And here I am asking for my sign-on to be upped a bit. Also an open-book SDG. I suddenly feel bad.
See what happened there? Now you feel bad about trying to ensure your financial security. Well played.
Keep in mind that strong SDG's were set up 10-15 years ago (some even longer) when reimbursement was higher, core measures weren't present, metrics weren't enforced, and original members planned for a large retirement and partnership bonus structure. Fewer physicians could be staffed without threatening throughput, ED holds were encouraged by administration, and a reduced workforce allowed group members to be paid higher rates.
These things are no longer a long-term reality for Emergency Physicians in today's current environment. As SDG's continue to cling to the model they set up, and hang on as long as they can for their retirement payout, rates in these groups with fixed economy of scale will always favor those who have been there the longest (even with open books, and shared bonuses). The more doctors that need to be hired, the more dilute the bonus pool becomes, while patient reimbursement likely drops over the next 5-10 years. The economic reality of some SDGs is that they will never be able to increase their rates without seriously impacting their bottom line, and will eventually be outcompeted by other groups able to pay higher rates - likely SDG hybrids, or full-blown CMG's who pay higher rates with productivity bonuses.
I don't think asking these questions would label someone as being "all about the money." For a new graduate looking to establish long-term roots in a community, the economic health of such a group can be critical to making a long-term decision, and a group's rigid adherence to a set pay rate and formula can be a sign of economic trouble ahead and potentially long-term instability. For the average physician who wants a steady paycheck, this isn't an issue - until 5-10 years pass and a stagnant rate fails to keep up with inflation. Of course, by then, the major shareholders in the current group will have cashed out, leaving the remaining members to pick up the pieces and eventually change the business model.
A better question might be to ask what the group's margin is. most SDG's today (unless they have diversified their capital and put up barriers of protection) operate on a VERY slim margin. Benefit prices will also continue to rise, and if a group pays for these, their margin will become even smaller. This margin will continue to erode until they are no longer economically viable.
Ask for that increased sign on. Ask for moving expenses, board fees, license fee reimbursement, and everything else you need to establish yourself as a member of the group and the community. If a group is economically sound, investing a couple thousand dollars in a future partner should be money well spent - and easily accomplished.