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When looking at your question, it is important to try to look at it from both the employer and employee perspective. I have been in both situations. It was hard for me to see the employer perspective as a new grad.
There are definitely some employers out there who are trying to get something for nothing (ie giving new graduates a greater increased workload with little financial reward). However, most employers are not like this. They are hiring because they need help in order to carry out obligation to a hospital, ASC, etc. Offering someone immediate partnership or other benefits from day 1 is a scary proposition. If this arrangement doesnt work out, it can be very complicated to "untangle" this new individual from the practice. This individual will also have "trade secrets" for which he can damage the practice. Therefore, most employers feel a greater sense of comfort by offering a period prior to full ownership. This is reasonable.
The employee is looking to be fairly compensated for their services. This is also reasonable. Personally, I feel that a one or two year partnership track is reasonable.
Good luck..........
Agree. But watch out for the bait and switch partnership. Where all "partners" supposedly are the same, upon partnership being granted after you put in the 1-3 years and buy the house, you find out that the partnership that you thought you were working for is not a true equal partnership. Voting rights for the company are controlled and always will be controlled by senior docs. A separate "billing company" exists that is owned by the senior docs whose fees are significant. Or senior docs whose family members are employed by "the company" etc., etc.
As a full partner with 15 years experience I've sometimes considered relocating just to try something new or live someplace new or be closer to family. I always let it drop though when I think about working at reduced salary for 2-3 years doing the same work as guys with less experience. It's a bummer to have to go through the buy-in process again just to try something different. I have heard of groups reducing the time to 6 months or a year based on experience but it doesn't seem common.
...you find out that the partnership that you thought you were working for is not a true equal partnership. Voting rights for the company are controlled and always will be controlled by senior docs. A separate "billing company" exists that is owned by the senior docs whose fees are significant..
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On your interview look every partner in the eye and ask:
1. Who does the billing and do any partners have a financial interest?
2. When I am a partner will I have ALL the same rights and privileges as ALL the other partners? If not, when will I be a true equal?
3. Does the company have any employees who have a personal tie to any of the partners?
4. Ask if you could see the corporate bylaws.
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On your interview look every partner in the eye and ask:
1. Who does the billing and do any partners have a financial interest?
2. When I am a partner will I have ALL the same rights and privileges as ALL the other partners? If not, when will I be a true equal?
3. Does the company have any employees who have a personal tie to any of the partners?
4. Ask if you could see the corporate bylaws.
How often do new grads ask these kinds of questions? Is there any negative connotation of asking multiple reimbursement/ bookeeping/ accounting/ fairness questions early on? I would immagine if they are looking for someone to abuse you'd less likely get the job, do you think it would turn more or less fair groups off?
What do you guys think?
I think a good group would think those types of questions are perfectly reasonable. A group looking for someone to abuse might think otherwise, which would probably be a red flag.
How often do new grads ask these kinds of questions? Is there any negative connotation of asking multiple reimbursement/ bookeeping/ accounting/ fairness questions early on? I would immagine if they are looking for someone to abuse you'd less likely get the job, do you think it would turn more or less fair groups off?
What do you guys think?
Agree. We all crave security in an insecure world. A stable group that has minimal turnover (other than partners retiring), One that has had an exclusive contract for decades with a hospital system is as secure that you are going to find in this business. Most of us will pay up for this by way of a long buy in.
You description of this stable group is exactly the kind of group that has the 5-yr partnership track that I talked about in the original thread. Nobody ever leaves. Its the most stable and oldest group in the metro area. I plan on staying in the area, which is why, despite the long track, I am interested in the goup.
You are over generalizing. Yes employed positions will be more common. No, we will not "All be employees of an AMC or large group" Yes, groups lose contracts, but it does not happen "all the time". For some working for a few years at reduced salary towards a partnership will be a bad investment, but for others it will be the best financial decision they ever make.
I may have been over generalizing. I live in a world where I do my own cases, never see a CRNA, and the hospital and surgeons appreciate me. Then I get on SDN every few months, read all the stuff about AMCs, CRNAs, healthcare reform, etc and it gets me depressed! I think my post reflected that.
I do some locum tenens on my vacation time, so I talk with lots of recruiters and hospital/AMC/group representatives. In the last two months I have talked with a large group in Texas with a new contract at a hospital (previously held by another large group), an AMC in the Southeast that got a a hospital contract (previously held by a private group), an AMC in New York that got a contract (previously held by a private group), and a hospital in Florida that was beginning to employ their anesthesiologists and had a number leaving. The hospital group I am at was private just 3 years ago. When I was finishing my fellowship I interviewed with a 14 hospital system that had not renewed their contract with three of their groups and were employing their anesthesiologist at those sites. They were recruiting leadership at that time too because the plan was to employ the anesthesiologists at all 14 sites in the future. That seems like a lot of groups losing contracts to me, and there are almost certainly many young anesthesiologists that worked at a reduced salary for a "buy in" that have nothing to show for it but a smaller retirement/bank account.