The gap is not where most sales leaders think it is | E.20
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In episode twenty of "Selling to Healthcare," Lisa T. Miller confronts a pattern she keeps hearing from sellers and sales leaders alike. When she describes the mechanics of earning C-suite access — pulling a hospital's Medicare Cost Report, calculating a cost-to-charge ratio, building a one-page margin leak brief — the honest reaction is some version of "I'm not sure my team could actually do that." Lisa argues that feeling is correct, but the gap it points to is structural, not personal — and it's the most valuable territory in healthcare sales.
She explains why even the best sales methodologies leave reps short. Challenger, Blue Sheets, and the rest teach a rep to qualify a deal, structure a discovery call, map a buying committee, and handle objections — but none of them teach a seller how to read a Cost Report worksheet or what a CFO is actually looking at when reviewing service line profitability. The result is a rep who is fluent in their product and average in the language of the buyer.
Lisa lays out the math the way she sees it: of a thousand reps calling on the same health system, maybe one has actually opened the Cost Report and triangulated it against MedPAR and the IPPS tables before reaching out. That rep gets the meeting — and behind them is a company that decided the work was worth doing. She walks through how to build the competency at the individual level (start with one hospital, write three versions of a one-page brief) and at the company level (hiring filters, graded onboarding, protected calendar time, peer-reviewed briefs).
This episode is a direct, practical case for treating hospital financial fluency as a learnable, coachable moat — the thing that turns a sales call into a conversation between two people looking at the same problem from two different seats, and that makes access start coming to you instead of you chasing it.
Highlights of this Episode Include:
- The Gap Is Structural, Not Personal: If your team can't read a Cost Report, that's not a talent problem — it's that no one built the systems, skills, and support to make it possible.
- Methodologies Aren't Enough: Challenger and Blue Sheets are real skills, but none of them teach a rep the hospital finance that actually matters to a CFO.
- The Math of Access: Of 1,000 reps on the same health system, ~950 lead with product and maybe 1 has triangulated the Cost Report against MedPAR and IPPS — that's the one who gets the meeting.
- "I've Never Seen This Before": CFOs who field vendor pitches every week told Lisa they'd never seen her analysis — not because the data was exotic, but because no vendor had ever built it from the public sources sitting in plain sight.
- Insight Is a Category Competitors Skip: Once you bring real financial analysis, you stop competing on price and product and start competing on insight — a category most rivals never enter.
- Start With One Cost Report: Pick one hospital in your pipeline, open Worksheet A and C, learn the cost-to-charge ratio, layer in IPPS and MedPAR, and write the brief three times — the building is what teaches you.
- Make It a Company Strategy: A real moat looks like hiring filters, graded onboarding, protected weekly brief-building time, and comp that rewards depth of analysis over velocity of activity.
Read the full article: https://www.selltohospitals.com/p/most-companies-selling-into-hospitals
Learn more about Lisa at https://lisatmiller.com/about
Book an appointment - https://calendly.com/lisa_t_miller/30min
LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/lisamiller/
Learn about Lisa's Services & Workshops:
- https://www.lisatmiller.com/lisa-t-miller-services/
- https://fluentinhealthcare.com/
- https://healthcaresalesmasterclass.com/