If you work the front desk, you’re often the first to notice when the EHR or check-in systems slow you down. But when you raise the issue, it feels like no one’s listening. That’s not because your concerns don’t matter, it’s because complaints alone don’t drive change. Clear, actionable requests do.
This blog shows how to reframe daily frustrations into specific, measurable issues your manager can respond to. You’ll learn how to track problems, show impact, and follow up with confidence.
Download Now: How to Push for the Tech Your Practice Deserves [Free eBook]
Vague complaints like “The EHR is slow” feel like venting. They’re easy to dismiss.
But a statement like:
“We’re losing 30 minutes per team member every day due to EHR load times”
…is a business problem that leadership can act on.
Your concerns aren’t the issue—it’s the way they’re framed. Managers need specifics.
The key to reframing complaints as actionable requests is structuring your requests in this way:
Problem → Impact → Suggested Solution
Instead of saying:
“The EHR is always crashing.”
Say:
“Our EHR crashes twice a day during check-in, causing 90 minutes of lost time each week and delays for 15–20 patients.”
This makes the problem visible and solvable while showing the clear impact of the problem.
Track these data points for 1 week:
How to track it:
Download Now: Practice Issues Log [Free Template]
Use real numbers and patient-facing impact:
These stories connect tech issues to lost time, money, and satisfaction.
Here’s a template you can adapt:
“The EHR crashes twice a day during check-in. This causes delays and costs about 90 minutes of staff time per week. I’d like to request we contact support or evaluate a more stable system.”
Use it in:
To make a more formal case to leadership, it helps to show the impact clearly and professionally using data, examples, and solutions. If you’re ready to take the next step, this presentation template is designed to help you organize your thoughts, data, and present a compelling case.
Download Now: Make a Strong Case for Better Systems With This Presentation [Free Template]
After a week or two, check in like this:
“Just following up on the EHR issue I mentioned—any update? I’m happy to gather more details if that helps.”
If they say it’s not a priority:
“What would need to change for this to become a higher priority next quarter?”
Every clear, documented issue helps build the case for improvement. Even one small fix—like a support call or better workflow—can reduce stress and save hours.
You’re not just flagging problems. You’re creating solutions that help the whole team.
Q: How do I ask my manager to fix an EHR issue without sounding like I’m complaining?
A: Use the format: Problem → Impact → Suggested Solution. Keep it brief and specific.
Q: What if I don’t have time to track issues every day?
A: Just track for 3–5 days. Even a few real examples are more powerful than general frustration.
Q: What if my manager says there’s no budget?
A: Ask what would make it a priority. Show the cost of inaction—lost revenue, staff burnout, or bad reviews.
Q: How often should I follow up?
A: Once every 7–10 business days is ideal. Be polite and offer to provide more data if needed.
Q: Does this really help get things fixed?
A: Yes. Practices are more likely to act when you connect tech issues to real business impact.
You see the problems every day. You’re not just venting, you’re advocating for smarter systems and better care. When you reframe frustration as evidence, you make it easier for your manager to say “yes” to the fix.
Need help getting started? Download our Issue Log Template or Book a Demo with EZDERM to see how we help practices turn feedback into real improvement.