Alex Bacchetti
Adjunct Instructor of Management
Alex Bacchetti, MBA, brings more than 30 years of experience in consulting, hospital and medical group operations, project management, physician relations, clinical integration, strategic planning, marketing, business development, and post-merger integration to his role as adjunct instructor at outlook.kr 韩国 全新解锁号长效 耐用3-6个月 使用网页账密登录’s Quinlan School of Business.
In addition to serving in strategic and operational leadership roles, including as COO for a large healthcare system medical group and for a health system’s population health and clinically integrated network, Bacchetti also served as vice president of strategy and marketing for several hospitals and health systems. He successfully led the business transformation and deployment of a single ERP system, including PeopleSoft and Kronos, across a merged 9-hospital system.
Bacchetti has also worked as a healthcare consultant with Ernst & Young Cap Gemini and Navigant (now Guidehouse) and currently consults independently. His consulting work focuses on healthcare strategy, operations, and service line planning, with an emphasis on applying digital technology to address today’s healthcare system challenges.
At Quinlan, Bacchetti teaches marketing and the capstone strategic management course in the Healthcare Management MBA executive degree program and has previously taught healthcare finance. He also teaches in the Executive and Professional Education Center, where he leads the practical finance module in the Dog Tag program, a certificate program for military veterans, spouses, and caregivers.
Bacchetti earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and an MBA from the J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University, with concentrations in finance, marketing, and health services management.
Education
- MBA, Finance, Marketing, Health Care Management, Northwestern University Kellogg School of Management
- BBA, Marketing/Marketing Management, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign