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Pharmacy

  • Are you developing the pharmacy talent around you?

    Make no mistake, as leaders, it is important to develop the people around us. This is not limited to support staff. It also includes helping to develop our peers and even the people we report to. When we develop people, we increase the overall capacity of the organization, and we instill an increased feeling of ownership with our team members.
    Pharmacy staff
  • Pharmacy U presenter Betty Golightly: ‘Have ticket, will travel!’

    When Betty Golightly decided to add travel health services to her Calgary practice, she committed to offering the highest quality of care. “My goal when I started this program was to deliver the best possible pre-travel consultation provided by any healthcare professional.”
    Betty Golightly
  • Icebergs, nuclear weapons and taking a new pharmacy job

    In pharmacy, the iceberg principle will apply at each step of promotion along the various dispensary or head office jobs. This will also apply in the change from managerial to ownership roles. We can only see what we understand and the truth hits home when we finally step inside.
    Jason Chenard
  • Advocacy Leader in Pharmacy Joelle Walker: ‘Advocacy is not a linear path and can take a lot of time.’

    Although when I started my journey in pharmacy, I had a pretty extensive health background, I knew nothing about pharmacy. The lack of knowledge about pharmacy and what pharmacists do remains one of the biggest challenges that we’re constantly working to overcome.
    Joelle Walker
  • Introducing my 9 Fs of leadership

    The days of ‘Command and Control’ – ‘Do as I say, not as I do’ – are long gone, and thankfully so. You don’t have to be the CEO to influence the culture of your organization or store. Everyone plays a part in the establishment of the work culture; the CEO simply sets the tone and encourages similar behaviours from every team member.
    Doug Sherman
  • 5 expert negotiation tactics for pharmacists

    We are pharmacists. We are not lawyers. We are not real estate agents. However, that does not mean we are void of negotiating. Whether we are explaining a co-pay to a patient, signing an agreement with an employer, buying a pharmacy or making a staff schedule, there are parts of the pharmacist’s day where we just have to pull up our pants and negotiate.
    Jason Chenard
  • What my neighbour’s peach trees can teach us about pharmacy leadership

    Earlier in my career, I served on a team that was to develop new revenue streams for our pharmacies. Anything that was not traditional dispensing was labelled “clinical” and given to our team to work through. In those days, we set out to participate in as many of these projects as possible.
    damaged peach tree
  • Pharmacists and Superman have more in common than you think

    For decades, pharmacists have been listed among the most trusted professionals. That trust comes from character. It comes from heart. It comes from having access to all sorts of powerful tools (medications) and making sure they are used to their greatest benefit!
    a man wearing a suit and tie smiling and looking at the camera
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