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How to Run Your Healthcare Analytics Operation Like a Business

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How to Run Your Healthcare Analytics Operation Like a Business

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A robust data analytics operation is necessary for healthcare systems’ survival. Just like any business, the analytics enterprise needs to be well managed using the principles of successful business operations.

This article walks through how to run an analytics operation like a business using the following five-question framework:

Who does the analytics team serve and what are those customers trying to do?
What services does the analytics team provide to help customers accomplish their goals?
How does the analytics team know they’re doing a great job and how do they communicate that effectively to the leadership team?
What is the most efficient way to provide analytics services?
What is the most effective way to organize?

A robust data analytics operation is necessary for healthcare systems’ survival. Just like any business, the analytics enterprise needs to be well managed using the principles of successful business operations.

This article walks through how to run an analytics operation like a business using the following five-question framework:

Who does the analytics team serve and what are those customers trying to do?
What services does the analytics team provide to help customers accomplish their goals?
How does the analytics team know they’re doing a great job and how do they communicate that effectively to the leadership team?
What is the most efficient way to provide analytics services?
What is the most effective way to organize?

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How to Run Your Healthcare Analytics Operation Like a Business

  1. 1. How to Run Your Healthcare Analytics Operation Like a Business
  2. 2. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. According to the Small Business Association (SBA), 30 percent of new businesses fail within two years of operating. Fifty percent fail within the first five years, and 66 percent fail within the first 10. Hundreds of books and articles have been written about the lessons learned from these high failure rates and the principles that, when followed, increase the likelihood of success. These lessons and principles are equally relevant when establishing and growing an analytics operation within a healthcare institution. Effective Analytics Business Operations
  3. 3. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. A robust data analytics operation is no longer optional for healthcare organizations; it’s necessary for their survival. While most health systems have invested heavily in their analytics operation in both time and money, many aren’t getting the kind of ROI they need. However, underinvestment in an analytics operation is more common and problematic than overinvestment. Effective Analytics Business Operations
  4. 4. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. In many health systems’ analytics operations, overtaxed resources that can never satisfy demands placed on them by the organization. Analysts have long queues of requests for data and reports. Then, data consumers frequently have complaints about the data – it’s often incorrect, irrelevant, or takes a lot of back and forth to get what they want. Customer satisfaction among healthcare executives and clinicians is often low because the data they get isn’t timely and not contextualized in a way that allows them to make important decisions. Effective Analytics Business Operations
  5. 5. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. For an analytics enterprise to be successful, it needs to be run like a business. And, just like any business, it will succeed or fail based on factors like customer satisfaction, profitability, return on investment, and potential for growth. This presentation will walk through how to run a healthcare analytics operation like a business using the five-question framework (figure 1). Five Question Framework for Analytics
  6. 6. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Five Question Framework for Analytics Figure 1: Five questions to answer in order to run a successful healthcare analytics operation.
  7. 7. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. This framework was developed by Eric Denna, Professional Services Senior Vice President at Health Catalyst, and is used by healthcare data analytics teams across the country. Analytics directors who do this successfully have the biggest impact on healthcare outcomes and ensure both their team’s and organization’s survival. Five Question Framework for Analytics
  8. 8. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. The answers to these five questions come from implementing these five steps. 1. Define the Customer 2. Define the Offering 3. Measure Success 4. Define the Process 5. Define the organization Five Question Framework for Analytics
  9. 9. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 1: Define the Customer Five Question Framework for Analytics Who does the analytics team serve and what are those customers trying to do? In order to provide products or services in the most effective way, any good business has a keen understanding of who their customers are and what they want. Similarly, the first step in running an analytics enterprise like a business is to define the customer.
  10. 10. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 1: Define the Customer Five Question Framework for Analytics In most analytics operations, this will include several different types of customers, such as executives and frontline leadership, clinicians, and improvement teams. For this reason, it may be helpful to segment the customers into different categories according to their needs.
