Running a home care agency is deeply rewarding; but it’s also incredibly complex. Between scheduling, compliance, caregiver retention, client satisfaction, and billing, it’s easy for owners and managers to feel like they’re drowning in details.
What I’ve learned as a Director of Operations and business consultant is this: the biggest opportunity for growth in home care isn’t just marketing, it’s operational excellence. When your processes run smoothly, everything else becomes easier: caregivers are happier, clients receive consistent care, and owners free up time to focus on strategy instead of putting out fires.
I believe in being hands-on with operations, and I want to share exactly how I help home care agencies identify inefficiencies, streamline workflows, and build processes that actually work in the real world.
Step 1: Diagnosing the Bottlenecks
The first step in improving any system is understanding where it’s breaking down. In home care, bottlenecks usually show up in a few common places:
· Scheduling: Double-bookings, last-minute cancellations, and time wasted chasing caregivers to confirm shifts.
· Communication: Too many phone calls, endless text chains, or important details getting lost between office staff, clients, and caregivers.
· Compliance: Missing signatures, outdated care plans, or incomplete HR files that create risk during audits.
· Billing & Payroll: Manual data entry errors, delayed invoicing, and reconciliation headaches between timekeeping and billing systems.
· When I come into an agency, I don’t just ask for reports, I sit down with the schedulers, shadow the caregivers, and listen to the clients. By seeing the workflows firsthand, I can identify the pain points that reports and KPIs alone won’t reveal.
Step 2: Mapping the Current Workflow
Most agencies grow reactively: one client at a time, one caregiver at a time. What works with five clients often breaks down with 25, and completely collapses with 100.
That’s why I start by creating a workflow map: a step-by-step visualization of how work gets done. For example:
· New referral comes in
· Intake coordinator calls family
· Assessment scheduled
· Care plan written
· Caregiver matched and scheduled
· Shift confirmed
· Notes documented
· Billing processed
When owners see this mapped out, they often realize just how many steps are manual, duplicated, or unclear. This is where transformation begins.
Step 3: Eliminating Inefficiencies
Once the workflow is mapped, I work with the team to simplify. Questions I ask:
Where are we doing the same thing twice? (e.g., writing notes on paper, then typing them into the system)
Where are we waiting on someone’s approval unnecessarily? (e.g., requiring a manager’s signature for a routine change that a coordinator could authorize)
Where are we using the wrong tool? (e.g., texting caregivers individually instead of using automated shift reminders in a scheduling system)
One example: At an agency I supported, the scheduling team was spending 10+ hours a week calling caregivers individually to confirm shifts. We moved them to a scheduling platform with automated reminders and confirmation tracking. Not only did this save hours each week, but it also cut no-shows by 30%.
Step 4: Standardizing Best Practices
Streamlining isn’t about doing less work, it’s about doing smarter work consistently. Once inefficiencies are removed, I help agencies build standard operating procedures (SOPs) so every team member knows the best way to get things done.
For example:
· Intake SOP: Every new referral is entered into the CRM within 1 hour, with a documented follow-up timeline.
· Scheduling SOP: Caregivers are matched based on skills, preferences, and availability, not just who’s free.
· Communication SOP: All caregiver shift issues are logged in the scheduling system instead of scattered across texts and sticky notes.
This standardization means that if one staff member is out sick, someone else can step in without chaos. It also ensures the client experience is consistent, which builds trust and retention.
Step 5: Leveraging Technology Wisely
Technology can either be a lifesaver or a money pit, depending on how it’s used. I’ve seen agencies pay thousands for software that sits unused because no one was trained properly.
When I introduce technology into a workflow, I stay hands-on through the entire process:
· Selecting the right tool for the agency’s size and budget (scheduling, HR, billing, etc.)
· Customizing it to fit the agency’s unique processes
· Training staff step-by-step until they’re confident
· Monitoring usage to ensure adoption
For example, I helped one agency migrate from spreadsheets to Generations. At first, the team resisted, it felt overwhelming. But after training them on shortcuts, automations, and reports, the same staff that resisted became its biggest champions. Within two months, billing errors dropped by 40% and scheduling conflicts were nearly eliminated.
Step 6: Building the Right Team Around Processes
Processes alone won’t fix everything, you need the right people running them. One of the hardest truths in home care is that not everyone is suited for the fast pace of operations.
I help agencies by:
· Creating clear job descriptions tied to specific outcomes, not just tasks.
· Designing training programs so staff feel equipped instead of overwhelmed.
· Coaching leaders on performance management, so they can address issues early instead of letting problems fester.
At one agency, I worked closely with the scheduling team. They were great people but lacked structured training. By building a scheduling “playbook” and providing weekly coaching, they transformed from constantly reactive to proactive planners. This alone boosted caregiver satisfaction, because caregivers weren’t getting frantic last-minute calls anymore.
What I’ve Done So Far That Works
Over the years, I’ve tested many approaches. Here are a few strategies that consistently deliver results:
· Weekly Operations Huddles: 15-minute meetings where each department shares one win and one challenge. Keeps communication flowing without dragging into endless meetings.
· 90-Day Onboarding Plans: For both office staff and caregivers. This structured approach reduces turnover because people feel supported from day one.
· KPI Dashboards: Instead of guessing, I track a few key numbers weekly: caregiver call-offs, client satisfaction, open shifts, and DSO (days sales outstanding). These metrics highlight issues before they spiral.
· Cross-Training: Teaching team members multiple roles so vacations or emergencies don’t derail operations.
The impact has been clear: agencies I’ve worked with have cut overtime costs, reduced caregiver turnover, improved client satisfaction scores, and grown sustainably without burning out their staff.
Scaling a home care agency isn’t just about getting more clients, it’s about building a business that can handle growth without breaking. Processes are the backbone of that success.
As someone who’s lived this role day in and day out, I know that process makes perfect. By diagnosing bottlenecks, streamlining workflows, leveraging the right tools, and building the right team, agencies can save time, reduce costs, and deliver better care.
The agencies that thrive are the ones that stop working harder and start working smarter. And in home care, that means one thing above all: processes that serve both people and performance.
Cordially,
Bella Boldoni | A Better Solution In Home Care
Director of OperationsC: 316.245.6669
E: bboldoni@absihc.com
www.absihc.com
