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Having been read by industry leaders for more than a decade, DTC Perspectives is the industry’s only magazine devoted solely to direct-to-consumer marketing of prescription drugs. Check out the Winter 2013 issue now!
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DTC PERSPECTIVES, INC.1120 Bloomfield Avenue, Suite 108West Caldwell, NJ 07006
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MAGAZINEWinter 2013
P E R S P E C T I V E S
T h e S o u r c e F o r D I r e c T T o c o N S u M e r T h o u G h T L e a D e r S
April 2- 4, 2013JW Marriott, Washington DC
Register Now! See Ad on Page 13
The DTC National 2013
The year’s DTC Hall of Fame honors four of the industry’s leading pioneers and visionaries
DTC HALL OF FAME
DTC CHAMPIONS IN 2013: Looking at the 3 QuaLifiersto Make You stand out
RE-HUMANIZE DIGITAL:using eMotion to heLp fiLLuntapped opportunities
MULTICHANNEL DATA:distiLLing it down to deveLopa 1-to-1 patient reLationship
beaconhc.com
At Beacon, it’s all about you...■ Your brand: we’ll listen to what you have to say
■ Your business: we’ll understand, because we’ve been there too…in professional, managed markets, DTC, oncology, and interactive
■ Your budget: we’ll be transparent and avoid surprises
■ Your success: our experienced professionals are ready to focus on you
Call Adrienne Lee at 908.781.2600 and tell her what Beacon can do for you or check out our Web site.
It’s all about you.
We have a thing for ears…
AP-9009 BEACON AD_DTCPersp_2-2011.indd 1 2/25/11 11:20 AM
beaconhc.com
At Beacon, it’s all about you...■ Your brand: we’ll listen to what you have to say
■ Your business: we’ll understand, because we’ve been there too…in professional, managed markets, DTC, oncology, and interactive
■ Your budget: we’ll be transparent and avoid surprises
■ Your success: our experienced professionals are ready to focus on you
Call Adrienne Lee at 908.781.2600 and tell her what Beacon can do for you or check out our Web site.
It’s all about you.
We have a thing for ears…
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Acquisition & Adherence
10
Miss an issue, or want to order one from our archives?Please visit our website www.dtcperspectives.com to view recent
issues of DTC Perspectives magazine, or call Debra Sander at 973-521-7475 to purchase previous issues.
P E R S P E C T I V E S
Winter 2013
CHART 1
18.5%
7.5%
1.0%
Acquisition/Conversion Tactics
Existing Patient Registrants (% On Product)
RxMarketMetricsTM
Top 20% Median Bottom 20%
4 Editor’s Desk
6,8 DTC in Brief
10 Sticking to the Script: Acquisition Tactics & Patient Adherence A series from Crossix RxMarketMetrics
14 Harnessing the Wild West DEB FUREY OF MERKLE LIFE SCIENCES
18 Three Qualifiers for DTC Champions in 2013 ELLEN HOENIG-CARLSON OF ADVANCEMARKETWORX
20 Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me: Why We Need to Re-Humanize
Digital DTC
REID CONNOLLY OF EVOKE INTERACTION
24 Make Sense of Your Multichannel Data: Developing a One-to-One
Patient Relationship
ELINOR SORIANO & ERIK PRINCE OF APPATURE
30 How Pharmacist and Patient Engagement Drives Behavior Change STACEY IRVING OF MCKESSON PATIENT RELATIONSHIP SOLUTIONS
32 DTC HALL OF FAME Profiles of the 2012 Inductees: Deborah Dick-Rath, Stu Klein, Don Lowy & Sheri Stump
38 People on the Move An update on DTC personnel and company changes within the industry
39 Contributors’ Page A closer look at the contributors to this issue of DTC Perspectives Magazine
39 Advertiser Index and Resource Center
40 Marketing on the Edge: Come As You Are Jonathan Isaacs shares his astute views on the marketing industry
42 Eye on the Hill: A Look at the Year Ahead in Washington Jim Davidson reports on the latest regulatory events & implications
44 Perspectives on Books: How We Do Harm Reviewed by Robert Ehrlich of DTC Perspectives, Inc.
46 DTC Perspectives Editorial: The Medicare Debacle
Driving Behavior Change
30
DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013 | 3
14
Data Integration
Inform Decisions.
Influence Behavior.
Inspire Health.
Contact: Jim Curtis • jcurtis@remedyhealthmedia.com • 212-695-5581
dtC perspectives is published Quarterly By: dtC perspectives, inc.1120 Bloomfield avenue, suite 108west Caldwell, nJ 07006phone: 973-521-7475eLeCtroniC serviCe reQuested
free to Qualified industry subscribers in the u.s.apply online at www.dtcperspectives.com.rates for international and non-industry subscribers:
$72 per (1 Year) in the u.s. $96 (1 Year) outside of u.s.Back issues $10 in u.s. $30 in all other Countries
©2013 dtC perspectives, inc. all rights reserved. no part of this publication may be reproduced in any form unless given permission by the publisher.
What a Year It Was?What a Year It Will Be!
The dtC industry underwent a lot of new changes last year, from the smaller things such as a facebook policy changes to the larger news of the supreme Court’s decision to uphold the affordable Care act, and everything in
between. But what an exciting time it is to be in this industry moving forward!Consumers expect a certain level of customer service in today’s world. as
detailed by ellen hoenig-Carlson of advanceMarketworx (read her article start-ing on page 18), dtC Champions will be judged on these three qualifiers in 2013: exceptional brand stewardship, superior integration, and outstanding curating. “today, though, in a progressively complex and digital marketplace, customer experiences and business value are being determined by how seamlessly a company can integrate and collaborate with its customers and a diverse set of business part-ners. this requires a more adaptive, open and diverse network that must work to achieve seamless, efficient learning and application real-time,” she explained.
it is important to remember though, as all of these technological innovations emerge, that we must not lose the “human element” in communications. as reid Connolly of evoke interaction explains, consumers crave that emotional connec-tion, especially when it comes to something as affecting as healthcare. Yet, it can be easy to overlook this with so many standard web forms or the flat calls-to-action requiring a visitor to “click here” for more information. as Connolly poignantly stated, “the reason re-humanizing digital dtC is a provocative idea is not only because we marketers are falling short of paying off on the emotional, but because what is emotionally-resonant has dramatically changed.” the solution is complicat-ed yet simple: think different. “we need to re-think human and re-think digital” to do it differently and “thrill” consumers through innovative, yet emotional, advance-ments.
What a DTC National It Will Be, Too!a progressive faculty of speakers will share their learnings on these very topics,
and more, all during our 2013 dtC national Conference (held april 2-4 at the Jw Marriott in washington, dC). some of the future-planning presentations will be led by karla anderson, partner of the pharmaceutical and Life sciences advi-sory practice at pwC and david houle, futurist and author of “the shift age” and “the new health age: the future of healthcare and Medicine in america.” a number of standout case studies at this year’s event include: sanofi pasteur’s Jennifer Jennifer havens, deputy director of Consumer Marketing and Michael szumera, director of public relations, Communications us – two of the leaders behind fluzone’s hedgehog and Coop de Quill vaccination campaigns; amy Lemen, associate Brand Manager at eli Lilly & Co. and terry voltz, svp, group Manage-ment director from draftfCB will discuss Cialis’ evolution and market entry with a new indication; paul ewing, senior director/group Leader, Consumer Marketing, us primary Care and karen Lazan, director, Consumer Marketing & adherence innovation, us primary Care, will share some of pfizer’s new engagement and adherence tactics. visit www.dtcperspectives.com to view our full agenda. we look forward to seeing you in april!
