Horngren’s Cost Accounting A Managerial Emphasis, Canadian 9th edition soluti...
How to Better Manage Your Veterinary Practice Finances
1. New Ways to Manage Your
Veterinary Practice with Financials
Mark J. McGaunn, CPA/PFS, CFP®
President
MJM Financial Advisors, LLC
114 Turnpike Road, Suite 107
Westborough, MA 01581-2861
phone: (978) 405-3133
e-fax: (978) 776-2609
e-mail: mark@mjmfa.com
web: www.mjmfa.com
2. Today’s Agenda
• Who to Blame
• Old Ways
• Basic Ways
• Key Performance Indicators
• Practice Dashboards
• Balanced Scorecards
• Financial Strength Index
3. The Great Number Deluge
How healthcare organizations use financial data
greatly affects current and future operational
and financial performance. Two schools of
thought:
• 1st school-Managers ask, “What’s the number?” If
bad, they ask “Whose fault?” Organization’s focus
only on bottom line.
• 2nd more successful school led by Leaders who say,
“Now that we have the number, what proactive ideas
can we implement based on it?”
4. Lots of Responsibility
Veterinary practice owners and managers
responsible for tracking projects, initiatives,
clinical outcomes, policies, and procedures.
Data “deluge” causes owners to lose focus and
fail to keep strategic thinking aligned with their
veterinary practice's long-term vision.
1. Great strides in information collection and
distribution, but
2. Significant improvements in decision-making
value of that information not realized.
5. Bad Tech Solutions Not Better…
• Technology often just simply delivers more,
irrelevant or inappropriate data quicker.
• Great practices demand timely, relevant data.
• Jack Welch, former General Electric CEO, had
worldwide operating results delivered to his
desk by day 5 of each month.
• Much smaller businesses have trouble with 30
days.
6. Use Your Data
• Knowing how to read financial statements and
understand the information within them is often
the difference between prosperity and just
getting by.
• Time-honored question asked by every
healthcare professional is:
“Are we making money?”
7. Know Your Stuff
• Veterinarians who don't carefully read such
financial outcomes measurements run risks
much as they would in failing to read medical
outcomes carefully.
• Your financial statements are key diagnostic
tools for managing the veterinary practice,
tracking revenues and expenses, identifying
financial problems, and ultimately increasing
everyone’s compensation.
8. Reporting Basics
You have to know the basics. The 3 financial
reports used to monitor an organization’s
financial health are:
1. Income statement-lists revenue, expenses, and
residual net income for specified period of time,
2. Cash flow statement-tracks operational,
investing, and financing cash flows, and
3. Balance sheet-indicates veterinary practice’s
degree of solvency and ownership equity
9. Basis of Accounting
• Most healthcare-practice CPA's utilize "cash
basis" method of accounting. Cash basis shows
what’s been collected and what’s been paid.
• “Accrual basis” presents income that’s earned
(not necessarily collected) and expenses
incurred (not necessarily paid).
• Both relevant for tax purposes. Accrual basis
must be used for those practices where
inventory a material income-producing factor.
10. Income Statements (P&L)
• Of the three financial statements, P&L most
adept and flexible device for monitoring
practice’s financial health.
• Most practices should review P&L review these
at least monthly.
• In addition to reporting patient income,
employee costs, and overhead (office and
medical expenses), income statements can even
breakout incremental costs for various ancillary
services (QuickBooks class system).
11. Comparisons & Budgets?
• Income statements augmented by footnotes
can explain to practice owners major deviations
in revenue and expenses compared to previous
periods.
• Checking against a well laid out budget (that
already incorporates these timing issues) can
show that no extraordinary management is
needed.
• Budgets are not meant to be punitive tools.
12. Cost Structures
When studying your costs, remember that
there are two general categories: fixed or
variable.
• Fixed costs remain the same regardless of
volume. They include rent, insurance and
utilities.
• Variable costs, such as medical supplies,
fluctuate with volume.
