Senior Living Foresight Archives – Varsity Branding

Tag: Senior Living Foresight

The future of senior living may depend less on new buildings and amenities and more on whether the industry is willing to rethink culture, autonomy and the resident experience itself. In this episode of Varsity’s Roundtable Talk, Derek sits down with Steve Moran, founder and publisher of Senior Living Foresight, one of the industry’s most influential media platforms.

Known for his candid commentary and sharp observations, Moran has spent years challenging operators to rethink leadership, culture, transparency and the overall resident experience. Derek and Steve discuss why the industry may have more of a culture crisis than a staffing crisis, how operators can better empower residents and families and why storytelling may be the key to changing perceptions of senior living for future generations.

Check out the full episode here.

WHAT’S THE REAL STORY IN SENIOR LIVING RIGHT NOW THAT PEOPLE AREN’T TALKING ABOUT ENOUGH?

As you know, we have great occupancy. We’ve had the best occupancy that we have ever had in my lifetime. And that’s really, really good news. What’s interesting to me, there are two things that are really interesting to me. The first is that when I talk to operators and leaders, there seems to be a sense of apprehension or fear like, ‘This is really good, but it feels like disaster is just around the corner.’ Probably some of that’s from the COVID hangover.

The other thing is we have operators who are just crushing it at huge margins and huge occupancies, while there are still some people out there that are really, really struggling. So much of it comes down to the operator and how they run their business because it can be super successful or really, really tough.”

ARE SENIOR LIVING COMMUNITIES TRULY ALIGNED WITH WHAT TODAY’S OLDER ADULT WANTS?

There’s this widespread belief that baby boomers are going to want something very different. I think there are a few things, but mostly as we get older, we’re going to want the same things people have always wanted.

Part of the biggest problem is that if we’re honest about the industry, senior living is still the last resort. I choose senior living when I can no longer live at home. That might mean I don’t want to take care of my yard anymore, I don’t want to cook or grocery shop anymore or it might mean I have real care needs. I’m not sure the industry is fully aligned with what people actually want because too often the focus is on providing the least amount of service at the lowest cost to maximize margins.

WHAT ARE OPERATORS DOING WELL RIGHT NOW — AND WHAT ARE THEY STILL GETTING WRONG?

I think operators are getting dining pretty right. They understand that dining is one place they touch residents’ lives three times a day. I think transportation is improving too and communities are building better physical spaces.

But I think they’re still not giving residents enough control over their own lives. I heard from a resident recently who said they were thrilled because residents had finally won the ability to choose what channel played on the TV behind the bar four days a week. And I’m thinking, this shouldn’t even be a battle. Those are the kinds of things I think we’re still getting wrong.

IS THE WORKFORCE CRISIS REALLY A STAFFING PROBLEM?

I don’t think we have a real staffing crisis. I think we have a culture crisis.

As long as there are people willing to work at McDonald’s, Taco Bell and Starbucks, we don’t have a staffing shortage. We have organizations that haven’t created cultures where people feel valued, appreciated and connected to purpose.

When you create a great work environment where people feel like they’re changing lives and love coming to work every day, they tell their friends about it. Goodwin House gets something like 900 applications a month. They hire the best people and the rest go elsewhere. That tells me the problem isn’t a lack of workers. It’s culture.

QUOTES

“I eat, breathe, and sleep senior living. And so having a chance to have a conversation about where the industry is at, where we’re going, what’s working and what’s not is one of my favorite things to do.” (Steve)

“We’ve had the best occupancy that we have ever had in my lifetime.” (Steve)

“It’s all about the operator and how they run their business because it can be super successful or really, really tough.” (Steve)

“The word I would put to it is the word tentative — that we’ve kind of got something that works pretty well, the returns are pretty good, and there’s a lot of hesitancy to change anything because it’s sort of working.” (Steve)

“We don’t have a staffing crisis, we’ve got a culture crisis. As long as there are people who are willing to work at McDonald’s and Taco Bell and Starbucks, we don’t have a staffing crisis.” (Steve)

“When we create a great work environment, a place where people feel valued, where they love coming to work every day, where they’re feeling like they’re making a huge difference, they’ll tell their friends about it.” (Steve)

“I think to not post pricing is a huge, huge mistake.” (Steve)

“We need big, bold stories that should be told.” (Steve)

“We should be our worst critics. We should be saying, what is it that we’re doing wrong? How do we get this right? How do we do it better?” (Steve)

NOTES

Steve Moran is the founder and publisher of Senior Living Foresight, one of the most widely read media platforms in the senior housing industry. A longtime commentator and thought leader, Moran is known for his candid perspectives on occupancy, workforce culture, innovation, leadership and the future of aging services. At 71, he also brings the perspective of someone personally navigating aging and senior care decisions for his own family.