P E R S P E C T I V E S
Robert EhrlichChairman and CeodtC perspectives, inc.
Christine Franklinvp, Marketing and sales
Jennifer Haugdirector of publishing & Content
Matt Yavorskisales associate
Carolyn Bradfordsales associate
Molly Diemel Marketing and production associate
Debra Sanderoffice Coordinator
Scott EhrlichpresidentMdpa division
Amanda Lawhornedirector of MarketingMCh division
Debra RennertCreative director
James Ticchioart directordirect Media advertising
Jennifer haug
sincerely,
P.S. – We’d love to hear from you! Send an email or Tweet to DTC Perspectives or myself:
info@dtcperspectives.com @dtcperspectivesJennifer@dtcperspectives.com @jen_haug
4 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
Inform Decisions.
Influence Behavior.
Inspire Health.
Contact: Jim Curtis • jcurtis@remedyhealthmedia.com • 212-695-5581
Observe a better brilliance.What happens when the agency renowned for leading technology, strategy and analytics mines rich, new veins in creative, digital and media? Showcase results. On a material scale.Expect more. www.merkleinc.com/lifesciences
Merkle_Life_Sciences_Ad_DTC_1212.indd 1 12/13/12 11:17 AM
I N B R I E F
E&Y Report: Using ‘Firepower’ to Face the Growth Gap Challenge
despite having kept pace with growth of the overall drug market in the past, pharma’s growth fell behind in 2011 by about $20 billion and the gap is expected to increase to approxi-mately $50 billion in 2012 and $100 billion by 2015, according to a recent ernst & Young report. the reason is largely attributed to the patent cliff, and with future pipelines unable to recoup the losses of such blockbuster drugs as Lipitor. e&Y “expects big pharma to fall even fur-ther behind in the years ahead.”
according to their “Closing the gap?” report, one of the solutions for big pharma to fill the gap is via mergers and acquisitions. Yet, in general, pharma’s financial capacity, or “firepower” as they refer to it, to conduct such transactions have also decreased by 23% from 2006 to 2012. Conversely, specialty pharma and big biotech firms increased their firepower. specialty pharma experienced a 61% increase in that same time period due to “premium pricing power and no generic exposure.” Big biotech firms rose 20%, “reflecting the rising strength of generics offset to some extent by patent expirations of a few major brands.”
Appature Launches Partnership Program To Enable Data-Driven Marketing Model
appature has created a new model for pharmaceutical companies to achieve data-driven “informed” marketing by combining its cloud-based marketing soft-ware platform with top professional service providers. this partnership program will enable brands to deliver a consistent, customer-centric brand experience to consumers and physicians and use multichannel marketing data to drive insights and campaign optimization. Being able to respond in such a timely and nimble manner is paramount in today’s rapidly changing environment. kabir shahani, co-founder and Ceo of appature, noted that “this will truly transform the industry by enabling marketers to fully own the customer experience, empowering them to more easily achieve strategic and financial goals, and raising the standard for informed life sciences marketing.”
the partners who have joined appature on this program provide a range of services, including: strategic consulting, plat-form implementation, change management, rM strategy, campaign operations, reporting and analytics. partner companies include: Zs associates, digitas health, closerlook, Crossix, the encima group, dki direct, extraprise, gCMs, harrison and star, BioLumina, highpoint solutions, and the CementBloc.
PHCG Creates First Business Network Integrating Media, Health & Wellness
publicis healthcare Communications group (phCg) established publicis health Media (phM), a first-of-its-kind network that will combine media with a specialized health and wellness practice. Matt Mcnally, who was named president of the new business unit, explained that phM will combine media with the creative process to increase efficiencies, something that is not only new for phCg, but is unique for the healthcare category as well.
the decision to embark upon such a venture came about as a result of market demands for an industry requiring such a spe-cific skillset. phM “blurs the line between content and context,” he added, which allows a team who knows and understands the brand to handle both media and content strategy and execution. in his elevated position, Mcnally will be responsible for media strategy, planning, buying, content distribution, and search across all phCg agency brands worldwide, including digitas health, saatchi & saatchi health, and publicis Life Brands.
January 2013
Perspectives from the Ernst & Young Global Life Sciences Center
Prescriptions
Closing the gap? Big pharma’s growth challenge and implications for deals
The challenge: pharma’s growth gapAs big pharma companies drew inexorably closer to the patent cliff — and grew increasingly aware that their existing pipelines were insuffi cient to fi ll the ensuing revenue gaps — it became imperative to fi nd additional ways to boost shareholder value to meet investors’ expectations. In particular, these fi rms needed to fi nd new sources of growth beyond their current drug portfolios.
In recent years, big pharma companies have undertaken numerous measures to drive shareholder value. In addition to fervent cost-cutting, they have downsized operations, spun off assets, restructured R&D, repurchased stock and increased dividends. These efforts will continue, but they are not, by themselves, a sustainable long-run solution. At some point, companies run out of fat to trim — and risk cutting into muscle and bone instead. Stock repurchases and raising dividends work in the short run — the 16 largest big pharma companies delivered total shareholder returns of more than 17% in 2012 — but ultimately require increasing operating cash fl ow. In the long run, therefore, big pharma inevitably needs revenue growth to create shareholder value in a sustainable way.
Growth, of course, hasn’t been easy to come by. With anemic sales growth in developed markets, companies have looked to emerging markets as a key part of the solution. However, this strategy presents its own challenges. Emerging markets have slowed in recent quarters, exacerbating the growth gap. Stagnation in the Eurozone has hurt even more.
6 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
Observe a better brilliance.What happens when the agency renowned for leading technology, strategy and analytics mines rich, new veins in creative, digital and media? Showcase results. On a material scale.Expect more. www.merkleinc.com/lifesciences
Merkle_Life_Sciences_Ad_DTC_1212.indd 1 12/13/12 11:17 AM
Boosting NRx, TRx, compliance and persistency through direct-to-patient programs in doctor offices, at home and on the go
product launch | awareness & acquisition | patient education | compliance & persistency | targeted advertising | direct response
healthmonitornetwork.com
Ask us aboutour special iPhoneCase Study
Health Monitor Network is the leading direct-to-patient company in the country and has one of the largest marketing platforms in medical offices, in patients’ homes and on the go. Our patient-education networkreaches more than 40 million patients/caregivers, 120,000 physician offices, 360,000 physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, diabetes educators and other healthcare professionals, as well as two million patients at home.
Health Monitor Network has proven ROI⎯We take an innovative approach to pharmaceutical marketing by developing customized, tailored marketing programs based on the individual goals and ROI needs of our clients. Targeted, powerful results are delivered through our integrated mobile, web, TV and print programs.
Get the most awareness, lift and compliance/adherence. Contact a Sales Director at 201-391-1911 or info@healthmonitor.com.
Measurable ROIMobile, Web, TV, Print Integration
DTC Perspectives ad 2012.indd 1 8/24/12 2:29 PM
Excerpt: seems like “innovation” is everywhere you look these days. innovative technology allows us to talk to our phones – and for them to answer us back. it allows us to view a hidden world of content not visible to the naked eye. it even allows us to better understand our bodies and how we can be healthier. no matter how innovative the technol-ogy is though, it still has to connect with the end user and provide them value. here are seven innovative technologies of tomorrow that you can use to make sure your marketing efforts provide users value today:
1. Link Print to Digital with QR Codes. one of the easiest ways to enable digital for your brand is to include a Qr code on all of your print materials or ads that connects users to a mobile optimized experience for the brand. You can deliver
supporting information, programs, multimedia, coupons and much more. Learn how scandinavian air used targeted advertising with two Qr codes to engage couples planning travel.
