The Importance of Selecting a Vendor, as Well as a Software

Pat Stricker, RN, MEd
Senior Vice President
TCS Healthcare Technologies

Usually you think looking for a new software involves just that – evaluating different software products to find the one that best fits your needs. While that is true, you have to realize that you are also selecting a vendor and you need to be sure they also fit your needs. The product and vendor come as a "package."

Think of the software system as the "heart" of your program. If you were having heart problems that limited your ability to perform your normal daily activities and continued to worsen, even with medications and treatments (work-arounds), would that be acceptable? Or might you, at some point, consider having a heart transplant in order to improve and save your life? While this is a little dramatic, it does correlate with how important it is for your business to find the right software system (the "heart" of your program), as well as the right vendor (the surgeon) to help revive and improve our business processes.

When looking for a software, it is imperative to list goals, objectives, and specific requirements that define exactly what the new system has to have. However, how often do businesses take that same approach when considering the vendor? The vendor is usually an "afterthought." This can be a drastic mistake. The vendor is going to be your partner (a term I prefer much more than "vendor") for years to come, so you need to make sure you are choosing, not only the best product, but the best partner.

Your partner will not only help you implement your product to meet (and hopefully, exceed) your needs, but also be there after the implementation for years to come in helping you meet ongoing business needs and challenges. They need to be committed to providing "best in class" software that keeps up with, or is ahead of, industry changes through the years, while also being committed to working with you to maintain and change your system to assure you can achieve your business goals.

So, how do you go about looking for and selecting the partner (vendor) you need?

Just as you develop criteria for goals, objectives, and specific requirements that the software needs to have, you also need to develop the same type of criteria for the vendor that you want as your partner. Formalize the criteria into a vendor checklist that is used to evaluate the vendor at the same time you evaluate the software. These are some of the key questions you should ask to develop the criteria for your checklist:

There may also be other specific requirements that you have for the vendor, so make sure you include those in your vendor checklist. They are going to be your partner for years to come, so this is a critical component in selecting new software. You need to feel confident that they will be able to help you not only implement the product, but be there after you launch it to help you maintain and change it to meet your ongoing future needs.

Pat Stricker, RN, MEd, is senior vice president of Clinical Services at TCS Healthcare Technologies. She can be reached at pstricker@tcshealthcare.com.