Editor’s note: The following supply chain leaders were featured in The Journal of Healthcare Contracting‘s Ten People to Watch issue.
Bruce Radcliff, System Vice President, Supply Chain, Advocate Aurora
What are the most important attributes of successful supply chain teams today?
Successful supply chains need to be agile, engaged with their clinical stakeholders and transparent across all levels of the organization with a collaborative and strategic roadmap.
What project or initiative are you looking forward to working on?
I’m looking forward to tackling innovative ways to handle the labor shortage of today and the coming years. Our team members are one of our greatest assets and keeping them engaged, empowered and feeling valued is a rewarding investment of our time.
What changes brought about by the pandemic are here to stay in the supply chain?
The call for transparency and management of risk combined with the creativity and resolve of supply chain to put patients’ needs first will never leave us. Our teams rose to the challenge and brought their talents to bear on a global problem. Our CEO summed it up well with “Calm over Chaos, Faith over Fear.” Resiliency, collaboration and creativity are here to stay.
What’s the most important risk you took and why?
During the pandemic, our supply chain continued to innovate and even converted our distribution model just a few months before our new ERP deployment. The movement to a higher service just-in-time distribution model was not at an optimal time. However, we took the risk to ensure our clinicians continued to get the dynamic services needed in the face of extreme labor shortages. We rolled from that distribution conversion into a big bang deployment of system-wide ERP across finance, human resources, supply chain and payroll.
How do you continue to grow and develop as a leader?
I believe in bringing your whole self to work and, as such, I have put together a group of a few trusted mentors to give me feedback and share their perspectives on not only leadership skills but also where I am as a person. This gives me a sounding board not only for new ideas but also to transfer their experiences and perspectives into my development. Not every lesson needs to be learned on our own. I’m always amazed at the willingness of people to help, if you ask and commit to listening.
What do you consider before promoting someone?
As I look to move someone into a new opportunity, not only am I evaluating their portfolio of work, team engagement and potential but I’m also evaluating what they have done to prepare their existing team members for their movement. Great leaders prepare their potential successors and teams by providing appropriate growth opportunities.
Jane Torzewski, Director, Category Management, Medical Device Team, Mayo Clinic and Captis
What are the most important attributes of successful supply chain teams today?
We ensure that the contracts team is engaging closely with the clinical practice side and that administrative support works with the clinical side too to meet their needs. The contracting process, the bid process and also the legal terms and conditions are all a part of that.
My role is making sure we meet our timelines. I’ve had the fortunate experience of working in value analysis when I’ve been in contracting. I managed most of our ortho and neuro agreements until a couple of years ago, many of which are in the med/surg area, so I have expertise to guide the team.
How has the contracting process changed in the past two years as well as your relationships with suppliers?
We’ve learned to be much more agile in our approach to contracting. We have to pivot very quickly when we have issues with supply constraints – when we’re trying to put out a fire. In my world, we’re seeing real constraints on supplies due to manufacturing issues like raw material concerns and freight concerns.
Relationships with suppliers are interesting. We’re not highly committed at a 90% rate, for example, with one supplier for med device. It just doesn’t make sense. Actually, having more of a mix of suppliers – a few more suppliers than just one – has helped us be a little more flexible in meeting our practice needs, especially in this environment. Also, do we pay more for reliability? Those are the conversations we’re having now.
Mayo stood up a strong business continuity team prior to the pandemic. As we’ve worked with that team, looking at our three- or six-month risks, we’ve pulled in some different factors like diversification of suppliers and their redundancies. The pandemic forced us to ask questions at a deeper level.
What changes brought about by the pandemic are here to stay in the supply chain?
It accelerated some trends that we were already talking about. The virtual environment was one of them from a staff perspective and we leaned into that. We weren’t a virtual staff prior to the pandemic, but we’ve embraced digital tools and technologies from a staffing perspective.
We’ll continue to deepen our digital connectivity platform, utilizing virtual visits and virtual care networks as we move forward. These were trends that were talked about and on our 2030 plan, but Covid accelerated the need. It’s understanding that work can be done differently. That’s a change in thinking. It’s how the work is getting done today and our team would argue we’re more productive.
But we’re trying to balance a virtual environment and coming together for collaborative intent. Contracting is a skill and an art. It’s difficult to teach that skill when you’re virtual all of the time. So, we’re trying to make it a hybrid situation bringing people back together to learn and mentor one another.
What project or initiative are looking forward to working on in the next year or 18 to 24 months?
Several years ago, Mayo embarked on a very robust plan to digitize its supply chain. That has resulted in a lot of automation and digitization for Mayo and digital tools that have elevated our ability to look at data and work with our stakeholders at a deeper level of understanding. Now, Mayo is starting to enter into some new relationships and new ventures along those lines. It’s exciting stuff.
From a career and contracting perspective, it’s going to broaden our world. It will allow our team to collaborate with new members and entities in a different way. During the next 18 to 24 months, it’s about capitalizing on the work we’ve done over the last several years and bringing a best-in-class supply chain into play.
What is your approach to leadership and managing employees?
People come from different places to work in sourcing and with different skill sets. When I look to mentoring someone, I look for someone with key qualifications. They must have an ability to form strategic relationships and are a people person. That’s something they have shown in previous work.
There are a lot of skills you can teach but there are some foundational, bedrock type of characteristics that are very hard to teach. Those bedrock skills need to be in place and then you can mentor and grow your staff. I have to start with the right person and then I can mentor them to the right place.
They must have the ability to speak confidently to physicians, but also form good relationships amongst their team members. We champion successes. The team knows we’re about trying to elevate opportunities and look to successes. They need to be curious about all aspects of the work they’re doing. If I have a person who’s curious and wants to work hard, coaching and mentoring becomes a joy.
How do you keep your team motivated despite conflicts and obstacles?
Mayo, like everyone else, is trying to figure out how to make their employees happy and keep them challenged and satisfied. It’s something I think about a lot. On the one hand, I’m happy they’re achieving so much. On the other hand, I want to keep them more motivated. So, how do you do that?
For me, keeping an employee motivated is a factor of making sure they know that their work is valued – actually telling them that and praising success. Also, giving employees opportunities to step outside their current role and into a leadership position gives them experience in something else. It helps their exposure within the organization and with stakeholders they’ve never met before. That elevates their career, confidence and skill set.
You must also be a strong advocate for your team. Previously as a nurse, advocacy for my patients was a huge factor and one that translates to being a manager and director. When you’re dealing with internal or external stakeholders, sometimes you need to step into that advocacy role. It teaches them that you can have compassion, courtesy and professionalism, while continuing to evolve and elevate your own team.
How do you align your organization with your vision and mission?
The needs of the patients come first at Mayo. That’s the cornerstone and beacon we put into play for all of the work we do. The humility and opportunity to serve in that role is of paramount importance. While in a negotiation session with a supplier, they’re coming from their viewpoint and we’re coming from ours, but our viewpoint is always going to be elevated. At the end of the day, we’re bringing in products to meet the needs of a patient who desperately needs them.
We also look to values like stewardship, integrity and compassion. Being a steward of the dollar is important, while also ensuring we’re getting the best value for our patients so that our doors remain open, and they can access the best care. We’re also in a business environment and need to value the confidentiality of information while working with suppliers and internal stakeholders. And finally, professionalism and compassion go hand-in-hand. You must remain professional but also understand the perspective of internal stakeholders from a compassionate viewpoint.