Archive for the 'Health and wellness marketing' Category

mhallett

Just because it’s virtual doesn’t mean it’s not real

As a psychotherapist, I’ve generally been of the mindset that a good ol’ face-to-face conversation is the most effective way to connect with another human being on an emotional level.  Like many therapists, I’ve been wary of the way communication has changed throughout the digital era, which is to say I’ve been mindful of what I perceived to be surface-level connections through 140-character text limits, or time taken away from connecting with the people who really matter—those sitting next to you on the couch—as you check out a friend of a friend’s trip to Hawaii on Facebook.  I found myself judging those whose online personas completely outshine their in-person personalities, assuming it’s easier for them to be sparkly, witty, and overly opinionated when they don’t have to see the faces of the people with whom they are communicating.  I thought about how empty their lives must be, not being able to connect in the flesh.  I patted myself on the back for being able to have real conversations with people.  And for not joining Twitter…

Well, I was knocked off my high horse pretty swiftly this week.

I sit on the board of directors for a fantastic non-profit organization called POEM, which helps new mothers suffering from postpartum depression and other perinatal mood disorders.  Our board meetings start and end with a “mission moment,” during which the executive director shares how moms using POEM’s services have been helped since our last meeting.  This week, the mission moment was about the increase in attendance of the monthly support group meetings.  I, of course, felt smug; this is how moms should be seeking help—in a face-to-face setting so they can see, hear, and feel, firsthand, others going through similar difficulties.

Then she shared the reason for the increase in attendance…

Facebook.

The support group leaders have recently created a closed group on Facebook for the moms seeking help from POEM to connect and chat in between meetings.  What they weren’t expecting was for it to be a major catalyst for real relationships.  Women were joining in droves, and they weren’t just writing encouraging posts of support and understanding; they were making lunch and play dates with one another.  Thanks to this online group, they all felt more compelled to go to the actual support group meeting because they had “tested the waters” and felt comfortable with the other women in attendance.  Plus, they were going shopping afterward!

Also, thanks to the online group, there were not only more moms in attendance at the support group, there were more moms being helped by POEM.  Women who were unable to make it to the group because of physical distance, transportation, or babysitter issues were still able to get the support they were seeking through the Facebook conversations.  And the online group has become so popular that the support group leaders now have a bimonthly moderated online chat—a virtual support group in real time.

In an e-mail to the support group leader, one mom noted (paraphrased), “Although I don’t post on the boards, just reading the other posts and knowing others are experiencing what I am experiencing is enough to get me through the day.”

So, a big lesson learned.  It’s time for me to embrace the inevitable and allow myself to see the emotional benefits that can come from connecting virtually.  Though I still believe that online connections cannot fully replace face-to-face connections, they certainly can enhance and enable them.

ceblin

No such thing as bad publicity?

If you aren’t privy to the controversy surrounding celebrity chef Paula Deen’s recent announcement that she not only has type 2 diabetes—but that she is also the new spokesperson for a diabetes medication called Victoza—I am truly surprised as to how you wound up at this blog posting.

Basically, you’ll find both criticism and support all over the Internet from fellow chefs, healthcare providers, and concerned people.

One perspective you won’t find much of is toward the drug company that hired her, prompting her to “come out” with her condition. This is both curious and disappointing.

The pharmaceutical industry has historically been painted as a profit-driven, insensitive villain—a credibility crisis that has, only in recent years, been somewhat softened through the tireless efforts to provide authentic support and advocacy for patients and healthcare providers through funding for research, education, and community development.

I recently read an article that summed the Deen situation up with the words “there’s no such thing as bad publicity,” in terms of her (however slight) change of branding, and promotion for Victoza. Maybe this is true in other categories…is it true in pharma?

I’ll bet that fellow drug marketers are still trying to figure out how this can be interpreted as a good thing—how hiring a celebrity chef who would be attacked for her decision to “sell out” and be a spokesperson (c’mon, who wouldn’t have seen it coming) can cast a light that is anything but negative for the pharmaceutical industry. Perhaps some market conditioning could have prevented all this backlash.

