce bills no one can understand. The list
could go on almost indefinitely. All too often, health care's tech is
not ready for prime time.
The question
is, are health care's leaders learning these lessons?
The future of
retail appears to be in "clicks-and-mortar" (or "bricks-and-clicks").
Health care can
act like B Dalton or Borders, assuming until it is too late that their
consumers will visit them in person, because they always had. Or it can
act now to jump to the data-driven "clicks-and-mortar" approach that
other retail businesses are moving to.
Health care
organizations which get that right will be the one to survive.
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