Do Tank helped a Colorado-based rural hospital redesign its strategic planning approach to strengthen leadership alignment, prioritize investments, and improve readiness for sustained change. The resulting strategy became an active management framework influencing workforce initiatives, service line decisions, and capital planning across the organization.
Like many rural providers, the organization faced workforce shortages, aging infrastructure, and persistent barriers to patient access. Previous strategic plans were developed through traditional leadership retreats with limited frontline engagement, leading to uneven adoption and reduced momentum for implementation. Leaders recognized the need for a more inclusive and operationally grounded planning approach that could guide real decisions in a resource-constrained environment.
Do Tank’s Role:
- Designed and facilitated a human-centered strategic planning process
- Led stakeholder engagement and insight synthesis activities
- Guided leadership workshops focused on prioritization and trade-offs
- Developed visual strategy frameworks and implementation tools
- Structured the planning journey using the Do Level methodology
Do Tank engaged clinicians, staff, and community partners through listening sessions, surveys, and data
analysis to surface key strategic challenges and opportunities. More than 250 frontline insights informed focused themes addressing workforce sustainability, service development, and regional partnerships.
Collaborative workshops enabled leaders to explore strategic options — including behavioral health expansion, workforce housing solutions, and infrastructure modernization — while clarifying sequencing and investment implications. Draft strategies were tested with operational leaders and board members before adoption, supported by digital engagement tools that increased transparency and shared ownership.
The participatory planning process strengthened alignment across leadership and staff while enabling early action on critical priorities. Immediate initiatives were launched to modernize core services and address retention challenges, alongside longer-term efforts to expand partnerships and improve regional access to care.
By embedding strategy into governance processes and operational planning cycles, the organization improved its ability to respond to evolving rural healthcare conditions and pursue growth opportunities with greater confidence.
This engagement illustrated how strategic planning can build institutional capability when discovery, design, and activation are integrated. Treating strategy as a continuous leadership discipline — rather than a periodic exercise — helped the organization move beyond producing a document toward strengthening its capacity to execute change.