Apparently, when Novo Nordisk contacted Deen, they did not know she was diabetic—they merely asked for lighter recipes for their “Diabetes in a new light” initiative. But when she responded with “how did y’all know I had diabetes?” their choice of partners (or at least their timing with Deen) might have been reassessed.

With several successful diabetes products on the market, Novo Nordisk is already a well-known name in diabetes care. So are they really worried about product awareness?

Or could this be a master plan to stir up awareness for the disease-state itself, which could be prevented with the right lifestyle choices?

Mmmmaybe. But in the midst of such controversy, no one seems to be making that connection—and it isn’t doing any favors for the reputation of the industry as a whole.

As for Paula, she’ll be fine. After all the dust settles and the news is no longer sensational, she will have lost some followers who find her hypocrisy and irresponsibility distasteful, but she will have gained new ones, namely among the millions of Americans with type 2 diabetes who can relate, as well as those who previously dismissed her because of the unhealthy nature of her otherwise delicious comfort-food recipes. For this, the publicity is necessary for awareness.

As drug marketers, we need to create a sense of advocacy and support for patients, healthcare providers, and their respective disease states. Simply put, the pharmaceutical industry has been trying to earn as much good publicity as possible. So we have to wonder, is this one step forward or two steps back?

ggoffe

New Year, New You, New Fave Brand

January is notorious as the time when people make healthy New Year’s resolutions. Places and times when health is top of mind are opportunities for brands to solve Wellness Dilemmas for consumers. Brands win big by finding a pain point—and providing a way out. The rewards are loyalty and a place as their go-to brand. The dilemma is a straightforward identification of a problem that resonates with consumers and interferes with turning intentions into actions. The brand provides a solution as the counterpoint. And here’s the fun part – it’s not just what your brand says (“We’re healthy!”), but the actions of the brand that matter (“Here’s a plan to make this happen”). Let’s take a look at a few initiatives and the Wellness Dilemmas they solve across categories such as meat, breakfast, weight loss, and workout gear that venture into new venues and programs.

Tyson Grilled and Ready chicken breast strips. Wellness Dilemma – you promised you would eat right but you’re so busy with work, friends and family, it’s hard to stay on track. Tyson introduces a program that solves the dilemma with 30 Days, 30 Ways, and 30 Rewards.

Slimfast. One of the original meal replacement weight loss plans, Slimfast has refreshed the brand with new packaging and formulations to go with their plan of a shake or bar at breakfast and lunch, followed by a 500 calorie dinner. Slimfast continues to solve the same Wellness Dilemma – that weight loss programs require time-consuming preparation of new recipes 3 times a day.

Egg Beaters. Wellness Dilemma – you want to eat more protein to support your healthy lifestyle and build muscles, but worry about too much fat, cholesterol and calories. Egg Beaters muscle supporting protein helps individuals meet fitness goals. It’s interesting to see the print campaign move from magazines to featured posters inside mega-gyms. Why not extend the promotion to trial, including breakfast choices made with Eggbeaters at the gym’s cafes?

Victorias Secret Sport VSX. Wellness Dilemma – Individuals want to look good at the gym even before the results of their new resolutions shows. VSX combines VS figure enhancing designs with performance workout gear, and introduces it via the Get a Runway Body promotion. Promotional posters have a lot less category noise to compete with at mega-gyms and boost visibility as fitness Instructors hand out scratch off  discount cards for VSX stores.

If your brand competes in those categories and you haven’t developed a clear strategy to connect your brand with the health and wellness opportunity, now is a good time to think about the role you can play for consumers looking for help turning healthy intentions into actions. Brands that haven’t developed a clear strategy and plan to execute it risk dropping off consumer’s radar as they discover new brands in the New Year.