Senior Living Foresight is a media and thought leadership platform focused on the senior living industry. Through articles, interviews, podcasts and commentary, the organization explores challenges and opportunities facing operators, caregivers and residents. Recently acquired by Procare HR, the platform continues expanding its editorial reach while maintaining Moran’s independent voice and focus on improving the industry.

Moran discussed how the senior living industry is experiencing record occupancy levels, yet many operators still seem apprehensive, almost expecting another crisis around the corner after the lingering effects of COVID. He emphasized that success in senior living often comes down to operational leadership and culture, pointing out that some communities are thriving while others continue to struggle.

He expressed concern about increasing ownership by large investment groups focused primarily on short-term returns, arguing that this can limit innovation and resident-centered experiences. Moran believes many communities still operate as a “last resort” rather than a desirable lifestyle choice.

Drawing from his own experiences, Moran shared that today’s boomers may not be as different as many assume. While older adults want autonomy and meaningful experiences, they still share many of the same emotional and practical needs previous generations faced as they aged.

Moran argued that senior living communities often fail to give residents enough control over their own lives, using examples like residents battling management over choosing television programming in common areas. He believes future communities must empower residents rather than dictate daily experiences.

On staffing, Moran challenged the common narrative of a workforce shortage, saying the industry actually faces a culture problem more than a staffing crisis. He explained that organizations with strong leadership, meaningful work environments and supportive cultures consistently attract applicants and retain employees.

He stressed the importance of storytelling in both recruitment and marketing. According to Moran, operators need to tell compelling stories about how senior living changes lives for residents, families and staff members rather than relying solely on amenities and clinical messaging.

Moran also highlighted the emotional complexity families face when choosing senior living communities, drawing from his own experiences helping his stepfather transition through multiple communities. He believes operators need greater transparency around pricing, care expectations and the realities families may encounter after move-in.

Looking ahead, Moran sees technology, AI and robotics playing increasingly important roles in senior living, though he believes the industry still struggles with fragmented systems and implementation challenges. He also predicts that future successful operators will prioritize employees, listen more carefully to residents and families and create experiences that inspire genuine brand evangelism rather than simple customer satisfaction.

Senior living’s biggest opportunity may not be occupancy or operations. It may be human connection. The communities people truly want to be part of are the ones built around trust, culture, communication and meaningful relationships for both residents and families.

That was a major theme during a recent conversation on Varsity’s weekly Roundtable featuring Steve Moran, publisher of Senior Living Foresight and one of the industry’s most recognized voices on senior living culture, workforce challenges and innovation. During a candid Q&A, Steve shared what the industry is overlooking, where operators are getting it right (and wrong) and what senior living must do to better align with the expectations of a new generation of older adults. Below are a few Fresh Perspectives from the discussion.

CULTURE, NOT STAFFING, IS THE REAL CHALLENGE

The communities winning on workforce aren’t magically finding more people, they’re building cultures where employees actually want to stay, grow and feel valued.

FAMILY EXPERIENCE IS THE NEXT BIG OPPORTUNITY

Senior living often focuses heavily on residents while overlooking the emotional and logistical burden carried by families. Communities that intentionally support caregivers will build deeper trust and loyalty.

CONNECTION IS THE MOST UNDERSERVED NEED IN SENIOR LIVING

The biggest differentiator may not be amenities or programming, but helping residents and families form real friendships and meaningful human relationships.

TRANSPARENCY BUILDS TRUST, EVEN WHEN THINGS GO WRONG

Families don’t expect perfection. They expect honesty. Communities that communicate openly about challenges, mistakes and solutions create stronger long-term trust.

SENIOR LIVING MUST BECOME MORE ASPIRATIONAL

Most people still move into senior living as a last resort. The future belongs to communities that people choose earlier for lifestyle, purpose, connection and belonging.

LONGEVITY ISN’T ENOUGH WITHOUT QUALITY OF LIFE

The industry has become better at extending life, but it still struggles with how to support emotional well-being, cognition and purpose as people age.

THE WINNERS WILL PRIORITIZE PEOPLE OVER MARGINS

The most successful organizations over the next decade will be the ones known for exceptional care, communication, trust and human connection, not just operational efficiency.

KEY QUESTIONS

What is the biggest challenge facing senior living today?

While staffing shortages often dominate the conversation, Steve Moran argues the bigger issue is culture. Communities that create supportive, engaging workplace environments are often the ones attracting and retaining strong team members.

Why is family engagement becoming more important in senior living?

Families play a major role in the senior living experience, emotionally, financially and logistically. Communities that communicate well and intentionally support caregivers can build stronger trust, loyalty and long-term relationships.

How can senior living communities create stronger human connection?

The most impactful communities help residents and families build authentic relationships and friendships, not just participate in activities or events. Social connection may become one of the industry’s biggest differentiators moving forward.

What will define the most successful senior living communities in the future?

According to Steve Moran, the organizations that thrive long term will prioritize exceptional care, transparency, communication and human connection over simply focusing on operational efficiency and margins.

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