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Would all of you O&P practice owners harassed
by qualified practitioners beating down your doors
please raise your hand? If that's not
a problem at your company, you may be interested
in a strategy used by New England Orthotic and
Prosthetic Systems LLC (NEOPS®), a relatively
new player in the O&P field. The key is co-ownership,
and it's more than sharing profits.
The Connecticut-based company also provides attractive
salaries, generous health coverage (about 100 percent
of family coverage), equal gender opportunities,
and the usual slate of professional staff benefits.
But it seems sharing profits from the onset is
what attracts ambitious and talented practitioners
to this five-year-old firm. Managing partner Ron
Manganiello couldn't be happier.
“We currently have a waiting list of ABC [American Board for Certification
in Orthotics & Prosthetics] -certified practitioners who are applying to
join our company. From Day One, a co-owner holds 20 percent ownership and gets
20 percent of the branch's net pre-tax profits. That's in addition to salary
and all the other benefits,” he related.
A businessman whose expertise is finance, Manganiello
started NEOPS in 1998 with investment partners
New Canaan Capital and Pat Donnelly, CPO. He and
Donnelly opened the first facility in Branford,
Connecticut, with Donnelly owning 20 percent of
the company. There are 16 branches now.
“As we started to grow, we'd open a new branch with a certified practitioner
as a managing partner owning 20 percent of that branch,” Manganiello explained. “They
don't buy in' as investors--we give them the 20 percent. Nor do we have profit-sharing
in lieu of salary--it's in addition to salary and the other perks.”
“In the last five years, we've only had to terminate one partner/manager,
and one left for health reasons,” Manganiello said. “This has been
a very good model which works equally well for the practitioners and for the
company.”
“For one thing, it retains good practitioners and keeps them involved in
the success of their branch,” Manganiello continued. “For a practitioner
to be named as partner/manager' on a business card not only strokes the person's
ego, but it's also good for marketing. When the practitioner is dealing with
referral or reimbursement sources, it tells the person on the other side of the
desk that this practitioner is someone of consequence who has the ability to
make decisions.”
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| Labs are clean, well-organized,
and efficient. |
Another fundamental NEOPS policy is maintaining
a loose rein. “There is no non compete agreement
in our organization,” Manganiello stressed. “We
feel if someone's not happy working for us, we
don't want them to stay. Different people perform
better in various working environments, and we
appreciate that. Some practitioners don't want
any administrative responsibility at all. We tend
to attract those of a more entrepreneurial nature.”
“We retain people by keeping them happy. And we do that essentially in
two ways: we treat them very well, and we give them a stake in the business.”
“In today's economy, starting your own O&P
practice is extremely difficult because of the
need to have insurance contracts, among other things.
I'm not saying that's a good thing--but it is a
reality. Instead, we give our partner/managers
a part of the business. The result is we have virtually
no turnover among our owner/managers. And now,
since word has spread about us, we're getting more
and more resumes from qualified people who want
to join the company,” he added happily.
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| Peter DiPaolo, CPO, is
partner/manager in NEOP’s Hamden, Connecticut,
facility. |
New England Orthotic and Prosthetic Systems consists
of 16 offices in four states: seven in Connecticut,
five in New York, three in Massachusetts, and one
in New Hampshire. Expansion is generally based
on either of two situations. NEOPS identifies an
area contiguous to an existing location; feedback
is then collected from referral sources who often
have offices or practice in hospitals in the secondary
area. If there is agreement that the new location
would generate sufficient work and be a convenience
for doctors and therapists, the groundwork begins
for a new branch.
In the second scenario, an established practitioner approaches NEOPS
about opening a branch at a particular location where the practitioner
already has a following.
“We have not solicited one practitioner to join our company, nor have we
advertised," the administrative partner emphasized. "They have all
found us via word of mouth. And we presently have a backlog of qualified people
waiting for an opening.”
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| Shelley Sherbondy, CO,
is partner/manager in the Hamden office, along
with Peter DiPaolo, CPO. |
Under the NEOPS organization, each branch has
a certified prosthetist, orthotist, or CPO as a
partner/manager. Four are headed by men, five by
women, and five have co-partners who share ownership
and administrative responsibility. One small branch
specializes in compression therapy and is managed
by a woman who is a certified compression therapist.
About 40 percent of branch owner/managers are women, and in cases in
which ownership is shared, four out of five branches feature male/female
practitioner duos.
“I'm not sure why this happens. It certainly wasn't by intent--but it tends
to work out exceptionally well. They seem to be our best branches," Manganiello
noted. "Maybe it's because every patient has the option of being seen by
a practitioner of the same sex. At any rate, we do have quite a high percentage
of female practitioners compared to the industry as a whole. In fact, our corporate
staff consists of two women among the three highest-ranking positions.”
As to how he accounts for his enterprise's success and growth within
five years, he responded, "We have all the advantages of a big company
in terms of access to capital, buying strategies, sophisticated computer
management information systems and communications, and insurance contracts.
But we function more like a series of small businesses, with co-owners
having a vested interest and a genuine participation. Some of the branches
also have staff practitioners who either prefer that arrangement or they're
waiting for a new branch to open.”
Another policy is that each facility handles its own fabrication. "I
agonized over having a central fabrication system for years," Manganiello
admitted. "But then we agreed that it's very difficult to make central
fab truly work. It's almost impossible to do fabrication a little differently
for each practitioner. So we don't do it that way. We let our practitioners
control how they want their prostheses or orthoses finished.”
Another success factor, Manganiello feels, is the attractive, patient-friendly
design and ambiance at the facilities. “Every facility is newly
built, and each branch manager has been involved in the design of his
or her own facility,” he said. The décor features bright
colors, attractive plants, and interesting fish tanks. Small kitchens
are available to patients as well as staff —so a patient
can get a cup of coffee while waiting. A patient hospitality room with
a television, computer, and a comfortable couch make often lengthy
visits for casting and fitting easier. There are no glass walls separating
the waiting room from the office/receptionist area; everything is open.
The warm, attractive environment may also be a factor in attracting
NEOPS' large percentage of women practitioners, Manganiello noted.
Although he isn't a practitioner, Manganiello gained his knowledge of
the field after acquiring the former J.E. Hanger Inc., Washington,
DC, in 1985. He added Capitol Orthopedic in 1987 and took the company
public, continuing with acquisitions from 1987 through 1995. Today,
he and former colleague Ivan Sabel, CPO, chairman and CEO of Hanger
Orthopedic Group, remain good friends.
As to NEOPS' further growth, Manganiello dropped his jocular tone and
said earnestly, "I know every employee in this company--there's
about 60. I know them on a first-name basis; I know their families,
their life history. They all have my home phone number; they've been
entertained at my home.
“I will stop the growth when it gets to the point that I don't know them
this well any more--when we have to hire middle management. I think middle management
can ruin a company.
“This company is really a lot of fun for us. I don't ever want it to not
be fun any more.”
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Mary Bach Fleming is the lead
writer and manager of editorial services at
Ron Sonntag Public Relations, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
A graduate of Marquette University College
of Journalism, she has been a newspaper writer,
columnist, and editor. This article appeared
in the December 2003 issue of The O and P Edge. http://www.oandp.com/edge/issues/articles/2003-12_06.asp |
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