*For more information on health and wellness visit thewellatgsw.com.

mnelson

A Wellness Advocate in action: LYSOL Mission for Health

As Advertisers, we’ve been taught to look for the right buyers for our products–intersecting the right individuals at the right time with the right claims to convince them to buy.  In today’s health and wellness marketing landscape, brands become relevant not by simply being different but by making a difference—by behaving as Advocates. That means finding a shared purpose with our consumers, proving it through actions and interactions and connecting stakeholders around the purpose. The goal: to create not just buyers, but ambassadors of the brand who will self-multiply.

Many brands today are saying the right things…telling consumers they have a “higher purpose.” What separates the LYSOL effort is how the brand is backing up the words with actions.  LYSOL’s campaign, Mission for Health, is a great example of applying the principles of an Advocate brand.

Like many health and wellness brands, LYSOL has a science-based differentiation: it kills 99% of bacteria.  But through Mission for Health, the brand truth is laddered up to a greater shared purpose with moms.  The campaign easily allows for new products and product improvements that continue to prove Lysol’s mission for health. It uses mass media as a mass invitation to a more involving online and grassroots experience.

How LYSOL Mission for Health puts Advocate principles into practice:

Shared Purpose: Reducing the spread of flu and colds at home and at school.

Action: Along with education around prevention, LYSOL proves its commitment to the purpose through acts of generosity, such as a $5 rebate on flu shots.

Serving: LYSOL is empowering schools, through a program endorsed by a leading pediatrician, to teach healthy habits to children and increase school attendance through the Lysol Blue Ribbon School Attendance Challenge that rewards schools for low absenteeism.

Connecting: LYSOL brings advocates for health together through its efforts in schools, humanitarian efforts and through online forums and community.

Dialogue: On lysol.com/missionforhealth, consumers can join dialogue around the greater purpose of health (including products) or can ask questions of experts from the healthcare and science community.

Citizenship: LYSOL has partnered with Save the Children, a non-profit humanitarian and disaster relief organization to support the needs of children and their families whose health and safety are affected by disasters. The difference between this effort and adjunct cause marketing is that it is directly linked to Mission for Health, so it is meaningful proof of the purpose, not just general goodwill.

Authenticity: First-time moms are provided with educational resources on keeping themselves and their infants healthy with information available at OBGYN offices, pediatrician offices, on www.lysol.com/missionforhealth and other online communities.

Ambassadors: Joining the Mission for Health cause allows moms to review products and get health tips they can pass on to others. Also, the Mission program includes a Community Heroes Contest, with winners judged on improving the health or happiness of a community, and the possible impact of a community improvement effort.

Without these Advocate principles in action, LYSOL’S Mission for Health campaign would just be another pretty Advertising tagline.  Kudos to the Advocate brand builders behind it.

*For more information on health and wellness visit thewellatgsw.com.

mnelson

Every time an Rx is written, it’s another New Year’s Day.

Right now we’re all thinking about starting a brand new year, ready to put our good intentions into action—you know, our plans to work out more, eat less.  Form new good habits.  Break the bad ones.  It seems to be human nature to need—or at least like—a trigger point for change.  So every January 1, we declare our intentions to make daily wellness choices in the new year.  And we all know what happens next.  By June a few of us are still at it, but many of us are back where we started.

That 6-month mark is a familiar theme for pharmaceutical marketers.  Because that’s the time the average persistence curve takes a dramatic dive south, especially for chronic conditions. If we think like Advertisers, we rely on mass media DTC campaigns to tell people “ask your doctor” and we consider the box checked. But when our consumers walk out of the doctor’s office with a new Rx and some good intentions in hand, it’s like another New Year’s Day.  Six months later, where will they be?

Advocate brand-builders understand that ROI for long term commitment is return on involvement. So they focus more of their time, attention and investment post-script—they ask themselves not “how can we get consumers to adhere?” but “how can we stick with our consumers?”  The Advocate definition of DTC is Do, Teach, Connect.

Here’s why:

1) Because mass media offers no utility to us as consumers except to make us aware, and awareness is the most superficial level of involvement.

Do means taking action vs. sending messages:

  • Adding utility to media –making it somehow useful, not just interruptive
  • Creating tools and personalized support systems
  • Showing up to solve problems where and when it matters most
  • Using mass media instead as a mass invitation to an involving, personalized experience

2) Because, as we learned in Pink Tank’s 2010 She Says Survey of 1300 women, consumers want more transparency from pharma companies when it comes to risks and benefits.