2. Become a Part of Adherence with Location-Based SMS. one of the newest ways to interact with users is loca-tion-based sMs as it provides that ability to deliver an sMs or MMs message to an opted-in user within a specific geo-fenced area anywhere in the world.
3. Connect Check-Ins to Rewards. a connected check-in allows a patient or caregiver’s physical check-in at a location using a service like foursquare to connect with a reward in a secondary program. foursquare’s current partnership with
american express is an excellent example of a connected check-in reward program.
4. Use Augmented Rea l i ty to Expand Your Packaging and Enhance Their World. Brand marketers are more frequently adopt-
ing the use of augmented reality because it allows them the ability to integrate the brand into their lives in a far more interactive and engaging way than ever before. You can view examples of two different innovative ar programs:
one from the makers of Band-aid (left Qr code), in part-nership with the Muppets, and the other from swedish fur-niture maker ikea, who made their entire catalog an aug-mented reality experience this year (right Qr code).
5. Turn What They Hear into Engage-ment with Shazam Audio Tagging. shazam’s new “second screen” engage-ment model has turned it into a powerful tool for advertisers to use in driving engagement beyond the standard :15 to
:60 spot. Brand marketers are more frequently adopting the use of augmented reality because it allows them the ability to integrate the brand into their lives in a far more interac-tive and engaging way than ever before.
6. Connect Health Efforts and Out-comes by Embracing Quantified Self. personalized connected health services like hea!thrageous are taking it a step fur-ther by using their connected monitors to collect information on your smartphone
and then they will analyze the data to help you optimize your health outcomes.
7. Have Them Pick Up a Prescription at the Neighborhood App Pharmacy. with everyone so interested in the app and bet-ter patient outcomes, the pharma brand of the future, may not be just a pill… it may very conceivably include an app as well.
scan the related code to learn about a company that is working to provide the service physicians and providers can use to “prescribe” apps to their patients.
as the examples above clearly demonstrate, though these technologies have yet to be routinely integrated into pharma marketing efforts, they do indeed exist and drive value for their brands. we are rapidly approaching a time in the not too distant future, when these tools are commonly used and will change the way healthcare is dispensed and consumers monitor and care for themselves.
Geoffrey McCleary is Vice President/Group Director of Mobile Innovation at sister agencies, Digitas Health and Razorfish Health. He can be contacted via email at Geoff.McCleary@digitashealth.com or follow Digitas Health on Twitter @Digitas_Health.
UPDATED QR Codes: Innovations fromTomorrow that Pharma Can Use Todayin our fall issue, we published Qr codes corresponding with geoff McCleary’s article, entitled Innovations from Tomorrow that Pharma Can Use Today (pages 14-16). it has been brought to our attention that if your device was an older generation, it may have experienced some difficulties reading the code. we apologize for any inconvenience, and to ensure all of our readers have a chance to scan and view the full digitas health Qr codes, please see the updated versions below.
8 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
Boosting NRx, TRx, compliance and persistency through direct-to-patient programs in doctor offices, at home and on the go
product launch | awareness & acquisition | patient education | compliance & persistency | targeted advertising | direct response
healthmonitornetwork.com
Ask us aboutour special iPhoneCase Study
Health Monitor Network is the leading direct-to-patient company in the country and has one of the largest marketing platforms in medical offices, in patients’ homes and on the go. Our patient-education networkreaches more than 40 million patients/caregivers, 120,000 physician offices, 360,000 physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, diabetes educators and other healthcare professionals, as well as two million patients at home.
Health Monitor Network has proven ROI⎯We take an innovative approach to pharmaceutical marketing by developing customized, tailored marketing programs based on the individual goals and ROI needs of our clients. Targeted, powerful results are delivered through our integrated mobile, web, TV and print programs.
Get the most awareness, lift and compliance/adherence. Contact a Sales Director at 201-391-1911 or info@healthmonitor.com.
Measurable ROIMobile, Web, TV, Print Integration
DTC Perspectives ad 2012.indd 1 8/24/12 2:29 PM
Chart 1: Benchmark for Percentage of Existing Patients Driven by Acquisition Tactics
CHART 1
18.5%
7.5%
1.0%
Acquisition/Conversion Tactics
Existing Patient Registrants (% On Product)
RxMarketMetricsTM
Top 20% Median Bottom 20%
10 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
C r o s s i x r x M a r k e t M e t r i C s s e r i e s
Sticking to the ScriptAcquisition Tactics & Patient Adherence
In 2009, a study of adherence among patients treating with oral diabetes medications found annual healthcare cost savings for adherent patients of close to $850 per person.1
across treatment categories, the cost of a non-adherent patient is substantial to every stakeholder, including patients, physi-cians and insurers. as healthcare costs move to the forefront of budgetary debates, the search for effective tools with which to drive patient adherence gains momentum, and has the poten-tial for meaningful improvements in overall economic welfare.
the causes of patient non-adherence are wide-ranging; however, the exposure of patients to direct-to-consumer advertising presents a uniquely adaptable and measurable forum for potential influence. patients, in general, have positive opinions of dtC utility and these positive opinions have sig-nificant impact on the use of dtC information for healthcare decision making.2 dtC drives an increased demand for treat-ment, and helps put under-diagnosed patients in physicians’ offices.3 Beyond simply driving a doctor’s visit, evidence sug-gests that dtC spending correlates with an increase in appro-priate prescriptions, with no significant effect on inappropriate prescriptions.4
Existing patients reached by all forms of DTCthe goal of driving that initial prescription, and acquir-
ing that new patient, is a major force behind dtC spending. while many marketing teams have a dedicated CrM strategy for enrollees driven by adherence-focused tactics, the majority of the brand spend can often be allocated toward broad-reach
acquisition tactics. even with the goal of new patient acquisi-tion, however, these tactics inevitably reach existing patients.
through the use of rx-based analytics, the share of existing patients driven by these acquisition tactics can be measured. Chart 1 displays the Crossix rxMarketMetrics™ benchmark for the percentage of existing patients driven by acquisition tactics. sometimes, the share of registrants already on product is small, but often the size of this pool is substantial, and can be meaningful when calculating roi. existing patients driven by acquisition tactics cannot contribute to the net impact of the program on new patient starts, often thought of as the only
With many younger brands emphasizing conversion to product as the goal of DTC advertising spend, they often overlook the adherence benefit of these acquisition-focused campaigns. Meaningful improvements in patient adherence have been measured for acquisition campaigns across the industry, validating the positive effect on patient outcomes.
About Crossix RxMarketMetrics™
Prescription drug information drawn from Crossix RxMarketMetrics™, market benchmarks for performance of patient
adherence and consumer marketing activities based on thousands of actual Rx analyses including more than hundreds and
hundreds of consumer marketing tactics across a broad range of therapeutic categories.
Campaigns included in RxMarketMetrics aggregated for the chronic, lifestyle and specialty/biologic markets and derived
from actual, anonymized and aggregated, results of consumer marketing campaigns for dozens of leading pharmaceutical
brands ranging from direct response (DR) to general awareness and branding campaigns (GA), and multi-channel, from Web
to Print to TV.
Normative Rx-based measures include conversion rates and curves, retention rates and curves, and Rx patient profiles spe-
cific to the market, channel and tactic. Benchmarks are further broken down by campaign specifics, such as purpose, level of
branding, creative, offer type, response channel and fulfillment stream.
