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How to Effectively Present Your Asset Management Plans to Healthcare Leadership

4 minutes

With the increasing complexity of healthcare facilities and the need for reliable equipment to ensure patient care, strategic asset management (SAM) plays a critical role in aligning asset management with broader organizational goals. Recently, I hosted a webinar on ways to more effectively communicate a strategic asset management plan to your leadership to get buy-in and improve funding for necessary projects.  

Below is a quick summary of the key learning objectives from the webinar, along with some insights to help you build a more compelling SAM plan that resonates with your leadership team and ensures long-term success.  

You can also watch the full webinar on demand here 

What is strategic asset management?

To start off, SAM is a systematic approach to managing your facility’s assets in a way that maximizes their value, while minimizing risks. It’s not just about fixing equipment when it breaks, but aligning your asset management strategy with your organization’s overall objectives. In a healthcare setting, this means ensuring that medical equipment, infrastructure, and other critical assets support patient care, meet compliance standards, and operate efficiently. 

SAM is essential because it allows healthcare facilities to take a long-term view of asset performance, cost, and risk. By proactively managing your assets, you can extend their lifespan, reduce downtime, and avoid unexpected costs.  

6 key steps to strategic asset management optimization

During the webinar, I outlined six essential steps for optimizing your SAM program. These steps can ensure that your organization benefits from a structured, data-driven approach to asset management: 

  1. Define SAM in your organization: Every healthcare facility has unique priorities, so it’s important to clearly define what SAM means in the context of your organization. Is it about reducing operational costs, ensuring patient safety, or improving compliance? Establishing this foundation will help align leadership and team expectations. 
  2. Understand where you are today: Evaluate your current asset management practices to determine whether you’re reactive, preventative, or predictive. Many organizations struggle because the quality of their CMMS data deteriorates over time, causing technicians to lose trust in the system. Ensuring data accuracy is key to success. 
  3. Determine how you want to manage your facility: After assessing your current state, decide how you want to move forward. Do you want to focus on extending asset life, improving compliance, or reducing operational costs? Having a clear vision will help you build a SAM plan that aligns with leadership’s strategic goals. 
  4. Align your leadership on asset management: Gaining leadership buy-in is crucial. You need to show how SAM supports broader organizational goals, such as enhancing patient care, reducing risks, and ensuring compliance. Use data and benchmarks to demonstrate the tangible benefits of asset management to your leadership team. 
  5. Install business processes to maintain data integrity: Accurate data is the foundation of any successful SAM program. Implement processes to ensure that asset data remains up-to-date and reliable over time. This might include regular audits, technician training, and using data-driven decision-making to maintain trust in your systems. 
  6. Apply standardized risk rankings to your assets: Not all assets are equally important. Using a standardized risk-ranking system helps prioritize maintenance efforts based on their impact on patient care, compliance, and operational efficiency. This approach ensures that resources are allocated effectively. 

Asset-driven budgeting and forecasting

One of the most critical elements of a SAM plan is leveraging data to drive budgeting and forecasting. Healthcare facilities often struggle to justify their capital investments without solid data to back up their decisions. By using asset data and benchmarks, you can validate your investment needs and ensure that they align with your facility’s long-term goals. 

For example, if your data shows that a particular piece of equipment is nearing the end of its lifecycle and will likely require significant repairs in the near future, you can use that information to request funding for replacement or upgrades. This data-driven approach not only builds confidence in your asset management plan but also enables leadership to see the return on investment (ROI) from their asset decisions. 

Aligning investment needs with larger strategic initiatives

The final and most important element of any SAM plan is ensuring that your asset management efforts align with larger strategic initiatives already endorsed by leadership. It’s not enough to simply request budget for new equipment or repairs—you need to demonstrate how these investments support the organization’s broader mission and objectives. 

For example, if your hospital is focused on improving patient care through the adoption of new technology, aligning your asset management requests with that goal will make it easier to secure buy-in from leadership. By framing asset management in the context of your organization’s strategic initiatives, you show that you understand the bigger picture and are working towards the same goals. 

Final takeaways

When it comes down to it, strategic asset management is an essential tool for healthcare organizations looking to improve operational efficiency, reduce risk, and enhance patient care.  

At Brightly we offer tools like Origin to combine with our healthcare CMMS, TheWorxHub, so that you can optimize processes, create data-driven budgets, and align with align your asset management plans with strategic objectives.  

If you’d like to learn more, be sure to check out the complete webinar here. Or read about some additional ways to maximize your facility performance with data-driven asset management