Teach means empowering choice, not preaching information:

  • Improving their “health literacy” about therapies and procedures
  • Tying rewards and risks together in a complete, logical and honest story
  • Giving them ways to visualize what’s happening inside, especially in chronic and preventive conditions where they may feel no cause/effect

3) Because now a physician’s opinion is a lesser part of the equation.  Over 40% of She Says Survey respondents told us that before filling a prescription they gather consensus through their Circle of Influencers both online and off.  Consumers are now taking a bigger role in their own care and self-navigating their way, armed with knowledge and community.

Connect means finding new ways to bridge disconnects and dead-ends healthcare consumers meet as they try to self-navigate:

  • Correcting misalignments or gaps in their Circle of Influencers
  • Helping to start or facilitate conversations between influencers
  • Thinking outside the industry for innovative partnerships to form new continuums of self-care

So how about this:  On January 1, 2012, let’s resolve to involve healthcare consumers more by redefining and redesigning our DTC efforts with the goals of Do, Teach, Connect.  The result could be a happier and more involving New Year for all of us.

*For more information on health and wellness visit thewellatgsw.com

mnelson

Advertiser to Advocate: Does your brand feel like the perfect gift?

It’s the gift-giving season.  Which brings to mind the quest for the perfect gift.  We’ve all received the not-so-perfect gift…it feels generic it doesn’t make us feel special.  We’ve all given not-so-perfect gifts, too…usually when we’ve got to “get it done.”

A perfect gift doesn’t have to be asked for.  It comes from listening, observing, understanding what we value and anticipating our needs. When we receive the perfect gift there is surprise and delight. It makes us feel cared about and cared for.  The perfect gift says, “you are important to me.”  A not-so-perfect gift could be really expensive.  A perfect gift could cost next to nothing.  What gives a perfect gift its value is the thought and time that went into it.

Creating a great brand experience is like giving the perfect gift.  By truly understanding what matters to our consumers and by investing our time and thought to solve it, we can create the kind of brand experiences that surprise, delight and involve them.

Six ways to make a brand feel like a perfect gift:

1) With thoughtful design

 Even the subtlest details in design can make our consumers feel more understood.  GE has put little touches in its appliances like a dishwasher with Smart Dispense that holds up to 6 months of dish soap.  This small time-saving gesture is a thoughtful feature for time-pressed moms.  Similac infant formula listened to new moms before designing the Similac SimplePac® with features like a one-hand grip so they can prepare formula with one arm while holding baby in the other.

2)  With delightful tools

We can offer tools that make our consumer’s life simpler.  Charmin shows its understanding of how hard it can be to find clean public restrooms with global sponsorship of SitOrSquat, an app that helps users find the cleanest restrooms wherever they are.

But tools don’t have to be literal tools.  Tylenol generously uses its media space to give simple tips to help people “Feel Better” that don’t include taking the medication.  The brand spends to pass on tips like eating cereal before bedtime.  Or demonstrating exercises to avoid getting a stiff neck while on long flights. Because they are not self-serving, these suggestions feel thoughtful—and make us feel Tylenol really does want us to feel better.

3) With acknowledgment

The simplest act of kindness a brand can give is attention.  It can be an unexpected thank you like the Starbucks barrista who tells a regular customer, “Today it’s on us.  Just because.”   Or Luna Bars reserving a space on every package to allow women to make tributes to other women they admire.  Or the ongoing support shown to nurses every year by Johnson & Johnson.

4)  With service

As Advertisers, we focus on selling, but ironically we might sell more by thinking about serving.  Especially in commodity categories, thinking like a service company can make a meaningful difference.  Department stores all carry similar merchandise, but Nordstrom’s has always differentiated itself through its customer service.  Pop Secret’s website has a fun movie finding guide that makes film suggestions based on mood, family type and occasion.  Topiaz is the OAB therapy that also comes with a program and a plan.