  11. 11. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 1: Define the Customer Five Question Framework for Analytics In a typical healthcare analytics operation, that segmentation might look something like this: Self-service These are customers who are sophisticated users or consumers of data who just need access, the right tools, and some training and orientation so they can self-serve. Guided tours A cross-functional team working on outcomes improvement might include a physician, a nurse, and a financial expert. Additionally, the team might need someone with analytic expertise that can bring the tools and expertise to respond to requests as they arise. Information Monitor An executive or other frontline leader might need a dashboard that shows how many patients are in the hospital, the readmission rate, and length of stay at any given time. This customer doesn’t want or need to drill down or design analytics, they only want to understand the story presented. Regulatory Measure Submitters These customers pull together data from a variety of sources, often lacking in completeness and timeliness. Thousands of hours are spent understanding the meticulous requirements and assembling reports to the satisfaction of the regulatory bodies that require them.
  12. 12. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 1: Define the Customer Five Question Framework for Analytics This is not a comprehensive list, but it’s a good example of how to define and segment customers of the analytics operation. The key is to ask not only who are they, but what are their goals? Answering these questions will help with the second step in running a healthcare analytics operation like a business: determining the best way to provide the service.
  13. 13. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 2: Define the Offering Five Question Framework for Analytics What services does the analytics team provide to help customers accomplish their goals? Any good business has a plan, complete with a clearly defined offering. An important part of that plan is a roadmap that shows how to systematically improve or grow the business. An effective analytics strategy also relies on creating this roadmap in order to clearly define the offering and the way forward.
  14. 14. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 2: Define the Offering Five Question Framework for Analytics What services does the analytics team provide to help customers accomplish their goals? Any good business has a plan, complete with a clearly defined offering. An important part of that plan is a roadmap that shows how to systematically improve or grow the business. An effective analytics strategy also relies on creating this roadmap in order to clearly define the offering and the way forward.
  15. 15. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 2: Define the Offering Five Question Framework for Analytics There are several important components of the road map as it relates to the analytics strategy that the team will need to think through and determine: Data Access How can the analytics team ensure broad access to data in a way that’s secure? Toolset Alignment How can the team provide access to the right tools to create insights and build knowledge? Education and Stewardship What is the best way to guide customers through the data journey? Marketing/Communication How can the team communicate the tremendous value they provide to the organization? Data Source Plan How should the team prioritize the list of data sources needed in the data warehouse to meet demand? Data Modeling How to eliminate repetitive tasks that every user would have to do when they access the raw data?
  16. 16. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 2: Define the Offering Five Question Framework for Analytics While these are just some examples of issues the analytics team needs to think through to define their offering, Mike Noke, a Senior Vice President in Professional Services at Health Catalyst, explores each of these success factors in his article on driving strategic advantage through widespread analytics adoption.
  17. 17. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 2: Define the Offering Five Question Framework for Analytics Figure 2: Analytics Platform Adoption Success Factors (credit: Mike Noke, Health Catalyst Professional Services SVP)
  18. 18. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 3: Measure Success Five Question Framework for Analytics How does the analytics team know they’re doing a great job (and communicate that to healthcare leadership)? Once a business is up and running, the next important step is measuring success. How does a business know if it’s growing or if it’s plateaued? How is success quantified? Just like a business owner, an analytics director will need to determine what defines success in a healthcare analytics operation and how to measure it.
  19. 19. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 3: Measure Success Five Question Framework for Analytics Be warned, if success isn’t defined clearly and confidently by the analytics director, someone else will. Common success measurements are: Customer satisfaction Team member satisfaction Number of customers Profitability > > > >
  20. 20. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 3: Measure Success Five Question Framework for Analytics Success Measure 1: Customer Satisfaction Customer satisfaction is the cornerstone of success for most businesses. Unfortunately, many analytics directors are not focused on this metric because they are not thinking like a business owner. Too often, analytics teams are buried in work, and are more concerned with keeping their heads above water with requests than delivering timely, actionable data to the individual teams and customers they are serving.
