Health plans invest significant time and resources into provider contracting. Networks are designed, gaps are identified, negotiations are completed—and contracts are signed.

But what happens next is where many networks begin to break down.

The reality is this: contracting is not the finish line—it’s the starting point. And for many organizations, the post-contracting experience is where operational friction quietly undermines network performance.

The Problem No One Talks About

Most network strategies are built around access, adequacy, and compliance. Far fewer are designed around the provider experience after the contract is executed.

That gap shows up quickly—and providers feel it immediately.

Common breakdowns include:

  • Slow or inconsistent onboarding processes
  • Delays in credentialing or system access
  • Fragmented communication across departments
  • Payment and remittance inefficiencies
  • Lack of transparency into status, timelines, or expectations

Individually, these issues may seem manageable.
Collectively, they create a frustrating experience that can damage provider trust from day one.

Operational Friction Has Real Consequences

When post-contracting processes don’t work, the impact goes far beyond internal inefficiency.

It affects:

  • Provider participation: Frustrated providers are less likely to prioritize your network
  • Speed to activation: Delays in onboarding slow down access and network expansion
  • Directory accuracy: Misalignment leads to outdated or incomplete provider data
  • Long-term retention: Poor early experiences often translate into long-term disengagement

In a competitive environment where providers have choices, ease of doing business matters.

Why This Happens

These gaps are rarely caused by a lack of strategy. More often, they stem from disconnected execution.

Different teams own different parts of the process:

  • Contracting
  • Credentialing
  • Provider relations
  • Payments
  • Network operations

Without alignment across these functions, even the strongest network strategy can fall apart in execution.

Rethinking the Post-Contracting Experience

Health plans that outperform in network performance don’t just focus on who is in the network—they focus on how it feels to be part of it.

That requires a shift from transactional contracting to operational excellence across the provider lifecycle.

Key areas of focus include:

1. Streamlined Onboarding

Reduce time from contract signature to provider activation by aligning workflows, eliminating redundancies, and creating clear ownership across teams.

2. Transparent Communication

Providers should never have to guess where they stand. Clear timelines, defined points of contact, and proactive updates make a measurable difference.

3. Payment Experience Optimization

Payment delays, lack of visibility, and administrative burden are among the fastest ways to create dissatisfaction. Modernizing payment workflows is critical to reducing friction.

4. Integrated Systems and Data

Disconnected systems create inefficiencies and errors. A unified view of provider data supports faster decisions and more accurate network management.

5. Ongoing Engagement—Not Just Activation

The relationship doesn’t end at onboarding. Continuous engagement, performance visibility, and responsiveness are essential to long-term retention.

The Bottom Line

Building a network is only part of the equation.

Sustaining a high-performing network requires operational discipline, cross-functional alignment, and a provider experience that supports—not hinders—participation.

Health plans that address these post-contracting gaps don’t just improve internal efficiency—they build stronger, more resilient networks that providers want to be part of.