 

5)  With the gift of giving

By finding a shared purpose with our consumers we can help them to make a difference.  Pampers gives new moms the gift of caring for other new moms by donating 5 cents per pack to buy 45 million tetanus vaccinations for pregnant women in developing countries.  Buying Dawn dishwashing liquid is a way to save animals caught in an unhealthy environment.  From Gardasil moms are given the gift of giving to their daughters and sons, as HPV vaccination becomes protection from cancer.

6)  Most important, without “strings” attached

A perfect gift can’t be created with compromised generosity.  What the brand is giving in the way of support, tools or other value must feel worth more to a consumer than what the brand is asking of her.  If a “gift” feels self-promoting or inauthentic in any way, or if she has to give to get, all credibility is lost.

As Advertisers, we think of offering incentives as a way to get consumers to buy our brands. If that is all we do, we are simply buying buyers. Instead we need to put our efforts, our thinking and our spending into creating surprisingly delightful brand experiences.  Because that has the lasting value to build meaningful long-term brand/consumer relationships.   A value greater than any coupon.

The Advocate brand builder knows that through giving the brand will receive.  Happy gift-giving!

dmarinacci

The Well @GSW named as New Venture to Watch

Health and wellness is quickly becoming one of the most prevalent and hot topics facing healthcare marketers, DTC/OTC, and consumer packaged goods retailers. Med Ad News (MAN) recently named our health and wellness group, The Well @GSW, one of three pharmaceutical marketing ventures to watch that could change the way pharmaceutical products are marketed and sold. Josh Slatko of MAN asked several of our leaders about the impact health and wellness will have on the future of pharma marketing. Marcee Nelson, Chief Creative/Content Officer for The Well @GSW had this to say:

“Our industry thinks in terms of ‘patients’ versus ‘consumers,’” Ms. Nelson told Med Ad News. “The distinction seems inconsequential, but has huge implications in how we feel and approach our audiences. When we think ‘patient,’ we picture a person in a gown being shepherded through the system by healthcare authority figures. Newsflash: Patients are consumers – more demanding, more informed, more unified than ever before. Today, the physician’s opinion is only part of the decision. Due to knowledge-as-commodity and global community, each consumer has a ‘circle of influence’ she/he consults, a phenomenon we call ‘composite decision making.’ With less authority, we must find new ways to influence.”


To read more, click here.

brizzo

Is your body trying to tell you something? Are you listening?

Many of us deal with stressors every day. Stressors are confirmation that we are alive! There is no such thing as a stress-free life, but being able to integrate or adapt to stress can help us to reduce the damage that stress can exert on our health. And your body often tries to tell you when you are experiencing too much stress but we often ignore it. Let me explain.

Dr. Hans Selye, an endocrinologist, first began to describe stress in 1936. His observations led to a three-stage model of the body’s response to stress. He called his theory the general adaptation syndrome (GAS). The first phase is an alarm reaction, the second stage is one of resistance or adaptation, and the final stage is one of exhaustion.

  • In the alarm stage the body responds to a stressor, which could be physical or psychological. With the release of adrenaline your heart could begin to beat fast, or you might include butterflies in your stomach, a rise in your blood pressure, heavy breathing, dilation of your eyes, dry mouth, and the hair on your arms might even stand on end.
  • During the resistance stage of a stress reaction, your body remains on alert for danger. When this part of the GAS is prolonged, your immune system may become compromised and you may become susceptible to illness. And with prolonged stress changes take place that weaken your body’s ability to fight off disease.
  • The final stage of Selye’s GAS is the exhaustion stage. As your body readjusts during this period, hormones are released to help bring your body back to normal, to the state of balance called homeostasis. Until balance is reached, the body continues to release hormones, ultimately suppressing your immune system, contributing to illness.

Over time, these hormonal changes can lead to ulcers, high blood pressure, arteriosclerosis, arthritis, kidney disease, and allergic reactions. His seminal work “A Syndrome Produced by Diverse Nocuous Agents” was published in 1936 in Nature.

