"Change is inevitable. Growth is optional.” John Maxwell
Over the last decade, healthcare has undergone significant changes, not the least being a consequence of digital transformation.
Digital health solutions have the potential to improve healthcare delivery in radical ways and serve to deliver value based care, by driving better efficiencies and better patient outcomes. Despite this, implementing meaningful change through digital transformation can be both challenging and frustrating.
New digital projects invariably impact the daily routine of the healthcare workforce, and in reality, most of us would rather avoid change if possible. Embracing change, however, is an important part of growing your organisation, remaining relevant and building a competitive edge.
Successful software implementation within your healthcare organisation is as dependent on the quality of your change management process as it is on the technology itself.
In this article, we uncover the fundamental elements of successful software implementation within your organisation. Whether you are Head of IT in a large organisation, a clinical leader or practice owner or manager in a small practice, adopting these principles will help your organisation or practice get the most out of its technology investment, keep your staff engaged and happy and deliver better outcomes for your patients and your organisation.
Have you ever wanted to implement a great new digital solution to your healthcare team knowing that it is going to improve patient safety, improve efficiencies or save your organisation money, only to meet resistance and inertia from a significant portion of your team? Perhaps it is a new electronic prescribing module or a new communication platform to connect your healthcare teams.
Conversely, do you find yourself frustrated by your juniors unilaterally adopting new and unsanctioned digital technologies that have yet to be vetted by the appropriate authorities within your organisation?
It turns out the uptake of a new technology when introduced to a group of new users follows a very stereotypical and reproducible pattern that can be well described by the diffusion of innovations process (technology adoption lifecycle)1. Knowing where you and members of your team fit on the technology adoption curve will help you better manage team dynamics and effect real change within your organisation.
When introduced to a new group of users, the adoption of new technology typically follows a normal distribution (bell-shaped) curve with users falling into one of five groups (Fig 1):
Fig 1. Technology Adoption Lifecycle
Understanding where you and the rest of your team sit on the technology adoption curve is a good start. Finding your tech-savvy early adopters is a good next step, but to achieve meaningful adoption you really need the support of some key early majority users to get the rest of the team on board. These individuals will serve as the best referees for the rest of your organisation. Remember they see the benefit to change where appropriate but are risk-averse. Therefore, they will want to see you deliver the initiative as a total solution (i.e user onboarding, product education and training, policies and procedures, and appropriate support channels in place. Be respectful of both their needs and aversion to risk when initiating discussions.
The late majority and sceptics require cold hard evidence. Case studies and testimonials from other organisations that have successfully implemented the solution are a start. However, robust evidence supporting the software’s purported claims is ideal. When dealing with sceptics address their concerns head-on. Honesty is always the best approach. Also, be specific. Rather than saying ‘your team can be onboarded quickly’ say 'the team can be onboarded in ten minutes'.
Here are some of the major obstacles an organisation faces when implementing information technology rollouts:
Installing software on a healthcare workers computer or phone does not, in itself, change behaviour.The success of any technology implementation will, to a large degree, depend on your organisation’s effectiveness in change management: Here are some guiding principles to drive meaningful change:
There is evidence to support a strategic change management mindset to your implementation. According to Prosci’s Best Practices in Change Management projects with poor change management meet objectives less than 50% of the time. Projects with an excellent management approach achieve a 96% success rate.
Understand what success looks like. If long term adoption of your solution is the required outcome then ensure the right metrics are being assessed. Instead of asking ‘’was the project implemented on time and on budget?’’, focus on outcome metrics. Have the original problems we identified been solved with the implementation of the new software?
Foxo is a powerful clinical communication platform ready for rapid enterprise deployment. We’ve made onboarding simple at Foxo.
Curious about how we can improve healthcare outcomes for all stakeholders? Want more information about onboarding your team to Foxo or just want to reach out? We’d love to hear from you. Reach out to us at hello@foxo.com or register for a demo here.
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