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7 Steps to Fast-Track Rounds Implementation Without the Headaches

Most teams don’t struggle because they can’t do rounds. They struggle because everyone does rounds a little differently, and the process lives in people’s heads. That’s what makes rounds implementation feel heavy. It’s not just picking software. It’s clinical workflow implementation across providers, assistants, scribes, and facility partners, with real patients on the schedule the whole time.

The good news is you can move quickly without creating chaos. The trick is to treat implementation like a short, focused project with clear boundaries and a simple feedback loop. Whether you’re doing rounding workflow setup in EasyRounds or planning broader EHR rounding implementation, these seven steps will help you get live faster and avoid the usual bumps.

Step 1) Define the scope in plain terms

Start with a single sentence that everyone can repeat.

Examples:

  • “We’re standardizing SNF rounding notes and follow-ups for all providers.”
  • “We’re launching rounds workflows for clinic and SNF visits, plus billing-ready reporting.”
  • “We’re rolling out a consistent rounding note format and patient flagging for follow-ups.”

Then choose what you are not doing in phase one. This protects your timeline.

Common phase-one boundaries:

  • Only one care setting first (SNF or clinic)
  • Only one provider group first
  • Only a few visit types first (routine SNF, acute SNF, clinic follow-up)
  • No major template overhaul until after go-live

Fast implementation isn’t about rushing. It’s about keeping the first version small enough that it actually ships.

Step 2) Map what happens today, including the messy parts

You can’t fix what you don’t see. Before you build anything, map your current flow from start to finish:

  • How does the patient list get created?
  • Who preps the chart and how?
  • Where do notes get written?
  • How are orders communicated to staff?
  • How do follow-ups get tracked?
  • What does billing need and when?

Don’t make this a big workshop. Do a 30 to 45 minute walkthrough with one provider and one support person. Ask them to show you a real day.

This is the most overlooked part of rounding software implementation. Teams skip it, then wonder why the new setup doesn’t match how work actually happens.

Step 3) Pick your “must-capture” list and build around it

Standardization starts with agreeing on what has to be captured during a round. Keep the list short.

A practical “must-capture” list might include:

  • Reason for visit
  • Assessment summary
  • Medication changes and why
  • Orders and next steps
  • Follow-up timeframe
  • Who needs to be informed (facility staff, clinic staff, family)

Once you have that list, you can create a basic rounding note template that fits your style. If you’re using EasyRounds, this is where templates, visit types, and patient flagging can keep everyone aligned without forcing long notes.

The point isn’t to write more. It’s to write the same essentials every time so the team can act on them.

Step 4) Decide who owns each part of the workflow

A fast rollout falls apart when roles aren’t clear. You want a simple agreement on who does what before, during, and after rounds.

Here are role questions that usually matter:

  • Who confirms the rounding list?
  • Who starts the note or pre-fills key details?
  • Who documents in the room or at bedside?
  • Who sends the communication to the facility?
  • Who tracks follow-ups until completion?
  • Who runs billing or quality reports?

Write this down as a one-page workflow. If you can’t fit it on one page, it’s too complicated for phase one.

This step is the heart of clinical workflow implementation. It’s also where teams save the most time long-term.

Step 5) Build a short rollout checklist and schedule it

This is where you turn the plan into a calendar. A provider rounds rollout checklist keeps you from relying on memory.

A simple checklist might include:

Configuration

  • Set up visit types
  • Create note templates
  • Define required fields for “done”
  • Set up patient flags and follow-up categories
  • Confirm who can access what

Training and readiness

  • Identify one workflow owner
  • Create a one-page “how we do rounds now” guide
  • Train providers and support staff separately
  • Decide where questions go during week one

Go-live planning

  • Pick a start date
  • Choose a small pilot group
  • Set daily check-in times for the first week
  • Define what counts as a go-live issue vs a later improvement

If you’re doing EHR rounding implementation alongside another system, add a checklist section for how information moves between systems so people aren’t guessing.

Step 6) Pilot with one small group and collect real feedback

If you want speed, pilot with a group that’s small but active. One provider who rounds regularly is often better than five providers who rarely do.

Keep the pilot short:

  • 3 to 5 business days is usually enough
  • Review a handful of notes together
  • Look at follow-ups and communication outcomes, not just template layout

Ask two simple questions:

  1. What slowed you down?
  2. What did you expect to be there but wasn’t?

Then fix only what matters. Don’t turn the pilot into a perfection project. The goal is to remove friction, not redesign everything.

Step 7) Go live, then stabilize before you expand

Go-live isn’t the finish line. It’s the start of the “stabilize” phase.

For the first two weeks, keep it basic:

  • A quick daily check-in (10 minutes)
  • A weekly review of a few rounding notes
  • A list of changes that are allowed now vs later

Track a few simple measures that show whether the workflow is working:

  • Are follow-ups getting closed?
  • Are providers capturing the must-capture list?
  • Are facility communications happening on time?
  • Are billing reports easier to generate?

Once the workflow feels steady, then expand:

  • Add more visit types
  • Add more providers
  • Layer in AWV, CCM, and quality measure tracking if those are part of your plan

That’s how you fast-track rounds implementation without burning people out.

A quick reality check before you start

If your team is already stretched, your implementation plan should respect that. A “fast” rollout that adds confusion will cost you more than it saves.

A genuinely fast implementation usually has three traits:

  • Clear scope
  • Clear roles
  • Tight feedback loop

If you keep those steady, your rounding workflow setup will feel predictable instead of stressful, and you’ll have a system your team can actually stick with.

 

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