He described two different kinds of stress, eustress or “happy stress” and distress or “disturbing stress.” We have to integrate and respond to that stress in our lives, we have no choice.  However Selye noticed that changes we feel upset about (distress) cause much more biological damage than changes we feel good about (eustress).

How does stress affect health?

In the short term stress can affect your health by disturbing your digestion (desire to eat more than usual, or eat less, diarrhea or constipation) or affect your immune system (ever notice how you get a cold after a stressful period in your life?). But there can be some not so obvious deleterious health consequences. You may have a rise in blood pressure (which can affect your kidneys, cause a stroke, or contribute to heart disease) or you could have an increase in acid secretion in your stomach (which can cause irritation, or lead to gastroesophageal reflux disease or ulcers). These are just a few examples.

Short-term, the stress response can be normal – the body does this for survival. However a chronic or habitual stress response can lead to a “weak organ response”. For example, some of us have recurrent chronic back pain, while others may notice they go through periods of intestinal discomfort. Chronic hypertension can be your body’s response to long term stress, chest pain, leading to heart disease. Some people get asthma, or are susceptible to lung infections. Everyone has a body system or organ that responds to too much stress over an extended period of time.

What can you do about it?

Start to pay attention to your body. What is your weak organ that always responds to too much stress? When do you know you have had enough? Here are some tips to help you adapt to stress:

  • Journal, this will help you clearly identify your stressors and how your body responds.
  • Exercise increases your ability to handle stress and boost your immune system.
  • Eating healthy can maintain energy and reduce digestive disorders.
  • Keep good sleep hygiene, maintain the same bedtime, the same amount of sleep, and keep your sleep routine calm and similar.
  • Just say “no” when people ask you to do more than you know you can take on, say, “I am flattered that you thought of me, but no I can’t right now.”
  • Identify your support system and use it. Do you have friends or families that can help you out? Sometimes they just need to know.
  • Talk about the stressor, either with a counselor, minister, or close friend that can help you get perspective.
  • Know your limitations, listen to your body and slow down.
  • Set aside time for yourself for a warm bath, or a good book, or whatever helps you escape for a moment.

So what do I do over the holidays?

  • Avoid unnecessary stress, like people who stress you, or unrealistic expectations you set on yourself.
  • Avoid hot button topics that you know could upset you (politics, religion, economy).
  • Be willing to compromise to get along.
  • Don’t try to control the uncontrollable.
  • Try to forgive, long-term grudges can waste a lot of energy.
  • Look for humor, maintain perspective, shrug it off.

Remember stress may be not only having a psychological affect but also a weak organ response that could be even more damaging.

leigh.householder

Rethinking rep tools: best practices for creating a digital detailing plan

By Leigh Householder and Sean Cowan. Originally published at www.pharmaphorum.com.

2011 may be remembered as the Year of the Apple in health care. Almost 1 in 3 physicians brought an iPad into the practice.1 The app stores offered 10,000 health and wellness apps. And, pharma and biotech leaders adopted the iPad in amazing numbers.2

Those tools have begun to change both healthcare and self-care. Now, they’re changing the frontline of sales and marketing.

Physicians welcome the shift. Forty-nine percent have already received a detail on an iPad or another tablet. They were able to name the details they remembered most – Pfizer, Merck, AZ, Abbott, GSK.3

Reps know how intrigued physicians are by the new tools – many report that their iPads have been plucked out of their hands by curious doctors who just want a test drive.

“Those tools have begun to change both healthcare and self-care.”

New questions from brand managers

This Spring, Digital Pharma East’s advisory board debated what critical topics attendees would be looking for this year. The conversation kept coming back to detailing: what tools should teams adopt, how will they change frontline conversations, what’s the right ROI model, how do we build our plan?

That got us thinking about the new best practices. We wanted to take what we’d learned launching and supporting e-detailing programs around the world and create a repeatable approach for launching sustainable digital detailing programs.

We identified four key elements at the foundation of the most successful plans:

• Content

• Training

• Measurement

• Integration.

