Know
your market
Understanding
needs and providing home-like care works for Sunrise
by Brett Lieberman
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Back
in the early 1980s when Paul and Terry Klaassen started
marketing an alternative approach to senior care, one
of the first things they did was purchase a mailing
list of people over 65. Yet within days of sending a
promotion for their assisted-living center in Northern
Virginia, they realized they had made a mistake. "It
was a disaster," recalls Paul Klaassen, the company's
CEO. "The wrong people came. The few that did come
were looking for golf course communities, maybe condominiums."
At
the time, the term "assisted living" had not
yet been coined. The Klaassen's notion of caring for
the frail and elderly in homey residential settings
was unheard of in 1981 when they founded what would
become Sunrise Assisted Living, Inc. Back then, elderly
people lived at home with family or were placed in sterile
nursing homes that smelled of disinfectant.
Twenty-one
years later, assisted living has evolved into the fastest-growing
sector of retirement care as the elderly and their families
shun nursing homes in favor of more comfortable, home-like
surroundings. McLean-based Sunrise is one of the biggest
operators in the United States, with 208 assisted-living
homes. The company rolls out a new site about every
two weeks and now has about 16,000 residents and 12,000
employees.
Its
rapid growth bucks the doldrums in the retirement living
market. Other companies are still dealing with the wreckage
left from the late 1990s when the industry exploded
and developers overbuilt. Capital dried up and some
of the industry's players bailed out. Even industry
leaders, such as Alterra Healthcare Corp. of Milwaukee,
Wis., were stymied. Alterra's stock is hovering in the
10-cent range, down from $35 four years ago. The firm
lost nearly $300 million last year and is in the midst
of shedding a quarter of its more than 400 properties.
Sunrise,
however, continues to thrive, in part because of the
lessons the Klaassens learned in those early days of
pioneering a new industry. Lesson number one: figuring
out the market. Usually, elderly people weren't the
ones hunting for a place to live. Instead, it was younger,
female members of their families. "It was always
45- to 64-year-old daughters and daughters-in-law that
were the real assisted-living customers in terms of
being the decision maker and who signed the contract
and who we had to keep happy," says Paul Klaassen,
the company's CEO.
That
realization continues to drive Sunrise's operations.
It steers clear of areas such as South Florida, which
are densely populated with seniors, as well as rural
or less populated areas. Sunrise prefers the top 25
major metropolitan areas where retiree's children -
the decision makers - live. It figures the children
will want their aging parents nearby. The positioning
has proved to be a good business decision, says Jerry
L. Doctrow, a Legg Mason analyst who tracks the industry.
"Sunrise markets where the kids are, not the seniors,"
he says. Adds Frank G. Morgan of Jeffries & Co.:
"As Marriott International has done in the lodging
and senior-care sectors, Sunrise is well on its way
to creating a branded name in senior care."
The
rest of the Sunrise philosophy involves creating comfortable
surroundings that appeal to residents and their families.
All in all, the strategies are paying off. In the first
quarter, Sunrise narrowly topped analysts' projections
with revenues of $111.1 million, a 6.8 percent gain
over 2001.
When
they embarked on their mission of improving retirement
housing for seniors, neither Klaassen had had much health-care
experience. Paul had been working for the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce and Terry at Radio Free Europe when they
started Sunrise at ages 23 and 25. But the couple was
convinced that Sunrise could offer something better
than the impersonal atmosphere and poor care they witnessed
while volunteering at nursing homes. So they drew upon
Paul's experience visiting his grandmothers in residential-style
nursing homes in the Netherlands and Terry's struggle
as a teenager caring for her terminally ill mother at
home. "The fear of growing old in our society has
really been not about dying, but about how are we going
to live those final months of our lives," says
Terry.
Sunrise
relies on its own in-house team to design each property.
Six months after residents move into a new center, the
team does a final walk through, usually making 40 adjustments,
some as minor as moving light switches, to make the
home comfortable and convenient for tenants. About 50
percent of each home - the term facility is shunned
- is devoted to common space to encourage socialization.
A house cat or dog usually wanders around and may sleep
on a resident's bed. Natural lighting, different wallpaper
in each room, carpeting throughout and themed hallways
help residents find their rooms and create a cozy environment.
Rather
than sterile institutional furnishings ordered out of
a catalog, homes use ordinary furniture, possibly with
non-traditional fabrics to protect residents and to
serve as a buffer against incontinence. Anne Hiatt is
typical of many assisted-living residents. After her
husband died, her children didn't want her living alone
at her McLean home. So she accepted an offer to try
out a Sunrise home for a weekend. The visit convinced
her to make the move, and she has been living at one
of Sunrise's Oakton homes for six years. "I don't
think there's a better place to live," says Hiatt,
80. "It's certainly better to live here out of
your family's hair. That can sometimes foul up your
relationships."
While
Sunrise is best known by its Victorian designs, especially
in the Northeast, architecture varies by location. Its
signature turrets are still a common feature at many
sites, but others such as the Hermosa Beach, Calif.,
location, which looks like a beach house, blend in with
their surroundings.