Chart 2: Benchmark for Acquisition Tactics from Existing Patients in the 6 Months after Registering
CHART 2
0.6
0.4
0.1
Acquisition/Conversion Tactics
Existing Patient Registrants: Net Rx/Person through 6 Months
Post-Registration
RxMarketMetricsTM
Top 20% Median Bottom 20%
DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013 | 11
C R O S S I X R X M A R K E T M E T R I C S : A D H E R E N C E
substantial source of incremental revenue for such programs. with the success of acquisition tactics defined strictly as impact on new patient starts, the rxMarketMetrics™ benchmark indicates that, at the median, 7.5% of registrants (and in some cases close to 20% of registrants) will not contribute to mea-sured value, diluting measured success of roi maximization efforts and potentially inhibiting positive roi.
existing patients register into acquisition-focused CrM programs for many reasons, including the desire for support, information and savings from a branded outlet. Just as mes-saging toward potential new patients seeks to provide support, similar messaging can influence behaviors of existing patients as well. exposure to branded or unbranded messaging, for exam-ple, can help patient adherence (especially of “newer” existing patients), whether by increasing comfort level, or simply serv-ing as a reminder. therefore, only through the measurement of adherence impact, in addition to new patient starts, can a brand gain a holistic understanding of the impact of an acquisi-tion campaign.
Acquisition campaigns can drive adherenceas shown by the rxMarketMetrics™ benchmark in Chart
2, acquisition tactics drive an incremental 0.4 rx, at the median, from existing patients in the six months following registration. Brands should more often recognize this impact of acquisition programs on patient adherence for a more accurate look at performance; moreover, acquisition programs can drive increased adherence among new patient starts, post-conversion to product. these effects have the potential to provide a sub-stantial positive boost to program roi when measured. using the benchmarks for existing patient registration rate (7.5%) and adherence benefit (0.4 rx/person), an average acquisition campaign producing 100,000 registrants realizes 3,000 net rx from existing patients in the six months following registration. with the broad range of script values for various brands, the incremental benefit in this example runs the gamut from mar-ginal to game-changing.
the audiences exposed to acquisition tactics across various channels can differ greatly in their share of existing patients. identifying the composition of a tactic’s audience and respond-er base upon launch supports the potential for differing cre-ative, CrM or level of spend, according to campaign goals. instead of rx-based measurement after a campaign has con-cluded, timely “in-flight” rx-based measurement can identify meaningful differences in existing patient shares driven across campaign tactics, informing spending and communication decisions and supporting “real-time” optimization.
Marketing teams can seize the opportunity to poten-tially augment the adherence benefit of acquisition programs through the tailoring of campaign messaging not only to potential new patients, but also to those currently on product. in terms of a patient’s exposure to healthcare messaging, dtC can play an important role between doctor visits. even more proactive patients, who seek information from independent
DTCNATIONAL CONFERENCE
THE FORUM FOR DTC THOUGHT LEADERS
REGISTER NOW
April 2-4 2013JW MarriottWashington, DC
Karla AndersonPartner, Pharmaceutical and Life SciencesAdvisory practice,PwC
Michelle BlechmanAssociate Director, Market IntelligenceAstellas Pharma US
Peter DorffSenior Portfolio Insight Manager, AstraZeneca
David HouleAcclaimed Futurist and Author of “The Shift Age” and “The New Health Age: the Future of Healthcare and Medicine in America”
Karen LazanDirector,Consumer Marketing & Adherence Innovation, US Primary Care,Pfizer
Barbara LippertCreative Guru, Editor-at-Large for MediaPost and former author of the Adweek Critique
KEYNOTE SPEAKERSDr. Kevin PhoFounder of KevinMD.com
Michael SzumeraDirector, Public Relations, Communications US, Sanofi Pasteur
…and many more. For conference news and to register, please visit the conference website at:www.dtcperspectives.com regularly. To register by phone, call:973-521-7475 x221
#DTCN2013
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MAGAZINEVol. 11, No. 3 • Fall 2012
P E R S P E C T I V E S
T H E S O U R C E F O R D I R E C T T O C O N S U M E R T H O U G H T L E A D E R S
How emerging technologies are creating innovative
opportunities for engagement and mobilityINNOVATE AND CONNECT
November 15-16
Orlando, Florida
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LEAD GENERATION:
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advertise in DTC Perspectives Magazine
Why advertise with us?•Effi cient Targeting reach pharmaceutical
marketers for a fraction of the cost than other industry publications
•Engaged Readers Loyal subscribers read us cover-to-cover, recognizing our content as valuable and relevant to their business
• Bonus Distribution DTC Perspectives magazine is also distributed at our dtC national, Mdpa & fall Conferences
For more information please contact Matt Yavorski at Matt@dtcperspectives.com or 973-521-7475 x226
Value-added packages available for 4 time advertisers.Opportunity for integrated presence through DTC Perspectives magazine, our website,
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12 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
sources, will often receive a range of dtC messaging. Cre-ative and CrM strategies for acquisition campaigns can seek to convert patients to product, while being a force for increased patient understanding, comfort, and adherence.
Timely “in-flight” Rx-based measurement can identify meaningful differences … informing spending and communication decisions and
supporting “real-time” optimization.
Lead to better outcomes via adherencenet rx represent far more than simply the “adherence
benefit” of acquisition programs, they also represent an influential factor in improving overall economic welfare. in november 2012, the Congressional Budget office published its finding that an increase in overall rx utilization results in decreased spending on medical services among Medicare ben-eficiaries.5 for the us healthcare system in general, the new england health institute estimated that non-adherent patients cost up to $290 billion annually, or 13% of total healthcare expenditures.6 a doctor has limited influence in driving a patient to fill the next rx, but, collectively, the decisions have broad economic implications. given their reach and general
acceptance by patients, dtC tactics, including those focused
on new patient starts, can play an important role in improving
patient adherence. DTC
This is a part of an ongoing series on Rx market metrics of various consumer marketing activities. For more information, see the Crossix RxMarketMetrics™ website (www.rxmarketmetrics.com), from Cros-six Solutions Inc., an Rx-based consumer analytics company (www.crossix.com).
References
1 hansen, richard a., et al. “a retrospective cohort study of economic outcomes
and adherence to monotherapy with metformin, pioglitazone, or a sulfonylurea
among patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus in the united states from 2003 to
2005.” Clinical therapeutics 32.7 (2010): 1308-1319.
2 deshpande, aparna, et al. “direct-to-consumer advertising and its utility in
health care decision making: a consumer perspective.” Journal of Health Communi-
cation 9.6 (2004): 499-513.
3 Jayawardhana, Jayani. “direct-to-consumer advertising and consumer
welfare.”International Journal of Industrial Organization (2012).
4 abel, gregory a., et al. “impact of oncology‐related direct‐to‐consumer advertis-
ing.” Cancer (2012).
5 Congressional Budget office. Offsetting Effects of Prescription Drug Use on Medicare’s
Spending for Medical Services. Congressional Budget office, 2012.
6 new england healthcare institute. Thinking outside the pillbox: A system-wide
approach to improving patient medication adherence for chronic disease. new england
health Care institute, 2009.
C R O S S I X R X M A R K E T M E T R I C S : A D H E R E N C E
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David HouleAcclaimed Futurist and Author of “The Shift Age” and “The New Health Age: the Future of Healthcare and Medicine in America”
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People are assertively choosing where and when to interact across the multitude of media and channels for information on therapies, providers and care. pharma-
ceutical marketers who believe that the traditional approaches (e.g., attitudinal segmentation, “targeted” media advertising) will work to engage consumers in this new terrain are missing the point; the way consumers and patients behave in reality is far more dynamic and complex than ever before.
this change in dynamics is evident in key trends in the pharma marketplace. Consumers interact in multiple channels throughout the day and are online in droves where market-ers have limited control and ability to directly impact behavior and choices. for instance, while a significant share of pharma investment online is in therapy and branded product websites, these websites represent a very small portion of consumer health search activity. in fact, of the 6.5 million unique visitors to all websites about cancer, only 4.2% were to branded sites1. patients are also increasingly using mobile devices to search the web, seek peer experience and are logging into mobile appli-cations to track and manage chronic conditions. approximate-ly 75 million individuals are using mobile phones for health information and tools – 14 million more than last year, accord-ing to a recent Manhattan research study2. and, as most con-sumer marketers know, consumers are interacting with health information at different points in their treatment journey – to understand the diagnosis, determine options, or perhaps learn more about a treatment that they have been prescribed.
