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Total Number of Subscribers: 1626 |
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Date:22nd August 2010 |
Compiled by: M Sathya Kumar |
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He
entered the profession at the time when it was regarded as an ancient art,
little better than faith healing, practiced mainly by amateurs and retirees.
Dr Batra, armed with little more than a first class
professional degree and a fierce determination started Dr. Batra's Positive Health Clinic in the year 1982. Today Dr. Batra's
has grown into a corporate chain of over 54 homeopathic clinics across 20
cities in Dr.
Batra speaks to DARE about his journey, values,
plans and more. Genesis
of Dr. Batra's Positive Health Clinic I
belong to a family of doctors and homeopaths. When I became a doctor, I was
offered a job of an academician. After this, I moved on to training under a
doctor for some time. Back
in the 1970s, homeopathy had to still gain social acceptance. It was
difficult to establish oneself under those
circumstances, but I convinced a polyclinic to give me some space to
practice. I practiced there for about two years, until the owner asked me to
find some other place as he wanted to utilize that space for something else.
I had no option but to setup something of my own.
We
ventured into specialty practice around 1996. Because we were looking at only
specialty patients, the number of patient visits came down to 3-4 per week,
from what used to be 135 per day. Within one year, I made sure that this
number increased. However, there were still patients who were in the waiting
list for months together. It is at this point that I tried out the approach
of multicity practice. This proved to be a huge
success, and I was traveling from city to city. The next steps that I took
were that of planning out expansion into more cities, and at the same time
make this approach work independent of me. By 2001, I had achieved this and
got out of practice and concentrate on building the organization. Today we
have grown into a corporate chain of over 54 homeopathic clinics across 20
cities in How
do you ensure that all the doctors you employ follow the same value system? There
are two things to this. Firstly, we do not have any franchisees or partners.
Secondly, I do not let any agents pick the doctors for my chain of clinics; I
handpick them. Just to give you a figure, out of 100 candidates, only 3
doctors bag the job. Besides other things, I pick people who are
psychologically strong too — the ones who are good with people. I interact
with these doctors on a regular basis, and personally train them. I make sure
that the values, the passion, and the drive is not diluted. How
do you go on about your expansion plan? We
have processes set in the organization which helps us in making these
decisions. Typically, we would expand more in a year where we have had good
business and fewer expansions in a year when we did bad.
We do not rely on market research for this purpose. We have a very simple
formula. For example, we come to know that X number of patients come from a
particular area. The moment this crosses a threshold, we open a clinic in
that area. That said, yes, a part of these plans also comes from the heart.
It has always been an emotional decision to open How
do you deal with competition? Well,
to retain and expand business, one has to focus on patient satisfaction. One
has to evolve with time. For example, we see doctors starting their own
clinics based on or around our concept. But what gives us the edge is that we
keep innovating from time to time and by the time these doctors catch on with
these, we have moved on to more advanced levels. Also,
we have never been in the numbers game on number of clinics. Like I have
mentioned before, we set our own standards and expand at our own pace. This
lets us maintain high quality and low charge. Any
insight on opportunities and trends in the near future? In
Offshoot
business opportunities in the ecosystem? We
are already trying to tap some such opportunities. For instance, all over the
world, people are looking for non-chemical products. I think natural and
chemical free products are going to be a good opportunity area to tap into. Homeopathy,
of course, is our core business. But we do not want to restrict our revenues
to only homeopathy. For instance, we have plastic surgeons who
are doing hair transplants—within four hours of walking into our clinic, a
person can walkout with all the hair on his head, that stays forever. There
are different stages of hair loss and for every stage there is a different
treatment for the problem. We are trying to cover all the areas, rather than
only treating hair loss at the early stage, which can be done through
homeopathy. I
believe that these kind of day surgeries are about to see a boom in What
is the one thing aspiring entrepreneurs should avoid
when starting up? Dishonesty.
I have always had zero tolerance for dishonesty. Someone who is not honest
and truthful to himself cannot be honest and truthful to others; and
therefore never be able to set up a value-based organization. Honesty and
transparency are very strong values in a corporate company. These are very
difficult to stand by in today’s world. If you are able to succeed in
maintaining these values, you come out strong—because your fundamentals are right. Article was earlier published in one the reputed entrepreneurial website. |
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