Best practice #1: content – go native in the medium

All too often when a new tool arrives or a channel opens, the first question around the conference room table is: what do we have that we can repurpose?

But, the real opportunity on the tablet is creating something we could have never created before. The tablet details that docs remember have been reimagined, not repurposed.

“The tools we carry are changing the experiences we can create.”

Sixty-eight percent of physicians who have received a tablet detail said they were satisfied or very satisfied with the new experience. Those who were not said the detail appeared to be “optimized for another medium.” In other words – if you’re going to put your print detail on the screen, you might as well just bring the print detail.4

The tools we carry are changing the experiences we can create. Maybe more importantly, they’re changing the experiences physicians expect to have.

So, what can we create that we could have never created before?

Details that are custom, not canned

The iPad can support true scenario selling to allow our reps to customise the detail to the practice.

The rep can use what they know – or ask simple questions to fill in the blanks. That information can generate a more personalised experience.

Figure 1: Physicians can move five slider bars to show what topics they’re most interested in

In this simple example, physicians can move five slider bars to show what topics they’re most interested in.

Their answers dynamically change the content they’ll see on the next swipe. The options can be limitless, or carefully curated to be responsive to specific kinds of med legal review.

Conversations that are about tools, not talk

In digital and mobile mediums, people want to use our brands, not just read and learn about them. In our consumer lives that might mean getting a real-time quote, downloading a recipe or even completing an outfit.

In the practice, it means tools that make running the business easier, make conversations with patients more powerful, or just solve for everyday aggravations.

With a tablet in hand, reps can easily demo the great apps and tools the brand has created. The rep can even show the doc how to immediately install the tool on his own device.

Opportunities to shop, not drop

We think the days of trunk stock are short. Today’s physicians want more flexible leave-behinds – ones that include just the information they want and can be delivered any way they prefer.

The iPad’s touchscreen interface makes it easier to shop and select together. In this example, the rep is sharing a wide range of patient support tools.

Figure 2: The rep is sharing a wide range of patient support tools with the physician

The physician can click into anyone he’s interested in to see more detail and add it to a personalised cart. At the end of the detail, the practice’s name can automatically be added to most of the materials and the physician can choose which to send by email or text message and which to have shipped to the office.

“In digital and mobile mediums, people want to use our brands, not just read and learn about them.”

Interactions that are logical, not linear

Conversations never follow the path we sketch out on a white board. In the field, they’re much more like those ‘choose your own adventure’ books – even when they start in the same place, they have many possible endings.

The touchscreen interface can make navigating those meetings a lot easier.

Hot spots and callouts let reps drill down into the data or ideas the physician is most interested in. Toggles turn on or off levels of detail.  One tap can reorder a map or a chart to look at a question from a different angle.

Multiple paths create a sense of discovery (to replace the page flip). And, make it easier to get to the most relevant answers within the two-minute call window.

Stories we build together, not just tell to each other

The iPad can create a virtual lab, an interactive operating room, or any other space we might want to collaborate in.

That dramatically changes the interaction. Now we can build scenarios together that reflect the practice’s real patients and demonstrate the impact of a therapeutic.

In this example, we use pinch and zoom to pull apart and rotate a device, letting the physician see how it’s built and how it’s implanted.

Figure 3: Pinch and zoom can be used to pull apart and rotate a device, letting the physician see how it’s built and how it’s implanted.

Best practice #2: take the time to train

When an interface is as intuitive as the iPad, it’s easy to think: anyone could do it. But, when we’re rolling out to a diverse sales force, nothing could be further from the truth.

We recently came across this great quote from Dave Mihalik, senior director of marketing at EKR Therapeutics, which illustrates how adoption really works: “We thought we were being so creative in the way that we were delivering the training materials. But, the very first follow-up I got was, ‘Hey, can you send me a Word document with five clear steps so that I can open my iPad?’”5

The reason behind the gap is a little something called the adoption curve. The curve (below) illustrates how new technologies move from early adopters to mass adoption.