13. Variable Costs
Recognize, however, that variable costs
vary differently.
• i.e. medical supplies have a close
relationship to volume, but staffing may
vary in steps.
• Important to recognize in budgeting, as
well as in developing strategy.
14. Helpful Hint…
BEFORE printing out financial statements to
review:
1. Make sure all deposits, checks, and credit card
charges have been entered to month end, and
2. Make sure all checking and credit card
accounts have been reconciled
Then print out reports and use for analysis!
And it won’t mess with your tax planning!
15. Simple QuickBooks Format
• You should modify your QuickBooks® chart
of accounts to incorporate the AAHA chart
of accounts format. No longer sold in
healthcare version.
• Makes practice to practice comparison
easier.
• It is not necessary for you to re-create the
wheel in your endeavors of practice-to-
practice uniformity.
16. AAHA Chart of Accounts
Balance Sheet
• Assets-Current, Fixed & Other (100 Series)
• Liabilities-Current, Long-term (200 Series)
• Equity (300 Series)
-Corporations (C or S)
-Equity for Partnerships or LLC’s
-Proprietor’s Capital (Sole Proprietorship)
-Administrative Costs
17. AAHA Chart of Accounts
Income Statement
• Income (400 Series)
• Cost of Goods Sold (500 Series)
• Operating Expenses (600 and 700 Series)
-Staff Expenses
-Occupancy Costs
-Equipment Expenses
-Administrative Costs
• Other Income & Expenses (800 Series)
• Income Taxes (900 Series)
18. Benchmarking
Measurement must incorporate key factors in
developing measures that:
• Extend throughout entire practice..
• Tie into practice overall strategic plan.
• Have consensus as to relevant and appropriate
factors.
• Based on both internal and external factors.
• Empower employees, not stifle them.
• Allow systematic review, and
• Encompass each operating division in a
veterinary practice.
19. Benchmarking
• Franchisors have utilized benchmarks to highlight
financial strengths and weaknesses in store-to-
store and intra-store measurements.
• True progressives utilize intra-entity
benchmarking and metrics to measure their
progress (if already > average).
• Financial metrics are typically only a component.
• Customer Service s/b measured in all aspects.
• How can we be cutting edge?
20. Your Primary Competition Is..,
• What relevant benchmarking data are
available to assess performance?
• Comparative benchmarking data are
crucial to the success of any reporting
systems.
• Ideally, a practice should have some
comparative reference points to evaluate
how it is doing with respect to its primary
competitor-itself.
21. Key Performance Indicators
• Quantifiable measurements that reflect the
critical success factors of an
organization.
• They reveal a high-level snapshot of a
practice’s financial and operational status.
22. KPI
• Before Key Performance Indicators are selected,
vital to identify what the practice’s goals are,
which are in turn dependent upon its mission
and owners.
• KPIs act as a measure of progress towards
these goals.
• Whatever they may be, KPIs must be critical to
the success of the practice.
23. KPI
• Application of Key Performance Indicators
provides practice owners with a high-level,
real-time view of the progress of a practice.
• Combination of reports, spreadsheets and
charts.
• Revenue figures, trends, or any long-term
consideration which may be essential in
gauging the health of the practice.
• Should not only reflect the organizational
goals but also be quantifiable.
24. KPI
• To be valuable it must be accurately defined and
measured.
• A KPI may meet the criteria of reflecting the
organizational goal, which may for instance
pertain to being the most popular company.
• However, since a company’s popularity can not
be measured or compared to others, therefore
the KPI would be useless.
25. KPI
• Considerations regarding how a KPI is to be
measured should also be established in
advance.
• Definitions as to exactly how the indicator is to
be calculated and whether it is to be measured
in dollar amounts or units should also be
specified.
• Moreover, it is imperative that the organization
then sticks to these definitions from year to year
in order to allow for annual comparisons.
26. Potential KPI’s
Indicators can include:
• financial viability
• clinical outcomes
• patient safety
• quality of care
• marketing and development
• internal veterinary practice procedures; and
• employee, patient, and DVM satisfaction.
