Austin, Texas-based plastic surgery practice manager Kristin Gunn had only been on the job for about a month when her new bossโ€”Jennifer Walden, MDโ€”took the all-female crew on a field trip to see a Willie Nelson show.

โ€œIt 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.

Gunnโ€™s job, in a nutshell, is to make sure that Dr Walden does what Dr Walden does bestโ€”perform surgery. For this to happen, all other engines must be running smoothly and the staff must work in harmony.

โ€œI want her in the operating room doing her thing,โ€ Gunn says. โ€œThis 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, โ€œpersonality 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 Waldenโ€™s practice, Gunn was running a local medspa. โ€œThis is a lot different,โ€ she says. โ€œRunning 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. Sheโ€™s a media coordinator who spends time arranging for Waldenโ€™s frequent media interviews. โ€œShe 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 contentโ€”not discounts. โ€œWe donโ€™t do discounts. We sell the practiceโ€™s 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. โ€œWhen 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. โ€œShe comes with the solution, not empty-handed with the problem.โ€ Whatโ€™s more, โ€œshe is a creative thinkerโ€”an 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].