When I was a young girl my mother would have chores that each of my siblings and I needed to complete each Saturday morning while she was at the beauty shop getting her hair done. She would write out the list with each of our names by the chores that we were to do. When I was real young I had to take out the trash, fold some clothes, and pick up my room. My sister who was older got to clean the bathrooms, I couldn’t wait until I was old enough to do this “glorious job.” Then the day came when I graduated to cleaning the bathrooms, now my mother was a smart woman and she took time to show me, in detail, what needed to be done and how she expected it to look when it was done and I knew that my job would be inspected when she got home. I really wanted to please my mom so I tried really hard to get it all right the first time, but I did miss a few things and when she got home she did not have any problems letting me know what was not done to her expectations, she set a standard and it needed to be upheld. Over time I was able to get those bathrooms clean and pass the inspection with flying colors, but even though I could do a good job, she still would look it over to make sure I did not slack off. My mother was creating in me good work habits that I would be able to take with me through my whole life and I thank her for this. So what does this have to do with working in a medical office? Well, office management needs to work in the same way that my mother did with me when it comes to performance expectations with our office staff. We need to not only communicate clearly what the job expectations are, but we need to demonstrate how we expect them to be done. Have training sheets with itemized tasks and goals for each employee to be able to review and work from. Also make sure you take time to show them how each task is to be done to meet the employers expectation, just saying “clean the treatment room” does not cut it because their idea of what clean is could be totally different from what your idea is. By having directions and inspections for each task you can ensure that the job is done correctly. Employees will be happier because they will know what is expected from them and management will be happier because the standard has been set and taught. Another good reason for having tasks and directions written is that it makes it much easier for review when something does fall through the cracks, you just have the staff member get out their training sheet and there it is in black and white, no ifs, ands or buts about it, making the goal expectations easy, allowing for a bulls eye to be hit every time.
10/01/2012
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