27. Underlying Principles
• The process of converting raw or
numerical tabular data into a graphical
depiction is known as “data visualization”.
• One of the main goals of data visualization
is to support decision-making through the
use of properly designed graphical
representations of information.
28. Visual Trends Inspire
• For most operations managers, trending data
and exceptions to those trends are much
easier to understand when they are
presented visually.
• Information presented in a visual format
allows decision-makers faster perception of
patterns or problems that they may not have
anticipated.
• Ultimately, they can make valuable
conclusions more readily.
30. People Factor
Common approach to measuring financial
performance basically little change from capital-
intensive operating styles of 20th-century
industrial companies.
Old model doesn’t sufficiently account for the
contributions of talented, highly motivated
employees that more often than not, are the new
basic source of integral practice wealth.
Somehow, the component of “people” seems
lost in the healthcare practice equation.
31. Other Industries
Global management consultant McKinsey &
Company reports since 1997 30 largest
worldwide companies (market cap) have seen
their profits per employee rise dramatically.
5 year reward system trend in leading US
financial planning firms now centered on
fixed-based structures, leading away from
variable-based because return on labor
statistics were a wild card (IA Mag.)
32. Practices can redesign their own internal financial
performance approach and set goals for an
intrinsic return on intangibles by also
incorporating greater attention to both:
1. profit per full-time employee equivalent (FTE) &
2. the number of FTE employees
rather than placing an intense focus on profits,
returns on invested capital (ROIC), and return on
equity (ROE).
New Practice Metrics
33. Do Homework Before Move?
0
100000
200000
300000
400000
500000
600000
700000
800000
900000
1000000
2004 2005 2006
Practice Profit
Owner Payroll
Staff Payroll
89% 68% 49%
ROL
Client moved to new
practice building in
2005-staffed up for
expected demand
34. Other Uncommon Metrics
• Avg. Unit Cost per Visit
• Avg. Occupancy Cost per Visit
• Actual Profit Per
Active Client (not avg.)
Calculate
Financial
Impact
Of Negative
Variances
Examine
Numbers
Convert
Numbers
to Ratios
Observe
Trends
Compare to
Benchmarks
35. Boring But Effective
April 1-8 April 9-16 April 17-24
Pt. Visits 225 211 185
Surgeries 21 16 11
Payroll $10,492 $11,212 $10,222
Checking
Balance
$6,122 $18,225 $9,887
Complaints 6 2 2
New
Patients
21 22 8
36. Presenting Dashboard Data
• "Dashboard" reporting used more in all
industries to keep owners and managers
focused on critical areas that affect overall
performance of the organization.
• Dashboards allow you to effectively
communicate your philosophy to your entire
practice.
• Low cost, strategic approach enables you to
translate a practice’s vision and strategy into
implementation.
37. • Can create visually interactive financial
scorecards to help you monitor both your key
financial and non-financial metrics and ratios.
• Help employees at all levels monitor individual
performances and align their performance
against practice goals.
• Instill a culture of responsibility and
accountability for results.
Dashboards
38. Practice Cockpit Indicator
Remember, it's that 15-year strategic
financial plan that serves as both the:
1. foundation for financial decision making
2. framework against which we measure our
financial performance.
We suggest developing a “one-sheeter”
Dashboard to organize pertinent practice
information to be reported on a minimum
monthly, and preferably weekly, basis.
39. Developing a Dashboard
Keep it concise and easy to use. Report can be
a combination of line and bar graphs, run
charts, instrument gauges, and diagrams.
A well-drawn Dashboard has basic guidelines:
1. The practice’s major critical success factors
should be included.
2. Comments should be used where necessary to
assist in interpreting the information.
40. Dashboard Keys
• Measures should be compared to targets and
benchmarks.
• Focus on looking at and explaining variances from
both targets and benchmarks.
• Use trend analysis so readers can visually see
long-term patterns.
