So, You
Want To Be a Medical Coder And Start Your Own Services From
Home?
The
Medical Billing Business Investment
Article by: Tammy Harlan
Medical Billing Course.com
Are You
Realistic?
Puplished with permission of author
You love to go boating and you've always wanted your very
own boat. After careful consideration, you decide on a 32 foot
SeaRay, a very nice cruiser that will sleep 6 comfortably and
pull a couple of skiers on the back.
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Analogy
Along comes a hot weekend and you are excited about taking
your boat to the lake (where you will dock it for the summer
months). You slap a hitch on the back of your 2001 Volkswagon
Beetle and you are able to pull it down the road, about a mile,
before the transmission fails and the back of the beetle falls
apart. Now you have a vehicle that requires repair and a boat
that you cannot get into the water. You're pretty much dead in
the water until you get real about what it will take to
efficiently carry your boat.
Had you invested realistically in a 32-valve 6.0-liter Power
Stroke® diesel engine and TorqShift® transmission available on
the Ford F-250 through F-550 pickups and chassis cab which
produces horsepower of 325 at 3,300 rpm and 560 foot-pounds of
torque at 2,000 rpm, you would have been “good-to-go” from the
very beginning.
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No, this
article is not about boats and trucks that can pull
them. I am using an analogy to illustrate a point that
is so oftentimes missed when people decide to enter into
Medical Billing Business ownership. You simply cannot put the
“boat before the horse.” The power of the horse
(business/software decisions) is vital to pulling and
supporting the boat (the business itself).
Scam Operations and Those Software Resellers
Who Perpetuate the “Lie”
Why are there so many people who believe that they need not
invest any more than $500 into a Medical Billing Business,
which provides services to professionals and can produce a 6
figure income? Simple. There are enough scam operations and
software resellers in this industry who stand to profit from
your $500 who couldn't care less if you succeed. Their focus is
on your $500 and this is how the “lie” is perpetuated -- it is
up to you whether or not to believe it. Upon performing due
diligence in the research of what it takes to begin and
successfully operate a Medical Billing Business, you should be
able to clearly see the “lie” for what it is.
A
Realistic Investment
So what is a realistic investment for such a business? I
have always maintained that your investment needs to be
proportionate to your expected return! What kind of monetary
return can you expect from a $500 investment? Is there someone
out there who is going to give you a brand new 2007 Ford F250
in exchange for your 2001 broken down VW Beetle with a failed
transmission? Certainly not! You could keep putting money into
your VW Beetle and each time it has been fully repaired, carry
the boat down the road for another mile, but how much sense
would that make? Wouldn't you eventually end up spending more
than if you would have simply done it right the first time
around? Yes, you would --- and you would eventually reach the
point of diminished return.
Your Medical Billing/Practice Management
Software
There are Medical Billing Forums all over the place and on
many of these forums, individuals will ask about “medical
billing/practice management” software programs that can be used
in a medical billing business setting. I cringe every time the
responder eludes that “software doesn't matter” or advises the
reader “not to spend too much on software.” What?
What? If you see this type of response, take a look
around and see if the forum is an extension of a web presence
which is selling “inexpensive” software programs. Try to
determine what the responder may be getting out of providing
such irresponsible advice!
Your Medical Billing/Practice Management Software is the
C-R-U-X of your business! It is the foundation of your services
and income. Do you really believe that the software choice
shouldn't matter? Do you really believe that the software
choice should be “cheap?” Or do you believe that there are some
software programs that are simply not designed to support your
business (VW Beetle) and others that may be designed
specifically for the needs of your business (Ford F250)?
Time is Money in this
Business
So let me provide you with an analogy of a software program
that is brilliantly designed as a “starter-program” for a
single physician's office (individual database) vs. a software
program that is designed specifically for the needs of a
medical billing business which services multiple clients (true
multiple database capability). Let's call the first program
“Beetle” and the second program, “Ford”.
You are a Medical Billing Business owner servicing 3
separate clients (clients A, B, C). You are sitting in front of
your software program inputting demographics for a new patient
for Client A. Client B calls your office to inquire about a
claim submitted for one of their patients:
Using Beetle: Crud! Why did Client B
have to call while I'm in the middle of entering patient
demographics for Client A? How dare he! Now I will either
have to call him back (after I save this record because I
don't want to lose it mid-stream) or if I want to provide
really good service, I'll answer his question now. I close
out the record for Client A and lose the data I've already
entered. Now I must close out of this database completely
and then go to my “directories” and open the database for
Client B in order to retrieve the information he is looking
for. Okay, I'm finished with the call. I can now close out
the database for Client B, pull up my directories, choose
Client A and begin re-entering patient data. Oh No! Client
C is on the phone with a question!
Using Ford: Not a problem. Simply
open the database for Client B right on top of Client A,
retrieve the needed information, close the window and
continue inputting the patient data for Client A. Client C
calls… again, not a problem.
As I said before, “time is money in this
business.” This analogy illustrates single vs.
multiple database capabilities but there are many other areas
of your software program to consider… i.e. reporting
capabilities, database manipulation, etc.
Many of you will ask if you can start with the Beetle and
then get the Ford later. You will end up spending more money in
the long-run and you will be converting your data from Beetle
to Ford in the middle of business growth --- not to mention
learning how to drive the Ford during the growth of your
business. You would need to decide if this is a feasible route
to take. I would, in my opinion, opt against that route because
I entered into the business decision realistically knowing that
I needed the Ford.
In my opinion, there is absolutely nothing wrong with an
inexpensive software program designed for a single physician's
office. These programs are in high demand and are very useful
in the appropriate setting.
--- Tammy Harlan
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Medical Billing Course.com
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