Early endeavorsthe industry is beginning to get the message in response to
these trends. Companies such as Boehringer ingelheim, sanofi
and astraZeneca3 are experimenting with a variety of social media tools including facebook and Youtube – providing disease, product education and tools with the goal of reach-ing consumers and patients wherever they appear to be. these companies are also working to manage the concerns about adverse event reporting and privacy by focusing on educa-tion and cautiously providing guidelines for interactivity. But it may be too much of a good thing. a quick internet search demonstrates a proliferation of Youtube channels and videos on disease, treatment and resources focused on patients. and on itunes, there are over 100 apps for diabetes alone. this implies that perhaps, rather than focusing on understanding where and how consumers are interacting, marketers are creat-ing even more locations to engage.
Clearly, traditional segmentation now doesn’t really work in this “wild west,” where consumers self-segment according to their most immediate interests and needs. attitudinal seg-mentation that is created from bi-annual research has a mini-mal role when one puts the customer at the center; consumers pursue diverse activities to get the information they need and they have very different healthcare needs along their treat-ment journey. their needs and goals are, in fact, more evident through their individual actions and interactions than through a template that marketers may have created to describe their needs. Marketers thus face daunting challenges as they look out into this frontier now, specifically:
•How to determine the optimal consumers to invest in,based on their activities and interactions
•How to find and engage consumers and patients at theright point in their journey – particularly when most interactions are anonymous and diversity is more complex
It’s old news: what makes for impactful direct-to-consumer marketing is no longer “direct.” It is the Wild West in today’s market, where consumers, caregivers and patients are exploring vast new territory as they navigate their options for interacting with pharma brands.
by Deb Furey
Harnessing the Wild West
DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013 | 15
•Howtounderstandwhereandwhatarethemostvaluableinvestments to drive market impact
Embracing self-segmentationat the center of understanding how consumers self-segment
is the emerging ability to track, capture and analyze multiple sources of data, particularly digital, both identified and anony-mous. while this capability is fairly new to pharma, other industries – media and consumer products in particular – have made significant advances over the past few years in harnessing large data sets (aka “big data”) to develop optimized, insight-ful portraits of consumer behavior. they achieve this through four key steps that begin with understanding all possible digital data sources available and the level at which the data can be extracted (cookie/ip, email, aggregate segment). this evaluation includes web analytics data (webtrends, omniture, google, etc), ad serving data (doubleClick, atlas, etc), social data (facebook, twitter) and mobile engagement data [apps, web browsing, short messaging service (sMs)].
step two is optimizing the data capture within and across internal and third-party systems to ensure maximum linkage across online and offline interactions. often this means nego-tiating with partners to capture data that was previously of less interest. some of these linkages are created through adjusting how data is captured, while other connections must be made once the data has been extracted from these systems and com-bined with other data sources. importantly, care must be taken to ensure alignment with privacy and security standards to ensure hipaa compliance. (see figure 1)
once data is integrated, step three is to process data sets – both identified and anonymous – to narrow down the “big data” into actionable information that can be used to drive deeper insights into consumer behavior and value, better per-sonalization, and robust program measurement. this data nar-rowing process begins with developing a clear roadmap of the marketing questions that a brand is seeking to address.
finally, at step four, the data is analyzed to develop activity-based segments to serve goals such as improved targeting and personalization, performing longitudinal analysis to understand the end-to-end interaction and the behavior of the most valu-able consumers, and ultimately creating predictive models to find more of these consumer populations (e.g., look-alike seg-mentation).
So, does opt-in really matter?Consider the scenario of a brand that is in its second year
in the market. product marketers have core elements of their consumer/patient campaign, including investments in third-party sites (e.g., webMd) to capture audience, an unbranded website (where the product is a novel therapy), and a branded website with optional patient opt-in to download a coupon for a 14-day free trial. in the doctor’s office, patients can also see and snap Qr codes on patient materials that capture their email address in return for a mobile coupon. in addition, the brand has a full digital media plan, including search/search optimization and display ads to drive click-through to the branded site and offer. Questions that would come to mind in this scenario include:
•Are actual patients/caregivers engaging in our media,website, mobile app?•What other media/
channels/properties did they explore or respond to?
•What path did theytake to finally “con-vert”? did they take the most valued path?
•D i d t h ey e v en tu -ally opt-in? redeem a coupon?
•Are the re in s igh t sabout these consumers that can help me bet-ter identify and target others?By integrating the
data sets as noted above and creating activity-based segmentation that de f ines anonymous-
D ATA I N T E G R AT I O N
Figure 1 – Activity Segmentation through Digital Data Integration
Step two is optimizing the data capture within and across internal and third-‐party systems to ensure maximum linkage across online and offline interactions. Often this means negotiating with partners to capture data that was previously of less interest. Some of these linkages are created through adjusting how data is captured, while other connections must be made once the data has been extracted from these systems and combined with other data sources. Importantly, care must be taken to ensure alignment with privacy and security standards to ensure HIPAA compliance.
Figure 3 – Activity segmentation through digital data integration
Once data is integrated, step three is to process data sets – both identified and anonymous – to narrow down the “big data” into actionable information that can be used to drive deeper insights into consumer behavior and value, better personalization, and robust program measurement. This data narrowing process begins with developing a clear roadmap of the marketing questions that a brand is seeking to address. Finally, at step four, the data is analyzed to develop activity-‐based segments to serve goals such as improved targeting and personalization, performing longitudinal analysis to understand the end-‐to-‐end interaction and the behavior of the most valuable consumers, and ultimately creating predictive models to find more of these consumer populations (e.g., look-‐alike segmentation). So, does opt-‐in really matter? Consider the scenario of a brand that is in its second year in the market. Product marketers have core elements of their consumer/patient campaign, including investments in third-‐party sites (e.g., WebMD) to capture audience, an unbranded website (where the product is a novel therapy), and a branded website with optional patient opt-‐in to download a coupon for a 14-‐day free trial. In the doctor’s office,
Display Social*
Party Identifiers
First Party Data Capture
(Example)
• Cookie ID (Primary)• IP Address
• Social Handle (Primary)• Email (Facebook)• Phone #
• Browser User agent
• Ad Impressions, activity, Click-‐throughs
• FB user profile data including likes, interests, geo, etc
• Other engagement based on specific social network (Twitter, Linkedin, etc)
Primary First Party Data
Systems
• Ad servers (DFA, Atlas) and DSP (Media Math, Turn, [X+1])
• Social Networks (Facebook*, Twitter) and social platforms
*Full Facebook data integration requires opt-‐in from Customer
Mobile
• Device ID (Primary)• Cookie ID (Primary)• Profile ID
• SMS send and click, Mobile Browsing
• Campaign data (SEO, SEM, Banner clicks, email clicks)
• SMS platforms, Web analytics, apps
Site
• Cookie ID (Primary)• IP Address•
• Browser User
• Referral site, Campaign data
• Engagement on site (clicks, views, downloads, etc)
• Conversion on site
• Web Analytics tools (Omniture, webtrends, etc)
Ad interest and 3rd Party media response
Likes, Interests, Profile
Mobile Device Geography Search
/Response Data
Survey Data –treatment history, interests
Incentive Use Contact
Information
Insights
Profile ID
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Nomination
Deadline: Jan
uary 31, 2013
Nominate Someone Now and Help Us Recognize the Most Infl uential DTC Marketers in the
Pharmaceutical Industry!
