Clear Vision
By Vogel, Mike | |
Proquest LLC |
Growing up in
Taylor was more than a spectator. At age 7, she and her younger sister sold greeting cards and jewelry door to door under their mother's supervision. When-old enough, Taylor worked at the local grocery store. She picked beans and strawberries to pay for summer camp. "It was really important to mom that we learned the value of a dollar," Taylor says.
With that background, the non-linear trajectory of her life begins to make sense. She says she's not a religious person and is unaffiliated with any religious denomination, but she attended a theological seminary for graduate school. She studied social ethics, not theology.
And for 20 years, she has built and led managed care company Premier Eye Care, which manages medical and routine vision care, including medical review, authorization and payment, for 2.7 million Floridians, through
Premier, which also manages vision care for another 287,743 outside of
In a competitive field, Premier stands out for the range of plans it works for. Notably, it also handles claims beyond routine exams and eyewear, including medical treatments like cataract surgery, corneal transplants, eye pharmaceuticals and the like - which many plans handle in-house through their own medical plans. The company is in 11 states (soon to be 15) and has grown from
Premier's executive offices are in the
Owned by
Taylor took the role of acting executive director and intended only to do the due diligence and help hire a leadership team. "Things happen that are a surprise," Taylor says. "I really just threw myself into it because it was so much fun."
Two critical ideas shaped Taylor's thinking in building a company that employs people from call-center temps to doctors. A follower of quality guru
The other idea, from her time at
Premier, she says, is "highly profitable," though she declines to reveal numbers. The other two P's in the bottom line require different metrics than dollars. Carpet tiles at the company's main workplace are made from recycled tires. Premier reports seven of 10 employees are women, a ratio that also holds for leadership positions. For its employees, it provides 11,000 pounds of free fruits and vegetables in the break room each year. For St.
The company has financially supported sending medical supplies to
One effort to raise money for shoes for the poor made for a memorable night for
Taylor, 57, says the community work creates a sense of loyalty to the company. She reported that from last year's Best Companies survey, employee satisfaction came in at 97% and engagement at 100%. Turnover, even for the company's 30 call-center jobs, is well-below industry norms.
Taylor sees the low rate as extraordinary given how tedious Premier's work can be. Managed care is a highly regulated and audited industry - Premier participates in about 50 audits a year by various agencies and health plans - and compliance with health plan and government program rules must be perfect.
The goal is for each worker to become so acquainted with the job's demands and plan rules that they're experts. As experts, they're then empowered to tell the company how both their tasks and the overall company can work better. They manage their work as they see fit.
A group of motivated, creative experts will turn in high performance and improve company processes, Taylor. says. "This is not hippy-dippy, touchy-feely. It's highly professional, highly organized," she says.
It certainly is helping the company grow. In November, Premier will move into new offices in
Taylor says she loves making money, but she clearly loves the social side too. She relates asking a relatively new worker at a holiday party how she liked the new job. The worker told her, "I just love the purpose."
Says Taylor, "What a great thing to say. And what a great thing to feel."
Copyright: | (c) 2014 Trend Magazine, Inc. |
Wordcount: | 1216 |
2014 ACA Election: Candidates and Voting Instructions
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News