Boost Client Retention With These Strategies
You’re working hard to make your senior services agency grow.
Are you working just as hard to retain the senior clients you already
have?
I own and run Catalina In-Home Services, a Tucson, Arizona, based agency
providing private duty fee-for-service home care aides. During the 16
years Catalina has been in business, our staff has developed a number
of strategies for boosting client retention.
Our senior clients are in the market for the best value in adult home
care. And since our agency doesn’t require long-term contracts,
senior clients are free to leave if we fail to satisfy them. That’s
a tremendous incentive for aggressive quality control. And our system
works. Many senior clients stay with us for six, seven, or even eight
years—a track record we’re proud of. Here’s how we
do it.
Making good placements
A successful placement begins by matching the needs, abilities, temperament,
and communication styles of the senior client and caregiver.
• Screen the client.
Careful screening is the key. Our initial RN evaluation determines if
the level of care the senior client needs meshes with our services.
And when we screen, we really listen. What type of meal preparation
will the client need? Does the client prefer a more mature caregiver?
Is smoking an issue?
• Screen the caregiver.
We check references, driver’s license, driving record, and auto
insurance, and we do a criminal background check. We also require a
TB test every year and CPR certification every two years.
• Make the match.
We inform the prospective caregiver of the client’s physical abilities
and senior service needs, personality, assignment location, allergies,
attitude toward smoking, and other information. How the candidate responds
is vital. What we most need to hear is a sincere commitment to the job.
Placements may last for several years; if the candidate wants a temporary
assignment, we keep looking. And we never pressure a caregiver to accept
an assignment.
• Send the best match first.
Accepting a caregiver is up to the client, but sending the strongest
candidate first reduces stress on the client, the candidate, and ourselves.
Sometimes we just can’t find the right person for the job. Sometimes
the client seems unable to accept or adjust to the supportive senior
care he or she needs or has unrealistic expectations. Our reputation
is on the line with every placement. If we can’t send the right
caregiver, we’d rather not accept the assignment.
Set high standards and supervise
Every senior client deserves a caregiver who looks sharp and behaves
in a professional manner. Some of our rules are as follows:
• Be prompt—arrive 15 minutes early for all services scheduled
for four hours or longer
• Don’t watch television or chew gum while on duty
• Don’t use the client’s phone for personal calls
• Don’t eat the client’s food
• Be in clean-and-pressed uniform attire
• Wear your name pin
Our basic senior service includes a monthly or bimonthly in-home visit
by the RN care manager. The nurse checks the client’s vital signs,
looks for medical problems, and fills medication boxes. Is the senior
client getting good care? Is the client satisfied with the senior services?
Are the client and the caregiver compatible? Is the relationship professional?
The routine nursing re-evaluation is our way of making sure the answers
to these questions are yes.
If the client is unhappy with the caregiver, we’ll send a replacement
immediately. Unsatisfactory placements can and do happen but dealing
with the situation promptly goes a long way toward making things right.
A week after being scheduled, the caregiver makes detailed records of
the of the client’s daily routine and weekly schedule. Kept in
the home, these records help ease the transition should a substitute
caregiver be needed.
We have other ways to stay in touch, too. Every client gets the following:
• A birthday card (flowers for those with the agency more than
two years)
• A gift certificate for four hours of service for every new-customer
referral (because personal referrals from happy clients are priceless)
• A choice of a weekly or monthly billing cycle
And to make things just a little easier for our senior clients, we always
send a stamped, self-addressed return envelope with our bills. Often,
it’s the little things that mean the difference between a “good
enough” agency and one that can win a client’s loyalty.
In addition, we report monthly on the senior client’s welfare,
by phone or in writing, whenever a trust officer, family member, or
other representative who is helping manage the client’s affairs
requests this information. Many clients form close bonds with their
caregiver, and it can be a shock to the client—and an invitation
to switch agencies—when a caregiver leaves. How can you retain
your caregivers in an industry where high staff turnover is the rule,
not the exception?