To nominate a pharmaceutical company colleague, please visit www.dtcperspectives.com under the Conferences tab or
contact Jennifer Haug at 973-457-5718 or Jennifer@dtcperspectives.com.
Top 25 Marketers will be honored at a private congratulatory
luncheon following the DTC National Conference on April 4, 2013.
TOP 25 DTC MARKETERSOF THE YEAR AWARD
TOP 25 DTC MARKETERSOF THE YEAR AWARD
16 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
D ATA I N T E G R AT I O N
to-identifiable linkages, the brand can inform media targeting and third-party sponsor strategies, refine display strategies and structure website navigation to achieve the optimal pathways. and while opt-ins for a subset of patients will be important in order to assign value to activities, they will ultimately no lon-ger be the sole source of actionable data.
Building activity-based segmentation can, thus, serve as the foundation for marketers to drive dynamic targeting, program personalization and development of best next action rules based on behavioral “paths” observed in consumer popula-tions. when a consumer moves from the unbranded to brand-ed site and hits a specific page, for example, business rules can be defined – based on past learnings – to serve up a specific message about the brand to drive the desired action. or, while brands will often track web page views for pre-defined activities that they deem valuable, assigning a score to site visitors and passing this along to the anonymous longitudinal data vendor (for the subset of opt-in patients) allows the brand to deter-mine if the activity is associated with conversion and retention. this puts more tools at marketers’ fingertips to fully optimize website and third-party program investments. (see figure 2)
redefining how to engage with patients/consumers is only part of the equation. direct-to-consumer (dtC) marketing is notorious for being difficult to measure, unless a) consumers/patients opt-in and b) a traceable incentive such as a co-pay or coupon is offered that can be tracked via anonymous lon-gitudinal patient data. this approach to performance measure-ment can be expensive, providing minimal chance for program optimization (results are typically available after six months). further, it only addresses a small portion of the potential con-sumer population.
A trail toward anticipating impactwith a view into consumer activity-based segments and
response, pharma marketers can fully embrace a discipline more typical of direct marketing industries: the pro forma.
the goal of pro forma is to anticipate the impact of a program, based on a series of assumptions which are determined based on prior experience and are applied to future programming. as an example, if one knows that:
1. 25% of all mobile visits to a site that result in the down-load of a mobile educational app will request a trial cou-pon via sMs, and
2. of those, 45% will redeem the coupon, resulting in $50 incremental revenue
…then one can determine the target kpis for mobile and site visits/downloads/requests against which to measure. Con-versely, one can also use predicted potential revenue to deter-mine how to allocate dollars to media and mobile to achieve the greatest roi. in this case, the activity and chosen path-ways of consumers are more important than their attitudinal or even treatment profile – and these measures can be deter-mined, at least partially, without identification. the pro forma discipline will become increasingly important as the industry focuses on specialty markets and the need to make significant choices about where to spend and why.
understanding consumers’ activity-based segments with these emerging capabilities will help marketers truly harness a challenging wild west, enabling them to reach and value consumers/patients based on observable activity. Marketers will have the data and tools to determine how to invest and how to gauge the potential impact of their campaigns with an end-to-end view of valued activity (avoiding the 40-version creative when five would be sufficient!). ultimately, marketers can apply these insights to deliver – and continually refine – a connected experience for consumers and patients that engages them wherever they are to deliver important service, commu-nications and resources. DTC
References1 adage insights whitepaper “pharmaceutical Marketing: targeting Consumers &
Connecting online,” october 20112 Manhattan research Cybercitizen health, september 27, 20123 weinstein, deborah; Boehringer ingelheim wants to make cancer care social,
Medical Marketing & Media, May 31, 2012. weinstein, deborah: text4baby firm launches mobile diabetes program, Medical Marketing & Media, october 4, 2012 and Kolodjeski, Laura; introducing diabetapedia – diabetes doesn’t define You…so help define diabetes!
With contributions from: Peter Vandre, Vice President of Merkle Digital Solutions, and Elizabeth Barrows, Senior Director of Merkle Integrated Marketing Strategy.
Deb Furey is currently Vice President and GM with Merkle Life Sciences. Drawing from her more than 15 years of experience working with FT500 companies to drive growth through innovative customer relationship strategies, Deb is responsible for healthcare client manage-ment, strategy and solution integration. She can be contacted via email at dfurey@merkleinc.com.
Figure 2 – Capabilities Delivered through Data Integration and Activity-Based Segmentation
patients can also see and snap QR codes on patient materials that capture their email address in return for a mobile coupon. In addition, the brand has a full digital media plan, including search/search optimization and display ads to drive click-‐through to the branded site and offer. Questions that would come to mind in this scenario include:
• Are actual patients/caregivers engaging in our media, website, mobile app? • What other media/channels/properties did they explore or respond to? • What path did they take to finally “convert”? Did they take the most valued path? • Did they eventually opt-‐in? Redeem a coupon? • Are there insights about these consumers that can help me better identify and target others?
By integrating the data sets as noted above and creating activity-‐based segmentation that defines anonymous-‐to-‐identifiable linkages, the brand can inform media targeting and third-‐party sponsor strategies, refine display strategies and structure website navigation to achieve the optimal pathways. And while opt-‐ins for a subset of patients will be important in order to assign value to activities, they will ultimately no longer be the sole source of actionable data. Building activity-‐based segmentation can, thus, serve as the foundation for marketers to drive dynamic targeting, program personalization and development of best next action rules based on behavioral “paths” observed in consumer populations. When a consumer moves from the unbranded to branded site and hits a specific page, for example, business rules can be defined – based on past learnings – to serve up a specific message about the brand to drive the desired action. Or, while brands will often track web page views for pre-‐defined activities that they deem valuable, assigning a score to site visitors and passing this along to the anonymous longitudinal data vendor (for the subset of opt-‐in patients) allows the brand to determine if the activity is associated with conversion and retention. This puts more tools at marketers’ fingertips to fully optimize website and third-‐party program investments.
Figure 4 – Capabilities delivered through data integration and activity-‐based segmentation
Redefining how to engage with patients/consumers is only part of the equation. Direct-‐to-‐consumer (DTC) marketing is notorious for being difficult to measure, unless a) consumers/patients opt-‐in and b) a traceable incentive such as a co-‐pay or coupon is offered that can be tracked via anonymous longitudinal patient data. This approach to performance measurement can be expensive, providing minimal chance for program optimization (results are typically available after six months). Further, it only addresses a small portion of the potential consumer population.
Personalize Messaging
Enhanced Targeting
Channel/ Path Prediction
Dynamic Look Alike Models
Best Next Actions
Attribution and Impact
sponsored BY
Nomination
Deadline: Jan
uary 31, 2013
Nominate Someone Now and Help Us Recognize the Most Infl uential DTC Marketers in the
Pharmaceutical Industry!
To nominate a pharmaceutical company colleague, please visit www.dtcperspectives.com under the Conferences tab or
contact Jennifer Haug at 973-457-5718 or Jennifer@dtcperspectives.com.
Top 25 Marketers will be honored at a private congratulatory
luncheon following the DTC National Conference on April 4, 2013.
TOP 25 DTC MARKETERSOF THE YEAR AWARD
TOP 25 DTC MARKETERSOF THE YEAR AWARD
18 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
Three Qualifiers for DTC Champs in 2013:Exceptional Brand Stewardship, Superior
Integration, Outstanding Curating
In 2013, pharma and biotech dtC Marketers face a tough balancing act among three compulsories that weren’t on the original scorecard to the same degree when most of us
learned our craft:•Exceptional brand stewardship to keep a brand’s
promise fresh, pristine: true to the brand’s image and val-ues at every brand intersection point despite the increasing number of specialists working on a brand.