  21. 21. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 3: Measure Success Five Question Framework for Analytics Success Measure 1: Customer Satisfaction An August 2018 Gartner article focuses on this very topic: why and how to make customer success a focal point of healthcare analytics. Despite the value customer satisfaction can provide, many analytics teams fail to approach or measure it in a consistent manner. Doing so includes knowing how satisfied customers are in a measurable way, whether they are asked to fill out a satisfaction survey each time a request is filled, or another system that produces quantifiable results.
  22. 22. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 3: Measure Success Five Question Framework for Analytics Success Measure 2: Team Member Satisfaction In a technology-enabled services enterprise, the people are the most important asset, hands-down. Do you know how engaged, how loyal, how satisfied your team members are? Do you proactively measure and monitor this and are you open to make difficult adjustments when this data reveals challenges?
  23. 23. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 3: Measure Success Five Question Framework for Analytics Success Measure 3: Number of Customers Another possible measurement for how well a business is doing is measuring the number of customers. Is this number going up or down over time? Keeping track of these simple statistics can help analytics directors know how they’re doing or if they need to make changes.
  24. 24. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 3: Measure Success Five Question Framework for Analytics Success Measure 4: Profitability Unlike most businesses, an analytics enterprise is not receiving a payment for the services they’re delivering, so defining profitability may take some creativity. The expenses of an analytics enterprise are visible to the CFO, but not value provided? When it’s time to cut costs and the only thing visible is the expense, analytics teams are likely to see cuts if they can’t effectively communicate the value they’re providing to the organization.
  25. 25. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 3: Measure Success Five Question Framework for Analytics Success Measure 4: Profitability Results With Improvement (RWIs) can help measure things such as patient outcomes, increased efficiency, and cost savings in order to provide a look at the true financial impact of an analytics enterprise. How many patient’s lives were impacted? Did the team help reduce readmissions? Did the team help cut costs from supply chain? Did the team get more work done in less time?
  26. 26. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 3: Measure Success Five Question Framework for Analytics Success Measure 4: Profitability Analytics directors need to have a vested interest in defining upfront what success looks like and then capturing and recording the results. Not only is it necessary to measure success, it’s also necessary to articulate and communicate the value generated.
  27. 27. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 3: Measure Success Five Question Framework for Analytics Success Measure 4: Profitability For example, the team might share their successes in a measurable, succinct way: “This year we saved the organization 15 million dollars, we saved 10,000 lives and we impacted 100,000 patients.” Being able to show the true significance of an analytics enterprise helps ensure the operations’ viability and growth. Ask yourself, is your operation a cost to the business or an investment?
  28. 28. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 4: Define the Process Five Question Framework for Analytics What is the most efficient way to provide analytics services? Successful businesses must determine the best way to provide their services to customers. This includes defining both the intake and fulfillment process in order to operate efficiently and effectively. A healthcare analytics operation also needs a clearly defined process that is transparent and easy for customers to use.
  29. 29. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 4: Define the Process Five Question Framework for Analytics Intake Defining the intake process is an important first step in ensuring an effective business operation. This might include answering questions such as: • How do customers interact with the business? • Do they shop online for services or show up at the doorstep? • Do they know the intake process?
  30. 30. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 4: Define the Process Five Question Framework for Analytics Intake Answering these simple questions in order to define the mechanism for analytics access will help improve the intake process and the expectations for both the team and customers. Referring back to Step 1, depending on the customer, they might need a tour guide, or they might just need access and training as a self-service user.
  31. 31. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 4: Define the Process Five Question Framework for Analytics Fulfillment The second component of this step is defining the fulfillment process. Let’s say a business selling widgets had more demand than they could satisfy at any given time. How would the business prioritize those customers? Is it simply a first-come, first- serve basis, and if so, is that the best way to operate?
