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Crucial Metrics for Medical Device Manufacturers: Contract Profitability (Part 1)

I have been in the medical device service business for more than 20 years, and most of those years have been spent in leadership roles for companies that generate multi-billions of dollars in service revenue. Over the course of those years the conversation has evolved from following quality-related metrics like parts per million (PPM) and defect rates to understanding the cost to service a product and contract profitability down to a customer and asset level. No matter the company size or the metric in question, analyzing the data for your chosen metric in real time often does not come easy. It’s difficult to measure profitability with poor data.

This two-part series takes a look at why real-time, accurate data is crucial, and the two metrics—contract profitability and cost-to-serve—that are crucial for medical device companies to prioritize.

Why Is Real-Time Data So Crucial?

As a service leader, I’ve seen it take more than two months to analyze data for one metric. It doesn’t take long to pull mountains of data—most companies are already sitting on all the data they need to perform value added analysis. Analyses become inefficient once you factor in the time it takes to comb through the data, clean it, scrub it and format it. Even then, you often don’t have a complete picture, and by the time you do get what you need, many executives find themselves asking if the data is even relevant anymore. Is it going to provide you the insights you need to make meaningful decisions, or has it taken so long that you can no longer be proactive, but find yourself now in a reactive state?

For example, let’s say a medical device company released a new surgical product two years ago. The installed base (IB) is growing and there is a healthy amount of product IB on warranty being converted to a service contract post warranty. The company’s ability to run a real-time analysis on two key metrics related to the product—contract profitability and cost to serve—will be crucial to understanding and maintaining customer satisfaction and driving business decisions. These two metrics will answer questions about the product’s performance and how much is being spent to support the asset and allow the manufacturer to catch a failure trend in a certain facet of the product or determine if the cost of quality is impeding on the revenue and growth projections of the business.

The ability to answer these questions in real time allows the business to react proactively and course correct before a situation ends up costing the business and impacting the customer, resulting in lost sales, trust and confidence. I’ve seen scenarios like this too many times to count, which is why I advocate that the medical device customers I work with prioritize and understand contract profitability and cost-to-serve.

What is Contract Profitability?

Contract margin analysis is especially important for the service business. Contract margin and profitability analysis have a direct link to cost to serve analysis. They complement each other and together tell a powerful story. Service organizations rely on contract sales to lock in revenue and drive healthy margins, and in most cases contract sales are the largest contributor to the top line (parts and time and materials are the other two, often smaller, revenue streams). Each contract must be managed from a cost perspective, and the total pool of contracts must maintain a target margin for the overall service business. There will always be outliers that will be less than desirable from a margin perspective and the rest of the pool will pull those losses up, however they should be just that…outliers. The service business needs visibility into all contracts down to the customer level to truly manage the health of the contract.

Understanding the health of the contract allows a medical device manufacturer to achieve the following:

What Are the Benefits of Knowing Contract Margin?

A medical device manufacturer that knows its contract margins can control pricing, leakages and concessions. Service businesses have a target margin they want to achieve, and if contract revenue is the biggest part of the pie, then that means it makes up the largest contribution to the margin. Hence, a manufacturer that is able to manage the margin of their contracts down to the product and customer level will be more proactive and make more informed decisions to manage their business.

Like cost-to-serve, which I will detail in the next article, contract profitability requires real-time visibility into assets so medical device manufacturers can understand how their customer contracts are performing and make decisions proactively rather than reactively. If a manufacturer’s contract margin is causing the business pain, then the product under contract is more than likely causing the end customer pain. If a manufacturer relies on their capital assets to generate pull through revenue from consumables, the pain is felt by the OEM from a revenue/margin perspective and productivity/financial hindrance from the customer side. As services become more outcome based and shared risk, the overall performance has a ripple effect for both the OEM and customer. Having this data at the manufacturers’ fingertips in real time allows the organization to take the actions needed to ensure their customer is taken care of and customer excellence is maintained before issues escalate and become costly for both manufacturer and customer.

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