•Superior integration of brand assets, data and learning that is consistently applied across channels and customers.
•Outstanding content curating that truly invigorates learning and conversation through relevant and valuable information.
healthcare consumers face many of the same issues that challenge marketers. they’re stressed from a higher cost of living, being inundated with information, overwhelmed with communications and spam from every which way, tired from working long hours (or looking for work), with insufficient time to enjoy the simple, healthful things in life. and when they finally do get to a doctor, s/he isn’t likely to be able to spend much quality time with them.
pharma and biotech marketers may have a more strategic view of relentless change, but our long hours, scarce resources yet bigger deliverables, and ongoing generic and cost contain-ment pressures are similarly stressful and mind-numbing.
Champions find ways to ensure that stress does not sully their performance. good marketing still rests on slowing down enough to articulate clear objectives, deep customer insight, and positioning that differentiates. Certainly smart marketers view dtC far beyond traditional tv ads: as the crux of all consumer engagement. But the mantra for brand champions is new: the connections that will power your brand’s vitality can’t be bought – they must be earned. as we move into 2013 and beyond, how can dtC Marketers win this new compe-tition, accelerating brand engagement, growth, and loyalty? Challenge yourself with these three questions:
1. Are you effectively leading your brand? in a world of increasing specialists, every brand faces the imperative to bring numerous internal and external specialists together for true col-laboration without letting go of laser brand stewardship and without acquiescing to each specialist who may want to exer-cise their own mark on the project. where do you stand on the brand marketer’s “control spectrum”?
top notch brand stewardship starts with an inspiring and clear vision for the brand and its community. it is a special kind of leadership challenge, requiring facilitation, providing scope, tools and resources, and opening the doors to opportu-nity. it means guiding where necessary, but avoiding imposing a “heavy hand” or “command and control” attitude. it means creating an environment that is open, supportive and agile in its own learning and interactions. it means that every action
Champions have a “constant restlessness that disallows the arrogance that we’re fast or agile enough.” In today’s consumer-driven marketplace, what will make for a successful DTC brand champion this year and beyond?
by ellen Hoenig-Carlson
DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013 | 19
you and your teams take at every level of the organization reflect and support the essence of your brand. anything less makes it easier for competition to steal share and growth by creating stronger relationships with your customers.
don’t let a long “to do” list curtail the time and effort you place here. in a time when everyone has too much to do and not always enough focus, this is an opportunity to excel: for a brand lead to be an exceptional brand steward.
2. How well have you mastered the art of integration? how seamless is your brand experience across programs and channels and between customers? how well are you syn-thesizing and employing “big data” into new learning that is leveraged throughout or across touchpoints? how well are you bringing integration to diverse high-potential consumer segments that might not otherwise get value from your brand?
For brand managers today, Integration is the new “hub of the wheel,” and essential for brand innovation and transformation.
“Brand integration,” initially meant to use someone else’s tv program content to drive your brand. the term dates back to when the Lifesavers brand was integrated into the 1932 groucho Marx movie “horsefeathers,” national geographic had a starring role in the 1946 movie “it’s a wonderful Life,” and spielberg’s “e.t.” featured the first paid candy integration with reese’s pieces, or when proctor & gamble and unilever sponsored soap operas.
today, though, in a progressively complex and digital mar-ketplace, customer experiences and business value are being determined by how seamlessly a company can integrate and collaborate with its customers and a diverse set of business partners. this requires a more adaptive, open and diverse net-work that must work to achieve seamless, efficient learning and application real-time. when brands aren’t well-integrated across customers, channels, partners, or even country manage-ment, brand power is limited, opportunities for transformative growth are negated. don’t do your competition any favors by overlooking:
•Consistentmessagingand“lookandfeel”acrosschannelsand/or customers. this includes telling a consistent story at every touchpoint ever time. it cannot be achieved with siloed functions and partners.
•Buildingacentralized inventoryofapprovedbrandassetsand content elements, such as claims, messages, patient quotes, relationship marketing content, video, images, style guides, etc., enables different teams to execute new campaigns across channels, segments and customers more nimbly and productively while ensuring consistency and uniformity of brand promise and branding elements.
•Digesting learningfromyear toyear, studytostudy, tac-tic to tactic, country to country, in a deliberate manner. institutionalizing the use of data analytics is essential if you are to better employ “big data” and turn it into action-
able insights and outputs. additionally, the transfer of best practice knowledge and experience to each team working on a brand can help elevate marketing performance and bring consistency and uniformity to marketing practices and results.
•Leveraginggrowingcustomerdiversityandbringingalongdifferent customer segments so the end result is a stronger but unified brand. this can help to encourage diverse advocates for the brand.
3. How good are your content strategy and curator skills? do you have your eye on creating content that is relevant, that helps customers learn and make decisions? are you still think-ing you can fool consumers with your messages vs. what they want to know?
this is the age of earned media, seth godin’s definition of “remarkable content” is how winning brands create rel-evance and spur action. it’s the door to the personalization that customers now expect. Content is no longer a tactic, it has become a brand’s lifeblood. Champion marketers are inventing and adjusting content strategy every day, knowing that con-tent creation and delivery – when done well – are competitive levers that harness and nurture loyal fans.
“people see more than 34 billion bits of information per day – an equivalent of two books a day.” [from the book “the 24-hour Customer.”] exhausted consumers don’t have tools to filter information down to the most useful bits with minimal effort. how much are you genuinely helping them navigate exploding information? are you succeeding in deep-ening your relationships with customers?
Where do you fall on the “selling” vs. “valuable educating” continuum through customers’ eyes? in today’s increasingly open, digital, and social environment, the more companies can focus on conversations, and providing some give and take between writer and reader, the greater the opportunity to get closer to your customers and build deeper relationships. dtC Market-ers are forewarned not to turn “content marketing” into what shel israel calls “message mongering”: just another way to get the message out. rather, use it to listen to what your audience wants and needs – let them make you smarter. that is the win for the 2013 dtC champ. DTC
Ellen Hoenig-Carlson is founder of AdvanceMarketWoRx, a consulting firm known for powering consumer and healthcare brand growth, through traditional and non-traditional marketing, leverag-ing critical customer interpretations and insights at key points. Voted among the 25 most powerful marketing executives by Advertising Age magazine in 1999 and 2000, Hoenig-Carlson is experienced domes-tically and globally in developed and emerging markets. She has led consistently in the field of DTC/P marketing since the August 1997 change in FDA regulations permitting mass DTC. She can be reached by telephone at (609) 333-0549, via her blog at blog.advancemarket-worx.com, or Twitter @ellenhoenig.
B R A N D C H A M P I O N S
20 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss MeWhy We Need to Re-Humanize Digital DTC
As pharma marketers contend with historically low brand growth, declining sales rep and media effectiveness and many post-ACA unknowns, there is growing pressure on DTC to drive high sustainable impact at lower cost and with lower risk. Where then, is the untapped opportunity in digital DTC? It is in more human ideas that move consumers to seek real, meaningful, emotional connections with our brands.
by reiD Connolly
Remember discussing whether digital will replace human interactions or supplement them?
while the digital vs. human debate is so five years ago, it is unarguable that digital has changed everything we do, how we think and how fast we react, to the point where we are – as users, consumers, patients and business people – much more efficient, a little more mechanical, and somewhat less soft.
even digital dtC has been peppered with this residue. despite the layering of feelings patients experience with regard to their health, our digital campaigns are not exempt from being unemotional, sterile and flat. Do you have chronic pain? Click here for questions to ask your doctor. Do you have questions about vaccines? Click here. action-inducing copy these are, but they don’t make you feel, cry, commit.