Paul
Klaassen believes there is plenty of room for continued
expansion in the U.S. Yet, over the next five to 10
years major growth is likely to come outside the country.
Sunrise plans to open as many as 50 locations in Germany
through a partnership with a Prudential subsidiary.
It already operates eight Canadian properties. Later
this year, it's scheduled to break ground on a third
London site. Klaassen is eyeing Japan as well.
In
2002 Sunrise launched its "At Home" program,
which provides in-home care for seniors who want to
stay in familiar surroundings and need minimal help.
Wall Street analysts and industry experts call it a
smart decision that will help introduce the company
to future residents while they are still independent.
Though
by far the most successful company nationally, Sunrise
has plenty of competition. Marriott, its biggest direct
competitor around Washington, D.C., and Northern Virginia,
uses its internationally known name and hospitality
industry experience to target a similar upper-middle
to upper-class customer in metropolitan areas. It cares
for 22,000 residents at nearly 160 properties, including
six in Virginia.
Marriott has taken a broader approach to providing a
continuum of care. Residents can move into properties
such as The Colonnades in Charlottesville as independent
seniors and move to assisted living or nursing care
as their health conditions dictate. "We are the
broadest based provider of senior services," says
Jeff Ferguson, Marriott's executive vice president and
general manager.
Other
companies, such as Westminster Canter-bury in Virginia
Beach, provide assisted-living care, but are predominantly
independent living properties. They offer on-site health
care and services along with swimming pools, golfing
and other amenities to seniors who live in 400- to 1,800-square-foot
apartments or condominiums.
While
the Sunrises and Mar-riotts are well known, they're
not the most common form of assisted-living care. Senior
group homes run by individuals and nonprofits dominate
the industry, but are far more difficult to find. Most
referrals come from family and friends, not doctors,
says Linda J. McCorkindale, who opened her first home
in Annandale almost three years ago.
Licensed
to have as many as eight residents, group homes operate
in ordinary houses in residential neighborhoods. They
care for the same range of seniors, including those
with Alzheimer's and dementia, as the larger facilities.
"It's more like a home," says McCorkindale,
who operates as Potomac Homes and recently opened a
second home nearby. "You are in a residential neighborhood
versus a large facility."
Group homes often offer the advantage of lower staff-to-resident
ratios - about 5 to 1 - though it varies from home to
home. State regulations, which also cover larger facilities,
set the bar low. A home can operate unlicensed with
up to three residents.
A bigger challenge at senior-living facilities is uneven
care. All that Virginia and many other states require
from a nursing perspective is that a licensed health
care professional come in quarterly. McCorkindale, who
happens to be a registered nurse, says residents at
many homes and larger facilities are getting lackluster
care. She describes one home she's visited as "horrific,"
but says it remains open because it's willing to take
residents that nobody else will. McCorkindale declined
to reveal the home's name or location, saying that state
regulators are aware of the problems.
Despite
industry complaints to the contrary, assisted living
facilities are not well regulated. Oversight varies
from state to state, but most operators will see an
inspector only a couple times per year. Major operators
such as Sunrise generally earn strong praise from state
officials, but no company or facility is immune to problems.
One
of the most common complaints heard by government officials
is that assisted-living centers practically push some
residents out the door. Most contracts allow the provider
to say when a resident is too sick and needs more skilled
nursing care. The result is heartache for residents
and their families who want to avoid nursing homes.
Perhaps
the biggest challenge to assisted living is the cost,
which runs about $3,400 per month even in group homes
such as McCorkindale's. Sunrise says its basic costs
range from $2,400 to $3,400 per month, but costs can
be higher depending on the level of care. In addition,
residents pay extra for a la carte items such as services
from a center's beauty salon or assistance with medication.
Long-term care insurance often covers the cost, but
many Americans lack such insurance or retirement planning.
As a result, a few years in assisted living can quickly
drain senior bank accounts leaving them the unenviable
choice of moving in with family or into a nursing home
that accepts Medicaid.
Assisted
living is strictly private pay. Medicare will not cover
any costs, except for a few medical expenses. Medicaid
also doesn't cover care, although a few facilities willing
to accept $910 in monthly state grants do qualify. Few
places can afford to accept such low reimbursements,
and the care and conditions of such centers may be of
a lower quality.
Despite
the present glut, developers definitely have demographics
on their side. During the 1990s, the number of senior
citizens 85 and older increased 37 percent. As aging
Baby Boomers pump up the senior population in the next
two decades, they will create an enormous need for elderly
care. Increased demand, high costs and people living
longer lives may create a society of haves and have
nots when it comes to having the resources to live out
one's golden years. Marriott's Ferguson is quite frank
about who his company is targeting. "We see ourselves
as an excellent provider in the premium tier of the
market," he says. The nagging question remains:
what happens to all the people in the non-premium tier?
For
information on licensing, complaint history and the
date and results of a facility's most recent inspection,
people can call the State Department of Social Services'
Division of Licensing Programs at (804) 692-1787. They
will be directed to a regional office for information
on facilities in their area.
Return to Virginia Business - August 2002
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