  32. 32. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 4: Define the Process Five Question Framework for Analytics Fulfillment In a free market, price and a willingness or ability to pay play a critical role in determining who gets access to services and products, and in what priority order. If your customers aren’t paying to utilize your products and services, what is your mechanism for prioritizing? In the business of analytics, the value exchange works a little differently. The payment you collect is the opportunity afforded you to create value.
  33. 33. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 4: Define the Process Five Question Framework for Analytics Fulfillment The higher the opportunity for value creation, the more appealing the customer. One customer might come in with a $200,000 problem and one might have a $1,000,000 problem. Realize, however, that these problems don’t always have a price tag that can be defined in dollars and cents. Sometimes patient safety is on the line.
  34. 34. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 4: Define the Process Five Question Framework for Analytics Fulfillment Other times, regulatory penalties or institutional reputation is on the line. Or, patient and team member satisfaction may be the goal. The value of these efforts may not be easily quantified. As such, it will be important to establish decision- making rights and process through effective governance (discussed briefly later and in various other articles produced by Health Catalyst).
  35. 35. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 4: Define the Process Five Question Framework for Analytics Fulfillment Defining the process for prioritization is essential for success and goes hand-in-hand with the ability to measure success. For instance, if an analytics director can say he has both a $1,000,000 problem and a $200,000 problem in the queue, but not enough staff to tackle them, he can then take that information to the executive team in order to ask for more resources.
  36. 36. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 5: Define the Organization Five Question Framework for Analytics What’s the most efficient way to organize? Most businesses spend a lot of time and energy on finding and keeping the right team. Before they do that, they need to know how many people they need on their team and what the functions of each position are. For analytics operations, defining the organization in order to maximize effectiveness is critical for success. Deciding how is open to a lot of debate.
  37. 37. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 5: Define the Organization Five Question Framework for Analytics What’s the most efficient way to organize? One question to start with is how specifically to define the expertise on an analytics team. This could include data modeling skills, data science and predictive analytics, statistical modeling skills, etc. An analytics enterprise might organize teams around each of those areas of expertise and each team would provide their expertise separately. This model is not very efficient.
  38. 38. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 5: Define the Organization Five Question Framework for Analytics What’s the most efficient way to organize? On the other end of the spectrum, each analyst would be a generalist on one large team and over time, each analyst gains expertise in every aspect of specialization. This model would be ideal if it were possible to hire and retain these people. The reality is likely somewhere in between.
  39. 39. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Step 5: Define the Organization Five Question Framework for Analytics It is recommended to err on the side of generalization and only specialize if and when there’s enough demand for that specialization to be self-sustaining. For example, if there’s a team of five data analysts and one data scientist, and one out of every 20 requests involves a data scientist, then the demand for that data scientist is going to periodically spike while the rest of the time he will experience a lull. During those down times, the business still has to pay his salary and all the associated expenses.
  40. 40. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Establish Stakeholders and an Effective Data Governance Plan As part of defining the organization, it’s important to establish stakeholders that will approve funding, growth, and strategy. Just as many businesses are responsible to their investors and a board of directors, an analytics enterprise may also benefit from an invested group of stakeholders, such as an Information Management Executive Council.
  41. 41. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Establish Stakeholders and an Effective Data Governance Plan In another of my articles, Governance in Healthcare: Leadership for Successful Improvement, the first principle is to engage the right stakeholders. An effective data governance strategy includes both data stewardship and establishing the leadership needed to maximize an investment in analytics. Because leadership buy-in is so important, it’s important to tap the right stakeholders to form the healthcare data governance committee who play key roles in establishing, growing, and sustaining successful analytics programs.
  42. 42. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Beware the Entrepreneurial Myth In 1988, Michael E. Gerber released the best- selling book, The E Myth: Why Most Businesses Don’t Work and What to Do About It. Today, the book is still relevant and popular because the basic principle is true: just because someone is good at something doesn’t mean he can turn that into a successful business. The reality is that most people are not good businessmen.
