Placeholder draft — Dan to finalize with real research and figures.
In most local home care markets, a small number of agencies capture a disproportionate share of available business. The common assumption is that referrals and private-pay clients are distributed roughly evenly across competitors. In practice, this is rarely true.
The agencies that consistently win the lion's share of business tend to share a few traits: a dedicated, accountable business development function, a diversified referral network rather than reliance on one or two sources, and a clear system for following up on leads before competitors do.
This matters because most agencies are competing for the same fixed pool of referrals and private-pay families in their territory. If a handful of competitors are capturing 70-80% of new business, the remaining agencies are splitting scraps — regardless of how good their care actually is.
The strategic implication is straightforward: growth is rarely about the broader market getting bigger. It's about taking share from competitors who don't have a real business development system. That requires treating sales as seriously as clinical operations — a discipline, not an afterthought.
