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Advanced Practice Providers (APPs, including APRNs and PAs) have difficult, yet rewarding jobs, and deserve to be paid well for their work. The more you know about the salary structure, the better your ability to discuss alternatives. The cost of turnover for an employer is 2.5x the cost of compensation, so it is worthwhile for employers to pay APPs well. To ask for incentive pay, APRNs and PAs need to start by gathering information.
Gather and ask for objective data of your performance measures (i.e. number of patients seen, billing, collections, and even patient satisfaction). You can also ask for visibility into other providers in the practice or to benchmark your practice against national data. Visibility can change behavior for the better when providers realize they are behind their colleague's measures. When individuals are aware that their work is being observed and that their performance is impacting institutional revenue, their productivity and the quality of their work improve. Then, ask to use this information to set up a base plus a bonus pay model. Use your current salary as your base and then ask for a percentage of your revenue based on your productivity. Many APPs have found that they are actually the highest producer in the office once they receive visibility. You can present, as an alternative, a straight inflation-based annual increase such as 2%. However, this is actually riskier for the practice because it commits them to a fixed salary no matter how much you produce. A base plus a bonus means that you will only be paid when you are producing more than your base. It also helps the employer to know that you are incentivized to code and write accurate notes and work efficiently to see patients. Presenting this alternative and then advocating for a base plus a productivity-based bonus is an effective way to negotiate for an incentive salary model. All APPs should consider advocating for incentive pay. If you are considering talking with your employer about salary at your next annual review, start by:
This article was originally published on Melnic by Jill Gilliland. Melnic was recently acquired by DirectShifts.