Run Operations Like an Investor, Not a Function
Most operations teams are busy. Far fewer are actually creating enterprise value.
When I step into a multi-site organization, I run the business like an investor. First, I start with outcomes. I then design the operating model around what “good” looks like. Finally, I hold leaders accountable for the few metrics that truly matter.
Outcomes over activity
Never start with “how hard everyone is working.” I start with clear definitions of success:
- What does “good” look like for revenue, margin, quality, and experience?
- How will we instrument it down to the site, team, and leader level?
- How will we review it weekly, monthly, and quarterly?
I separate leading indicators (capacity, throughput, referral flow, authorization cycle time) from lagging indicators (revenue, margin, quality). If we only manage to lagging metrics, we’re already too late.
The operating system: KPIs, cadence, governance
Every high‑performing operation I’ve run has three things in common:
- KPIs: A short list of leading and lagging metrics that everyone understands and can influence.
- Cadence: Weekly execution reviews, monthly business reviews, and quarterly strategy resets relentlessly focused on root causes and actions, not storytelling.
- Governance: Clear decision rights, escalation paths, and cross‑functional forums so decisions don’t die in meetings.
Compliance, quality, and safety are designed into workflows—not bolted on afterward. I define non‑negotiables (quality, safety, documentation, escalation) and then give local leaders room to optimize within those guardrails.
What this looks like in the first 90 days
When I take on a new portfolio or region, my first 60–90 days look like this:
- Baseline every site.
- Segment each into Protect & Grow, Stabilize, or Turnaround tiers.
- Identify root causes: volume, staffing, throughput, revenue cycle, quality, or workflow variation.
- Assign interventions and owners, and review progress weekly against a simple scorecard.
The result is an operating discipline that scales. Leaders know what’s expected. Teams know how they’re measured. The C‑suite sees a direct line between operational levers and financial outcomes.
If you lead a complex, multi-site operation, I’m available for a chat. You might want an outside perspective on your operating model. I’m always open to a brief conversation.