• Clear definitions should be published.
• Visual appeal shouldn’t be a “bonus”.
• Proper use of color constitutes an important
function in well-designed Dashboards.
42. 0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Percentage of patients utilizing our
pharmacy service . Goal: 80%
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Percentage of patients who are
compliant with dentistry
recommendations. Goal: 85%
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Average time in minutes from
patient check-in to check-out.
Goal: 25 min.
0
20
40
60
80
100
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Percentage of patients who
report being delighted with care
provided. Goal: 95%
4
5 5
6 6
8
5
7
9 9
11
9
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Number of Surgical Cases per Day
0
20
40
60
80
100
Dr. Dewey Dr. Cheatem Dr.Howe Dr. Shep
Percentage of patients who saw
their veterinarian at last
appointment. Goal: 90%
0
20
40
60
80
100
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Overhead Cost per Visit
$65
$62
$58
$0
$10
$20
$30
$40
$50
$60
$70
$80
Baseline Current Goal
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Our Practice Goal
FTE staff members per FTE veterinarian
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
Qtr 1 Qtr 2 Qtr 3 Qtr 4
Percentage of staff who recommend
our practice as a great place to
work. Goal: 100%
Practice Cockpit Indicator
43. As healthcare financial leaders, we can
perform key management tasks to assist in the
application and analysis of financial data:
• Get it right.
• Get it soon.
• Make it useful.
• Get it to decision makers.
• Make active decisions with the data.
Balanced Scorecard
44. Balanced Scorecard
• Robert Kaplan and David Norton developed in
1997.
• Process integrated strategy execution,
performance management, and facilitated
organization learning.
• Kaplan argued traditional benchmarking based
on production and financial indicators provided
limited insight into business’s key strategies and
that comparisons were generally made to the
average of a group of practices.
45. Balanced Scorecard
Balanced Scorecard approach helps practices
develop primary goals directly from a mission
statement, practice vision, and defined critical
business strategies to implement all 3.
Approach takes a pulse of:
– financial and non-financial measures of your
practice,
– its leading and lagging indicators,
– employee and patient satisfaction, and
– short- and long-term strategy.
46. Balanced Scorecard
• Kaplan utilizes a strategy map (Scorecard) to
develop a practice’s key strategies.
• Shows cause and effect linkages between
various parts of strategy.
• Represents an attempt to enhance the value of
information and to exploit IT capability to deliver
true value to decision makers.
• Perfect for situations such as lack of focus or
direction, a new strategy, or a need to achieve
practice alignment to a common vision.
47. How Scorecards Help?
Balanced Scorecards state that:
• Reporting should be available on those key
performance indicators truly affecting
veterinary practice performance, and
• Data is irrelevant if it cannot be utilized to
improve veterinary practice performance.
48. Show Concepts Clearly
Balanced Scorecards present data in a visual
format, allowing both a:
• High level review of goal attainment and
• Drill down ability
to monitor status against predetermined practice
objectives.
You can incorporate your “15 year” strategic
plan to everyday practice operations
management.
49. The Four Views
Balanced Scorecards suggest we view a
practice from 4 perspectives, and develop
metrics, collect data, and analyze it relative to
each perspective:
1. Learning and growth perspective
2. Veterinary practice process perspective
3. Customer perspective
4. Financial perspective
51. Link Measures to Strategy
Critical
Success
Factors?
What Are
Critical
Measurements?
Begin by Linking Measurements to Strategy
To Our Patients Our Processes
What is the
Vision of the
Future?
If Vision
Succeeds, How
Will We Differ?
