An individual and organizational moral obligation

My buddy Jeff Thompson is stepping down as CEO of Gundersen Health System in a few months.  I have commented several times here on Jeff's leadership abilities, which are again demonstrated in a note he sent to his staff this week.  In simple, direct terms he reinforces the narrative that is at the heart of his hospital's purpose.  It could be the same purpose of any hospital in the world, but it is not often set forth so well.  An element of leadership is that the narrative is expressed in so eloquent and elegant a fashion--one that permits all recipients to feel ownership of the privilege and obligation they have been given.

Dear Colleagues,

We are experiencing many changes as an organization. Some are very exciting like Dr. Rathgaber taking over as CEO in September. Others are more of a struggle. There is always going to be change, especially in our business.

But it is not the changes that are the most important.  It is how we respond. How we respond to change as individuals, teamsand as an organization is what defines us. It will determine our futures and move us from good to great.

Sounds good, but change can be very scary.

Here’s what won't change: Our mission to improve care, lower costand improve the health of the community. This rises beyond growth targets, financial goals and facilities plans. It really is an individual and organizational moral obligation.

To take on big responsibility and big changes, it is best to start with a great platform as a base. The solid platform we have should give us great confidence going forward.  In the face of higher quality standards, economic down turns, tons of regulation and increasing competition, you as teams and we as an organization have steadily improved on all of our key strategies.

Going forward it boils down to just a couple of really big things: Take care of our patients and take care of each other.  The "patient" part has expanded to "patients, families and communities" and each other needs to include those well beyond our immediate work groups to colleagues and partners.

Although changes will always cause some struggles, we have no reason to fear them. We need to trust our strong platform, our clear path and a great team to not just survive but truly excel through the change.

I know we are up for the challenges.

Sincerely,

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Serendipity is allowed

Yes, even surgeons can learn

The story from Consorci Sanitari del Garraf