Blog
Adebola Badiru

How to Make Real Service Improvement Where You Work

A lot of clinicians underestimate how much value they can add beyond

AB
Adebola Badiru
6/23/2025  ·  2 min read

A lot of clinicians underestimate how much value they can add beyond

treating patients. If the only thing you bring to the table is your

ability to treat patients, then I hate to break it to you, you are very,

very replaceable.

Think about it. As a business owner or clinic manager, would you want to

hire someone who just comes in, does the basic physio work, and clocks

out? No initiative. No fresh ideas. No effort to help the business grow.

Anyone can treat a patient, physio assistants, chiropractors,

osteopaths, even GPs with MSK training. But not everyone improves

services.

This is why service improvement matters.

In the NHS, recruiters often ask candidates to show examples of how they

have improved services in previous roles. You will see this in person

specifications, job descriptions, and supporting information sections.

It is not just a tick box it is about showing that you can think

critically, add value, and drive meaningful change.

So, the question is: how do you write strong evidence of service

improvement?

One method I teach in my book, *Shortlisted: The Ultimate Guide to

Writing Perfect Supporting Information*, is the STAR method. But today,

I want to share another powerful framework one I use regularly as a Lean

Six Sigma Green Belt and that is the DMAIC framework.

What is DMAIC?

DMAIC is a structured problem-solving approach used in Lean Six Sigma to

improve any process. It stands for:

Example: Reducing Patient Wait Times

Let us say you noticed that new patients in your clinic were waiting too

long to be seen. Here is how you could apply DMAIC:

was 14 days.

prioritised.

slots each week.

slot availability.

That is a solid, measurable example of service improvement that goes

beyond just saying "I helped the service."

Bonus: Use Root Cause Analysis

When you get to the "Analyse" stage, you can use tools like the 5 Whys

or a Fishbone Diagram to identify what is really causing the problem.

Example: A colleague keeps coming to work late.

Now you know the real issue is not the colleague. it is the lack of

structure. That is the kind of insight that leads to meaningful,

sustainable solutions.

As a final thought, If you want to stand out as a clinician, whether in

a job application, interview, or just day-to-day practice, you need to

show that you are more than just a therapist. You are a problem-solver.

A service improver. A clinician who adds value.

So next time you are asked about service improvement, do not just talk

show structure. Use frameworks like STAR and DMAIC to make your impact

clear, believable, and compelling.

Let them know: You are not just doing the job you are moving the service

forward.

Top of Form

Subscribe to my blog and get my regular thoughts right to your email

Submit

Bottom of Form

Explore my journey as a physiotherapist leader.

[privacy policy/cookie policy](https://adebolabadiru.co.uk/policy)

© 2025. All rights reserved.

This website uses cookies to provide necessary site functionality and to

improve your experience. By using this website, you agree to our use of

cookies.

AcceptDecline

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Doctor Knows Best? Not Anymore! Why the Montgomery Standard Matters

A look into the legal shift from the Bolam test to the Montgomery

Standard and what it means for clinicians today. This post breaks down

why informed consent is more than a formality and how shared

decision-making should shape your daily practice.

Adebola Badiru

AB
Adebola Badiru MCSP, PCQI
Board Director · First Contact Practitioner (FCP) · Founder of PhysioConnect. Writing about clinical leadership, NHS careers, advanced practice, and healthcare transformation.
← Back to blog Get in touch