Austin, Texas-based plastic surgery practice manager Kristin Gunn had only been on the job for about a month when her new bossโJennifer Walden, MDโtook the all-female crew on a field trip to see a Willie Nelson show.
โIt was a team-building exercise,โ Gunn recalls, and this is the type of collaboration, camaraderie, and collegiality that she has tried to emulate and foster in her role as practice manager.
Gunnโs job, in a nutshell, is to make sure that Dr Walden does what Dr Walden does bestโperform surgery. For this to happen, all other engines must be running smoothly and the staff must work in harmony.
โI want her in the operating room doing her thing,โ Gunn says. โThis means everyone on staff must be engaged and focused on the other tasks that help the practice run smoothly and efficiently.โ
A growing practice, there are now about 15 on staff. When Gunn is hiring, โpersonality is a big thing, because we want any new person to fit right in,โ she says. This means they must feel as at home in the office or operating room as they would at a Willie Nelson concert, for example.
Before joining Waldenโs practice, Gunn was running a local medspa. โThis is a lot different,โ she says. โRunning the practice of a board-certified plastic surgeon means I do a lot more than just order Botox Cosmetic. I have to schedule the anesthesiologist and make sure that our surgical suite is properly credentialed, among other things.โ
GIRL FRIDAY
Like most managers of busy practices, Gunn wears many hats. Sheโs a media coordinator who spends time arranging for Waldenโs frequent media interviews. โShe is on TV almost weekly but also gets requests from local and national media outlets, so I have to carve that time into her schedule, too.โ
Gunn is also involved in marketing. The practice sends out a monthly newsletter that is ripe with contentโnot discounts. โWe donโt do discounts. We sell the practiceโs uniqueness instead,โ she explains.
She often interfaces with patients during and after consultations, providing quotes and financing advice. Sure, Gunn does encounter a difficult patient from time to time, but she tends to throw out some Texas charm. โWhen you are sweet as pie and ask them to come in to discuss their concerns, their tune changes,โ she says.
Gunn is a problem solver, Walden says. โShe comes with the solution, not empty-handed with the problem.โ Whatโs more, โshe is a creative thinkerโan artistic, visual person, which in my industry translates into an out-of-the-box thinker with innate Internet, web design, and internal marketing skills; a natural at growing the medspa side of my practice while I am busy operating,โ
Walden says.
Denise Mann is the editor of Plastic Surgery Practice. She can be reached at [email protected].