Vision - Who we want to be
Mission-Why we exist
Our Employees
Financial
Perspective
Customer
Perspective
Internal Process
Perspective
Employee
Learning
To Our Owners
52. Scorecard Review
Balanced Scorecard Elements
Business Vision & Strategy
Strategic Themes
Four Business Perspectives
For each Perspective there are:
Objectives
Measures
Targets
Initiatives
Financial Perspective
Customer Perspective
Internal Process Perspective
Employee Growth Perspective
Revenue
Strategy
Productivity
Strategy
Compensation
Strategy
Operational
Excellence
Pet Need
Solutions
Client
Education
Operations
Efficiency
Marketing
Drive
Innovation
Employee
Competencies
Technology
Infrastructure Responsibility
Practice Vision & Strategy
53. Blank Strategy Map
Balanced Scorecard
Strategic Theme:
Process Improvement
Customer Satisfaction
Financial Performance
Employee Satisfaction
Objectives Measurement Target Initiative
Statement of
what strategy
to achieve and
what’s critical
to its success.
How
success in
achieving
strategy will
be
measured
and tracked.
Level of
performance
needed.
Key action
programs
required to
achieve
objectives.
54. Customer Perspective
Objective
Key
Performance
Measure
Target Initiatives
Encourage
patient owner
compliance with
AAHA dental
screening
recommendations
over current 30%
standard
Percentage of
patients compliant
with semi-annual
screenings and
recommendations
100% DVM
recommended
follow through
(PMR review)
Compliance
Year 1-45%
Year 2-60%
Year 3-75%
-Implement
PetCare TV® &
dental education
in waiting areas
-Document!!!
-Develop staff
communication
plan (DVM, tech,
kennel, recept.,
other) & training
55. Internal Processes Perspective
Objective
Key
Performance
Measures
Target Initiatives
Develop
diagnostic and
therapy protocols
for practice to
ensure consistent
medical treatment
and care
# of Protocols
Written
# of Missed
Charges Found
on Random
Charge Audits
80% of all practice
visits covered by
formal written
protocol
Target Coverage
Month 1= 20%
Month 2-9=60%
Month 10-12=80%
-Functional areas
responsible for
part of each
protocol
-Training!!!
-Develop staff
communication
plan (DVM, tech,
kennel, recept.,
other) & training
56. The Result!
Developing KPIs, Balanced Scorecards &
Dashboards to measure and evaluate performance
can pinpoint successes or problems in a veterinary
practice.
Saves valuable energy and efforts on coming to
such conclusions.
Practice owners can rely on that information about
practice operations and performance in order to act
correctly and make good decisions.
A special thanks to Elizabeth Bellavance, DVM
(Camlachie, Ont.) for her Balanced Scorecard expertise!
57. Financial Strength Index (FSI)
Simple measure of overall human hospital financial
health is the Financial Strength Index (FSI).
Composite measure of 4 critical dimensions that
collectively determine hospital financial health.
FSI implies that hospitals with large profits, great
liquidity, low debt, and newer physical facilities are in
excellent financial condition.
Conversely, hospitals with poor profitability, low levels
of liquidity, heavy debt, and aging physical plants are
in poor financial condition.
58. FSI
In a study of human hospitals, four key drivers
of financial strength were:
• profit (total margin),
• liquidity (days cash on hand),
• financial leverage (debt to total assets), and
• age of physical facilities (accumulated
depreciation percentage)
59. FSI Critical Key Factor is…
Profitability strongest relationship to financial
strength.
• High-FSI hospitals had greater mix of surgical
patients.
• Pricing far more important than cost control as
a driver of financial strength.
• High-FSI hospital fees on avg. 13% higher but
costs that were only 2 % lower than those of
low-FSI hospitals.
60. Other FSI Factors
• Liquidity. High-FSI hospitals had better
liquidity, evidenced by higher values for cash
on hand.
• Financial leverage. High-FSI hospitals had
lower debt.
• Age of facilities. High-FSI hospitals had
significantly newer facilities and greater rates of
investment.
61. In Closing
• Seek help from CPA or practice management
consultant
• Decide if you want number crunching or “big”
picture analysis.
• Set short- and long-term goals for success and
growth.
• Well-developed financial plans help merge
strategy and financial capability.
• Management’s mantra-"anticipation, attention,
analysis, and action."
• Financial performance-currency of an effective
competitor.