  43. 43. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Beware the Entrepreneurial Myth In looking at creating a successful analytics enterprise, an important consideration is who to have in the leadership and accountability role for this business. That person isn’t necessarily a great technician or analyst that moved up through the ranks. The person in this role needs to be a visionary that is closely connected to the customer. A common downfall in healthcare organizations occurs when analytics falls under the accountability model of the CIO, and many CIOs are not the visionary that is needed.
  44. 44. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Beware the Entrepreneurial Myth That’s not to say the CIO is never a visionary, but don’t make the mistake of assuming that is the right person to lead an analytics operation because it’s the most obvious. Instead, be thoughtful about who is in that role, and, ideally that person should be elevated to be a member of the leadership that reports directly to the chief strategy officer or CEO.
  45. 45. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Beware the Entrepreneurial Myth Ryan Smith, Senior Vice President of Professional Services at Health Catalyst and former healthcare CIO, makes a compelling case for executive sponsorship of a healthcare analytics program as a key strategy for its success. In the article, Smith says: This strategy involves identifying the right executive sponsor, at the right level in the organization, to provide oversight of an enterprise data management and analytics program.” Ryan Smith SVP of Professional Services
  46. 46. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Long-term Success for a Healthcare Analytics Operation Means Running It Like a Business Just as many businesses don’t succeed, a healthcare analytics operation that fails to understand its customers, provide services in the most effective way, measure success, or organize efficiently is also likely to fail. Running a successful analytics operation involves many of the same steps for success as running a successful business.
  47. 47. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Long-term Success for a Healthcare Analytics Operation Means Running It Like a Business This includes: Understanding the unique needs of each analytics customer. Creating a roadmap for success. Measuring the success of the operation and communicating that clearly and frequently to hospital leadership. Making sure the process is transparent and efficient. Organized in a way to maximize effectiveness. > > > > >
  48. 48. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Long-term Success for a Healthcare Analytics Operation Means Running It Like a Business Taking these steps helps ensure a successful analytics operation that can improve healthcare outcomes, save the organization money, and impact patient lives.
  49. 49. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. For more information: “This book is a fantastic piece of work” – Robert Lindeman MD, FAAP, Chief Physician Quality Officer
  50. 50. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. More about this topic Link to original article for a more in-depth discussion. How to Run Your Healthcare Analytics Operation Like a Business Addressing Healthcare Waste Through Centralization David Grauer, MBA, MHSA , Sr. VP Professional Services Why Clinical Quality Should Drive Healthcare Business Strategy Health Catalyst Editors How to Achieve Your Clinical Data Analytics Goals – Elaine St. James, BSN, RN, CPHQ, Patient Safety Services; Josh Ferguson APRN, ACNP, ANP-BC VP of Clinical Outcomes Improvement Nancy Casazza, BSN, MMI, RN , Clinical Outcomes Improvement, Director The Digitization of Healthcare: Why the Right Approach Matters and Five Steps to Get There Health Catalyst Editors Healthcare NLP: Four Essentials to Make the Most of Unstructured Data Mike Dow , Technical Director
  51. 51. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Dan has been developing and implementing the core products and services of Health Catalyst since February of 2011. He started as a data architect, moved into a technical director role and is now a Vice President of Client and Technical Operations. Prior to joining Health Catalyst, Dan owned and operated a management consultancy for five years that assisted ambulatory practices in the implementation of electronic health records and data-driven management methodologies. In this venture he served as data architect, business- intelligence developer, and strategic advisor to physicians and practice owners in the strategic management and growth of their practices. Dan holds Master’s degrees in Business Administration and Health-Sector Management from Arizona State University and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics from Brigham Young University. Other Clinical Quality Improvement Resources Click to read additional information at www.healthcatalyst.com Dan LeSueur
  52. 52. © 2018 Health Catalyst Proprietary. Feel free to share but we would appreciate a Health Catalyst citation. Other Clinical Quality Improvement Resources Click to read additional information at www.healthcatalyst.com Health Catalyst is a mission-driven data warehousing, analytics and outcomes-improvement company that helps healthcare organizations of all sizes improve clinical, financial, and operational outcomes needed to improve population health and accountable care. Our proven enterprise data warehouse (EDW) and analytics platform helps improve quality, add efficiency and lower costs in support of more than 65 million patients for organizations ranging from the largest US health system to forward-thinking physician practices. Health Catalyst was recently named as the leader in the enterprise healthcare BI market in improvement by KLAS, and has received numerous best-place-to work awards including Modern Healthcare in 2013, 2014, and 2015, as well as other recognitions such as “Best Place to work for Millenials, and a “Best Perks for Women.”

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