Editor’s note: The following supply chain leaders were featured in The Journal of Healthcare Contracting’s Ten People to Watch issue.
Kathryn Carpenter, VP Sourcing, Contracting, Clinical Strategy and Implementation, CommonSpirit Health
What are the most important attributes of successful supply chain teams today?
First, being able to transform processes and adapt to a rapidly changing supply chain ecosystem. Second, having support from system leadership to create a vision of “systemness.” Finally, developing data systems that can support (the first two points) at scale.
What project or initiative are you looking forward to working on?
Together with the finance department, we’re in the midst of a three-year purchased services initiative to discover and standardize many of these services nationally. We’re also setting up gatekeeping functions to review services contracts through finance and supply chain resources. It’s been highly effective because in a system our size, we weren’t making financial decisions with the awareness we should have.
What changes brought about by the pandemic are here to stay in the supply chain?
We’ve created two FTEs with the sole function to ensure resiliency and redundancy with supply chain operations. We’ve included questions in all of our supplier QBRs that include a second-tier look into their manufacturing processes and geography and labor policies. And we’ve developed a more robust relationship with CMOs, national clinical executives, quality functions and legal teams to better inform process creation related to vaccine and masking requirements.
How do you keep your team motivated despite conflicts and obstacles?
My team knows that I have an open-door policy at all times. I have weekly one-on-one meetings with my directors and monthly meetings as a group. This allows for any conflicts that arise to be dealt with in an expedient manner. Nothing is allowed to go unanswered and churn into dissatisfaction. In other words, I know my team’s business well.
We have hired people for whom success is the great motivator. I allow teams to be managed without my interference, and they can trust me to respond to any difficulties and roadblocks they may encounter. This has allowed them to knock their goals out of the park and the entire organization is aware of this success.
What qualities are lacking among today’s leaders?
The quality that I most find lacking is the willingness to wade into conflict and resolution. Most leaders are hesitant, especially in today’s healthcare environment, to stand for, or even entertain, solutions that require bold change.
So often the structure of an organization is the very thing that dictates outcomes, and there is a great reluctance to restructure. “The way we have always done it” is no longer going to be acceptable.
Keeping eyes on the wrong prize. So many leaders tend to speak in platitudes and generalities without focus. An organization’s goals should be able to be articulated in three sentences, not three words. Everyone in the organization should be able to repeat the three goals easily and without question of interpretation. Mission statements should remain that which was established at the beginning of an entity, not take the place of clear goals.
How do you continue to grow and develop as a leader?
Having grown a terrific team at CommonSpirit, I aspire to learn about supply chain in healthcare more completely. Healthcare lags behind other industries such as manufacturing and retail when it comes to best-in-class supply chain development. Healthcare leaders are just now starting to truly value and develop IT and data functions, which is way behind other industries. I’d like to continue to learn and help reshape the industry as befits the people we serve.
What are the most important traits to look for when hiring a new employee?
By far, the most important trait for me is to hire people with emotional maturity. You can tell a great deal from an interview that veers outside the technical questions, and I ask people to talk about themselves through their experiences. For the most part, you can teach and provide education to develop work skills, but it’s much more difficult to teach people how to get along with each other. We do offer emotional and professional development counseling, but it’s much better to hire people who bring their maturity – and I don’t mean age – to the job.
Conrad Emmerich, SVP, Supply Chain, Lab, Imaging & Chief Product Officer, Atrium Health
What are the most important attributes of successful supply chain teams today?
Collaboration, communication and trust.
- Collaboration: It’s imperative for success that we share a common understanding of the challenges facing supply chain today and tomorrow. This shared understanding means working hard to partner with and align internal customers, as well as vendor partners we work with every day. We must develop solutions together to meet the common goal of improving health.
- Communication: Your team and your leaders need to know where and how your supply chain operations are evolving. Strong communication is required to keep teams informed, motivated and focused. Communicating in a variety of ways, formal and informal is essential for success. You are always sending a message, even when you don’t know it.
- Trust: There are few attributes that can damage a team’s ability to win each day more than lack of trust. Highly successful teams push each other to be great and conflicts may arise, but the hard conversations only make the output better and the team stronger.
What project or initiative are you looking forward to working on?
I’m looking forward to our organizational ESG work and how supply chain can lead. Supply chain can play a significant role in making an organization’s commitment to sustainability real. The World Health Organization (WHO) says climate change is the biggest health threat facing humanity. We, as an entire supply chain community, can drastically change the emissions output caused by healthcare. In addition, we can impact how our organizations work within the communities in which we reside though supplier diversity. We are working to bring more local, minority-owned vendors to our organization for the opportunity to earn business. This brings significant value to the communities we serve.
What changes brought about by the pandemic are here to stay in the supply chain?
Resiliency isn’t a buzzword. It’s always been in the DNA of robust supply chains throughout industry. However, it’s a requirement now for anyone in this business. The advancement of transparency in the supply chain, and the partnerships between providers and manufacturers must continue. The transition to vertically integrated supply chains can only benefit our ability to reduce supply chain disruptions. Another element here to stay is the redistribution of the globalization of supply chains. Nimble organizations will be less reliant on some specific regions going forward.
What one thing makes you most proud?
My strong, tight-knit family. I’m so lucky to have their strong support. I think we all make each other better people.
How do you generate great ideas in your organization?
By listening. We don’t have the answers in our function, but our frontline teammates who have a different perspective know what’s working and what isn’t working. Listening is often overlooked as a business strategy and, in many cases, thoughtful listening holds the keys to success.
What are the most important traits to look for when hiring a new employee?
After determining if someone has the skills and experience required for a role, I look to see how they will complement the team. How will they make us better? What gap do they fill? How will their style and personality elevate the team? My goal is to diversify our team, skill sets, mindsets and backgrounds. However, one thing I won’t compromise on is character. That’s how you treat people and how you conduct business.