One of the most common structural problems I see in practices of all sizes is that credentialing and billing are treated as completely separate functions with zero ongoing communication. Credentialing gets a provider enrolled. Billing submits claims. Nobody is checking that these two systems are telling each other the same story.
The result is predictable: a provider's contract effective date changes, billing doesn't know, claims go out early, denials start accumulating. Or a provider moves to a new location, the address gets updated in the billing system but not with the payer, and suddenly there are NPI/address mismatch rejections that nobody can explain for weeks.
What Revenue Cycle Management Actually Encompasses
RCM is the end-to-end process of converting clinical services into payment. It starts before the patient even walks through the door (eligibility verification, prior auth) and doesn't end until the last dollar is posted to the account. The key stages are:
- Patient registration and eligibility verification — confirming coverage before the service happens
- Charge capture — ensuring every billable service is captured and coded correctly
- Claims submission — clean claims get paid; unclean claims get denied
- Payment posting and reconciliation — making sure what the payer paid matches what was expected
- Denial management and appeals — recovering revenue from rejected claims before deadlines pass
- Patient billing and collections — collecting patient responsibility portions
Credentialing is the foundation that makes all of this work. Without active, accurate enrollment at every payer, the whole process collapses at step three.
The RCM Metrics Every Practice Should Track
If your denial rate is above 5%, credentialing issues are almost certainly contributing. Enrollment lapses, wrong billing provider data, and inactive payer relationships are among the top 5 denial root causes for most practices.
The Five Silo Problems That Cost Practices Real Money
Billing activates a provider before credentialing confirmation
The new hire starts seeing patients on day one. Somebody in billing activates their NPI for the payer. Credentialing hasn't confirmed the effective date yet. Two months of claims go out in-network, get denied as out-of-network, and the timely filing clock is ticking on recovery.
Address changes aren't propagated to payers
The practice moves locations. IT updates the PM system. Credentialing updates CAQH. But nobody sends notice-of-change letters to each individual payer, and some payers won't pull CAQH for address updates. Now claims are going out with an address that doesn't match the payer's file.
Re-credentialing lapses don't trigger billing alerts
A provider's re-credentialing deadline passes, their contract lapses. Billing keeps submitting claims as if nothing changed. By the time the denials start coming in, it's been 2–3 weeks of impacted claims that can't be retroactively recovered.
The Fix: Build a Communication Bridge
We recommend a simple monthly reconciliation meeting between whoever handles credentialing and whoever manages billing. The agenda doesn't need to be complex: review any enrollment changes from the past 30 days, confirm all new providers have active payer status before billing, check the expiration calendar for anything coming up in 90 days, and verify the billing system data matches the enrollment data for all active providers.
That one hour per month has, in my experience, the highest revenue protection ROI of almost anything a practice can do operationally.
We Bridge the Gap Between Credentialing and Billing
Our managed service clients benefit from automatic synchronization between their enrollment records and billing team communications — built into how we operate. No more silos, no more surprise denials. Let's build that system for your practice.
Schedule a Revenue Cycle Consultation