Why “something for everyone” resonates deeply with almost no one — and how to fix it. “Something for everyone” is the unofficial motto of the senior living activity calendar. Exercise for the active, music for the social, crafts for the creative, lectures for the curious. Spread the programming wide enough, the thinking goes, and everyContinue reading “Beyond the calendar: breadth vs. fit”
Tag Archives: quality of life
From days to dollars: modeling LOS revenue
Translating each additional day of length of stay into retained, recurring community revenue. Every senior living operator understands Length of Stay intuitively. A resident who stays longer is a resident whose unit doesn’t need to be re-marketed, re-toured, and re-filled. But “stays longer” has rarely been something operators could model — a number they couldContinue reading “From days to dollars: modeling LOS revenue”
The one-event-a-day tipping point
96% of residents fall short of a single meaningful event per day. Here’s what changes when they don’t. Walk into almost any senior living community and you’ll find a full calendar. Morning exercise, afternoon bingo, evening music, a craft session, a guest speaker. By the measure most operators use — events offered — engagement looksContinue reading “The one-event-a-day tipping point”
Why senior living is ready for payor-aligned data
How quality of life, SDOH, and self-rated health map resident outcomes to the language of value-based care. For most of its history, senior living has spoken a different language than the rest of healthcare. Communities measured occupancy, incident counts, and satisfaction scores. Payors, health systems, and ACOs measured risk, utilization, and outcomes. The two vocabulariesContinue reading “Why senior living is ready for payor-aligned data”
The Biggest Takeaways from the ‘Improving the Resident Experience’ panel at SLTS
Let’s take a look at some of the key problems and challenges we discussed about improving the resident experience with top industry thought leaders Sara Kyle, Kelly Stranburg, Barbara Solomon and Aras Erekul.