ABSTRACT

The need for a more conscious, focused and proactive approach to the management of health-care organizations has increased substantially. One consequence of this is that health-care managers are having to look at managerial approaches and techniques that previously were the province of the private sector. Prominent among those is the whole area of marketing. This work takes a broad approach to the marketing process, highlighting some of the challenges that health-care managers and medical professionals are having to face. Having done this, the authors move on to examine some of the characteristics of good and bad management practice. It is against this background that, in subsequent chapters, they turn their attention to the question of marketing and how it might best contribute to the management of organizations throughout the health sector. Each chapter includes questions and checklists offering scope for applying marketing principles to primary and secondary health-care organizations of all types, sizes and specialities.

chapter 3|17 pages

Developing a customer-centred health care organization

the first few steps

chapter 7|19 pages

Planning for success (part two)

developing the marketing plan

chapter 8|10 pages

Using the marketing audit to assess the true level of the organization’s capability

revisiting your strengths and weaknesses

chapter 9|27 pages

Developing the health care marketing mix

chapter 10|17 pages

Setting the standards of customer care

the Blackpool rock phenomenon

chapter 11|15 pages

Internal marketing, leadership and teamworking

fighting the Napoleonic complex

chapter 13|11 pages

Thornham General Hospital

(This case study is not based upon any one hospital, but is a reflection of our experiences within a number of health care organizations.)