Accountable Care Organizations were created with a clear goal: to coordinate care, reduce costs, and improve patient outcomes. Healthcare organizations have invested significant resources to make this model successful. However, many ACOs still struggle to consistently achieve shared savings targets. The challenge is not a lack of effort but the absence of effective ACO success strategies that turn fragmented data into timely decisions.
The difference between high-performing ACOs and others is not the size of the team or the number of contracts. It is the ability to shift from reactive manual processes to proactive, intelligence-driven care across the entire patient population.
Why Most ACOs Are Still Struggling
The challenges ACOs face today are structural, not superficial. Understanding what’s actually breaking down is the first step toward fixing it.
Data Fragmentation Creates Dangerous Blind Spots
Many ACOs operate across multiple EHR systems, which complicates data integration. Large ACOs often receive dozens or even hundreds of claims files each month in different formats and reporting timelines from multiple payers. Even organizations that have invested in data warehouses often can’t clean and normalize this information fast enough to act on it.
The consequences are direct:
- Encounter data that arrives late causes care teams to miss follow-up windows entirely
- Incomplete coding: Risk adjustment scores may fail to capture the full complexity of patients, which can affect shared savings calculations.
- Disparate data systems cause areas of blindness, resulting in avoidable readmission and lost quality opportunities.
Care Coordination Breaks Down Without Real-Time Intelligence
Manual workflows can’t keep up with the pace of value-based care. Without real-time insights, care coordination gaps compound quickly:
- A patient gets discharged but never receives a follow-up appointment
- A high-risk diabetic goes months without required lab work, and no one is tracking it
- Referrals to specialists go out without complete clinical data, leading to duplicated tests and missed diagnoses
Care managers working from outdated patient lists are not failing because of a lack of effort. In many cases, the limitation lies in the system rather than the people using it.
The Most Effective ACO Success Strategies
Success in value-based care does not come from simply working harder. It depends on delivering the right insights to the right people at the right time. This capability often separates high-performing ACOs from the rest.
1. Unify Your Data Before Anything Else
Every effective ACO success strategy starts with a clean, connected data foundation. That means continuously ingesting clinical data, claims, lab results, and social determinants of health (SDoH) from every system into one standardized platform and keeping it current, not just current as of last Tuesday.
A unified digital health platform eliminates the delays that fragment care decisions. With clean, real-time data, AI can identify high-risk patients earlier, before their conditions escalate to emergency care.
2. Replace Static Worklists with Dynamic, AI-Driven Prioritization
Care managers are expected to use their time on patients rather than manually sorting out the spreadsheets. AI-driven care management enables a proactive care model:
- Real-time notifications alert care managers when high-risk patients trigger risk thresholds.
- Risk stratification updates continuously rather than just at contract year kickoff
- Point-of-care prompts embedded in provider EHR workflows surface missed screenings and undocumented conditions during the actual patient visit
3. Use NLP to Surface What’s Buried in Clinical Notes
A large portion of clinically relevant information appears in free-text documentation. The advanced NLP methods identify the unstructured indicators of medication non-adherence, residential instability, and unrecorded chronic illnesses that would otherwise remain hidden. This directly improves risk adjustment accuracy and coding completeness, both of which have a measurable impact on shared savings.
4. Give Leadership Real-Time Performance Visibility
Near-real-time analytics dashboards allow leadership teams to adjust performance before reporting periods end. Monitoring shared savings goals, quality indicators, and population health dynamics in real-time is a structural benefit that compounds at each contract cycle.
5. Combine Technology with Governance and Provider Trust
AI and data orchestration lay the foundation, yet they do not act independently. Successful ACOs over time combine smart technology with well-defined governance structures, consistent data quality, and trust between providers created by using transparent and relevant insights. The three must move simultaneously.
What Real ACO Success Looks Like
McLaren ACO was managing over 250,000 patients across multiple contracts and dealing with the same data complexity that most large ACOs know well. They automated risk stratification by creating a centralized data mart and analytics foundation, and shifted the paradigm of retrospective reporting to prospective care management. The outcome was practical learning that was provided on a large scale to the providers and care teams, not only to a high-risk group.
Bottom Line
ACO success strategies that actually work are built on unified data, AI-powered care management, and real-time visibility, not on adding more manual processes. ACOs investing in this infrastructure today are more likely to achieve shared savings targets and deliver on the goals of value-based care.
Persivia offers Persivia CareSpace®, a purpose-built platform designed specifically for ACOs navigating the complexity of value-based care. From unified data ingestion and AI-driven risk stratification to point-of-care provider tools and near-real-time dashboards, Persivia CareSpace® connects every layer of ACO operations into one intelligent ecosystem so the right insights reach the right teams when decisions need to be made.

