Feb. 8, 2002. Founded in 1986, the Lee Perfect Transcription Company
has grown from one typewriter in Linda Manderfeld's closet to having 280
transcriptionists. The company, which has an office at 680 N. Lakeshore
as well as satellite offices in Orland Park and Elgin, serves over 1500
physicians nationwide and has branched out into the legal industry and
teleconferencing scripts, boasting clients such as Sprint Communications
and Ameritech.
Manderfeld, the founder and president of
Lee Perfect, said her business was "born out of necessity." A
former employee of the Illinois Department of Revenue,
Manderfeld's path toward her own business was dizzying. She
was married in December of 1986 only to learn the following
April that her husband was dying of cancer.
"We found
out that he had cancer and he died Memorial Day. I was
pregnant with my son (born in September 1987), so I was a
single parent. I needed to make more money basically, I needed
to provide for my son. And my mother had Alzheimer's so I had
to sell her house. So it was just me."
Manderfeld
found a second job, working in a surgeon's office, and built a
reputation in medical transcription services. "He [the
surgeon] was one reference, but I started working for my
[late] husband's oncologist typing at home. We did a good job
and word spreads."
After starting out alone,
Manderfeld soon had five typists working for her and the
company evolved with the emergence of the PC. Lee Perfect is
now very much an online business—using an application
developed by EMDAT (Electronic Medical Dictation and
Transcription), clinicians are able to use a hand-held
recorder and send dictations via an Internet connection for
transcription. The company touts its services as 'Quality
transcription using the latest proven technology.'
Lee
Perfect also offers clinicians the chance to do it the old
fashioned way by mailing in cassette tapes or through
Dictaphone digital dictation, where a clinician logs into the
system, identifies the patient and speaks over the phone. The
company utilizes close to 500 independent contractors, said
Manderfeld, and will be looking to utilize voice activation
technology in the future.
"I guess a positive came out
of a pretty difficult beginning," said Manderfeld. "If you
just work hard enough---I had two jobs at the beginning but I
had to do this. You have to pay your bills and you can make
it."
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