Figure 4: The curve illustrates how new technologies move from early adopters to mass adoption

“…if you’re going to put your print detail on the screen, you might as well just bring the print detail.”

Today, only 1 in 20 US consumers own a tablet. Most of us who do have been trained by Steve Jobs for years.  We learned a little about how the iPad would work from our first iPod, a little more for our first iPhone and a lot more from the changing iOS.

When we arm an entire sales force with iPads, we’re connecting with people who would have naturally been at many different points on the adoption curve if they were to buy an iPad themselves.

Another trick of the curve is that, the further we move across it, the harder adoption can become. Think of every single point on that curve as a ‘plus one’ – a person who’s never picked up the device before, trying it for the first time. If you’re an early adopter, it’s easy to admit you don’t know how it works. If everyone around you is an expert in how to use it, it can be a little harder to take the risk.

One successful strategy to help reps feel confident with the tools is releasing the technology before the content. Give reps one to three months to play with the tablet and make it part of their lives before you  mandate it for work.

Training on the content is essential, too. When tablet details take true advantage of the medium, the opportunities to change and guide the conversation can be endless. We’ve seen as much as a 50% gap in adoption between teams that just got an implementation guide and ones that got a guided tour.

Best practice #3: build a measurement plan upfront

There is one critical question brand managers should answer before undertaking any strategy: what do you want to accomplish? The answer will guide both what we create and how we measure.

Return-on-investment models are still emerging for the iPad. Some companies are measuring their cost savings (paperless workforce), others are looking to productivity (particularly access).  Whatever the brand’s larger goal, there are three emerging measurement models we’re tracking:

• Longitudinal measurement: cost per engagement pre-/post-launch

• Test-and-roll modelling: launching the iPad with a key segment first and tracking the test group versus a control group against existing metrics and goals

• Satisfaction tracking: field feedback (from physicians or reps) and overall access.

Best practice #4: create a truly integrated sales kit

The iPad offers new kinds of interaction and interactivity so reps can answer physicians’ questions on demand and engage with both marketing and operations in real time. An ideal sales suite makes the tablet the centre of a full set of tools:

Figure 5: An ideal sales suite makes the tablet the center of a full set of tools

References
1. Manhattan Research, 2011
2. First Word report, The Impact of iPads on Pharma, July 2011
3. Manhattan Research, 2011
4. Intouch Solutions & Harrison Group, 2011
5. First Word report, The Impact of iPads on Pharma, July 2011
mark.stinson

$450 billion worth of unpaid family care – and 5 questions prompted by the AARP study

The conclusion of a recent AARP study is that families provide $450 billion worth of unpaid care. That’s how much it might cost for the care that roughly 1 in every 4 adults provide – helping loved ones get dressed, take medications, and myriad other tasks.  You can read the full article here.

With the wide diversity of family settings and career experiences among us at GSW Worldwide, this is certainly a trend that affects us personally and professionally.  So today, instead of just one person’s view, I’d like to offer some questions:

  • Caregiving is getting more medically involved, due to shorter hospital stays and more home-based medical technologies. Caregivers often have little training or preparation for performing these tasks, which include bandaging and wound care, tube feedings, managing catheters, giving injections, or operating medical equipment.
    • What are the implications to bio-pharma brands of a supportive caregiver now becoming an active care-provider?
  • About 42.1 million individuals are caring for relatives and close friends at any time during the year — and about 61.6 million provide care at some point during the year.
    • What is an example of a new communication tool or media channel that might be needed to engage this group?
  • The average caregiving individual is a 49-year-old woman with an outside job, who spends nearly 20 hours per week caring for her mother for nearly five years.
    • This describes a demographic profile, but what word might describe her EMOTIONAL persona?
  • The study includes recommendations for involving family caregivers to improve care for the aging patient.
    • What perils would face the bio-pharma brand manager who ignored this group?
  • AARP is an advocacy group, and this study certainly helps support its position and brand.
    • What other organizations, companies, or institutions could also embrace the cause of caregivers?

I hope you’ll join the “liberating conversation” and share your comments below.