Nicole Vafadari
Operations, IT, and Marcom: Natural Enemies or Collaborators?
Nicole Vafadari
Founder, Doret Consulting

Operations, IT, and Marcom: Natural Enemies or Collaborators?

With Nicole Vafadari
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Why do so many healthcare initiatives—no matter how well-funded or data-driven—fail to change patient behavior?

Healthcare organizations invest heavily in marketing to drive patient demand—but too often, the systems responsible for converting that demand into care are disconnected, inefficient, or working at cross purposes.

In this episode of the Healthcare Success Podcast, I’m joined by my good friend Nicole Vafadari, founder of Doret Consulting, to explore one of the most persistent—and often frustrating—challenges in healthcare: the disconnect between marketing, operations, and IT.

From missed calls and outdated scheduling workflows to EMR limitations and siloed decision-making, we unpack why the patient access experience continues to break down—and where healthcare organizations are leaving significant growth on the table.

A central theme of our conversation is this: healthcare organizations don’t have a demand problem—they have an access and alignment problem. Driving more patients into a broken system only amplifies friction. Real growth happens when marketing, operations, and IT work together to create a seamless, patient-centered experience.

We also explore how organizations can begin to break down silos, including the importance of involving marketing earlier in system decisions, using data to drive change, and aligning around shared goals instead of competing priorities.

Finally, we discuss what it takes to turn these traditionally siloed departments into true collaborators—from rethinking internal processes to leveraging technology in a way that actually supports both patients and teams.

Why Listen?

If you’re a healthcare marketer, CMO, operations leader, or executive trying to improve patient access, increase conversion, or better align your teams, this episode offers practical, real-world insight.

You’ll hear:
• Why marketing, operations, and IT often work at cross purposes
• How siloed systems create friction in the patient journey
• Where healthcare organizations lose revenue due to access barriers
• How data can be used to connect outreach to scheduling and outcomes
• Why online scheduling and call center optimization are critical
• How leading organizations are beginning to break down silos and improve performancers

Key Insights and Takeaways

  1. Healthcare growth is limited more by access than demand. Many organizations successfully generate patient interest, but fail to convert it due to poor access experiences. Friction in scheduling, long wait times, and disconnected systems push patients to seek care elsewhere.
  2. Siloed teams create fragmented patient experiences. Marketing, operations, and IT often operate independently, each optimizing for their own goals. But patients experience the system as one unified journey—and when those teams aren’t aligned, the experience breaks down.
  3. Misaligned incentives drive internal conflict. Marketing is tasked with driving demand, operations is focused on capacity, and IT is managing complexity and security. Without shared goals, these priorities can conflict and create unintended consequences.
  4. Data can be a powerful tool for breaking down resistance. When organizations use both qualitative and quantitative data to show lost revenue, patient frustration, and missed opportunities, it becomes easier to align stakeholders and drive change.
  5. Online scheduling and access improvements drive measurable ROI. Removing barriers to scheduling and making it easier for patients to access care can lead to significant increases in appointments, conversion rates, and overall revenue.


6. The patient doesn’t see your silos.

Patients don’t care about internal structures, physician group distinctions, or system limitations—they expect a seamless, consistent experience. Organizations that fail to deliver this risk confusion, frustration, and lost trust.

7. Cross-functional collaboration is the real unlock.
The most successful healthcare organizations bring marketing, operations, and IT together—not just in execution, but in planning and strategy—creating shared accountability for outcomes.

8. Small operational changes can have outsized impact.
Improving call center workflows, aligning messaging with service line needs, or introducing targeted outreach can unlock significant growth without massive new investments.

9. Technology alone won’t solve the problem.
New tools and platforms are only effective when paired with the right strategy, governance, and collaboration. Without alignment, technology can add complexity instead of solving it

“Driving more demand into a broken system just gets more patients to a frustrating experience faster.”
Nicole Vafadari

Nicole Vafadari

Founder, Doret Consulting

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Note: The following AI-generated transcript is provided as an additional resource for those who prefer not to listen to the podcast recording. It has been lightly edited and reviewed for readability and accuracy.

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