Start at the objectivewhat do we want dtC consumers to do? to respond to
our campaigns or to remember us forever?well, the direct response vs. Branding question is really a
worthless one, because as marketers, everything we do today is direct response. every piece of marketing we release is designed to get a response. an ad drives a site visit. a site visit drives a registration. a registration drives an email view. an email view drives a video forward. a forward drives several likes.
But even though communication should be, by definition per seth godin, the transfer of emotion, not everything is designed to drive an emotion, especially in digital dtC today.
Why the premium on emotion?
a) Simple findability: in a medium that is even more bill-boarded than Las vegas on a good night, truly remark-able purple cow-like executions help your brand break through the clutter. think about your own web searches, inboxes, phone apps, social activity: there is so much you want to do that it takes something truly personal, antici-pated, and relevant to sway you away.
b) Staying power: Communications that evoke emotion go beyond eliciting a single response. they have the power to engage, to stimulate discussion and interaction, to deeply persuade and to be remembered, ad infinitum. the american express shop small campaign is a power-ful example of a campaign that struck a primal chord and drove a real public sentiment, rallying consumers, retail-ers, and public officials to not just change the way they act but also the way they feel. amortize that over a per-son’s lifetime and you get a fat, hefty roi.
c) Because the alternative could destroy us: there is a more subtle and deeper aspect to the importance of the human in health. Celebrity author and stanford physician
DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013 | 21
dr. abraham verghese has grappled publicly with our growing dependence on technology in the healthcare set-ting, and has widely advocated what he calls the “power-ful, old-fashioned tool of human touch.” describing the deficit of a human dimension during his own stay at a hospital, he writes, “the computer records what i call an ‘ipatient’ – and this ipatient threatens to become the real focus of our attention, while the real patient in the bed often feels neglected, a mere placeholder for the virtual record.”1
has digital marketing, with its relentless focus on consum-er direct response, driven our consumers to become mere placeholders for clicks, registrations, and downloads?
Four digital handicapsin the era of social connections and facebook, how can we
accuse digital of being anti-human?thanks to digital communications, many more consum-
ers than ever before will encounter our ads, interact with our content, review user feedback, and talk to their doctor about our brands. Consumer access to health information is at an all time high of 80% of all adult internet users, while access to other people’s commentary or experience about health or medical issues is up to 34% of all adult internet users.2 so yes, with social media, the digital channel has enabled more human interaction and fostered more touch points than could be pos-sible with a tv or direct mail campaign.
But the digital communications we do control (display, search, email, mobile, pharma-sponsored social), are handi-capped by four issues that are keeping our efforts from reach-ing their full potential:
1) Content-heavy medium: digital has always been considered a content-heavy medium. for pharma prod-ucts with complicated messaging, this has been a safe haven, where we can hold patients’ hands and lead them through to a decision. the tradeoff though is that we lead with functional benefits at the cost of the emotional.
2) Micro-targeting: as we get more sophisticated with targeting and “thin slicing,” our collective focus is turn-ing to “big data,” segmentation, operations, and analytics, with consumer insights and the “big idea” commanding less and less of a role in marketing decision-making.
3) Technology blindness: we’re enamored with the technology. our management is enamored with the technology. at least 70% of product directors we have talked to have received a call from management asking for their pinterest/twitter/foursquare/tumblr/insta-gram strategy. digital marketing is becoming about the utility, not the user.
4) Regulatory limitations: we can’t avoid the elephant in the room – regulatory. every dtC marketer has had
at least one instance of being told they needed to pull back on an execution due to limited space, dynamic experience, or two-way interactions. Marketers now assume that much of the dimensionality of the digital experience has been taken off the table, leaving very little room for magic. it is common practice now, too often, to use regulatory as a reason to rationalize medio-cre work.
Has digital marketing, with its relentless focus on consumer direct response, driven our consumers to become mere placeholders for
clicks, registrations, and downloads?
The changing face of “human”the reason re-humanizing digital dtC is a provocative
idea is not only because we marketers are falling short of paying off on the emotional, but because what is emotion-ally-resonant has dramatically changed. i was watching the rockefeller Center Christmas tree lighting celebration last november (on tv). Mariah Carey was up on stage singing in all her resplendent resplendence. the camera panned across the audience: one out of every two people was watching Mimi through the screen of his camera phone. not interacting with the queen of r&B, not experiencing the bulk of her vocal presence in the here and now, but recording it for later, for posting, for likes. there is a new human face of digital, and really, a new digital face of human. the role brands play in peoples’ lives will change. digital marketers need to notice.
Playing to digital’s strengthsfollowing are three approaches to make digital communi-
cations more present, and more real.
1) Content: Tie educational content closer to the in-person experience
according to multiple studies done by Millward Brown and Manhattan research, the in-person and very human doctor-patient conversation is still the most influential source of information relating to drug brands. and per healthtalker’s andrew Levitt, in his article on word of Mouth Marketing in the last issue of this very publica-tion3, in person, offline conversations between consumers constitute 90% of conversations about brands.
the closer we can integrate consumer content on our educational websites and our digital/social/mobile efforts to the in-person experience, the more alive and therefore more influential our content. Borrow credibility from physicians. help simulate the doctor conversation. facili-tate in-person advocacy or educational meetings. help with documenting patient histories. help with transport
R E - H U M A N I Z I N G D I G I TA L
ADVERTISING AWARDS
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aw
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ds
2
01
3New categories include “Most Innovative Campaign” and
“Best PR Event or Program”, plus additional category divisions such as Branded TV – Large Brand, Branded TV – Small.
For full entry details, please visit the Awards tab on www.dtcperspectives.com.Please call the DTC Perspectives offi ce at 973-521-7475 with questions.
Enter the 2013 DTC National Advertising Awards – Now With Expanded Categories
Act Now! Entry Deadline – January 31st
2013
22 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
R E - H U M A N I Z I N G D I G I TA L
to or m-connectivity with a doctor. the space is vast and the needs are many.
2) Customization: Targeted messages that actually make a difference
with growing investments in talent, systems and infra-structure, today’s marketers have, according to a study by iBM, more consumer data at their disposal than they can cope with, yet the vast majority of it goes unanalyzed and unused. in other words, we’re expending our resources on data gathering, at the expense of other aspects of mar-keting, but we’re not using it. double whammy.
Most, if not all, dtC marketers have segmented their dtC population and are delivering tailored communica-tions to target segments. But, for ease of MLr approval, we create boilerplate templates, and selectively swap out chunks of copy, imagery, or calls to action under the banner of tailoring.
we understand, for the most part, what makes our con-sumers tick, but because of the cost of design, burden of approval and complexity of operations, we don’t neces-sarily carry this comprehension through to communica-tions development. here’s the truth though: being more attuned to consumers’ emotional interplay is not more expensive, not harder to approve, and just as complex an operation. all it takes is thinking about it differently.
3) User Experience
as i said earlier, digital communications need to be about the user, not the utility. our industry has fine-tuned interface design, usability, and even persona develop-ment; but in this multi-channel world of three-eight screens, we need to raise the bar on user experience.
here’s my doctrine on user experience:
•User experience is not user interface. it is more than aesthetics and call-to-action placement. it is a holistic discipline, with a heavy strategic component, and multi-disciplinary responsibility.
•Technologyisthemeansnottheend. to quote a brand marketer from Coke, “digital is the experience, not the venue.” Location-based services are great only if consumers really need retail-specific promotions or doctor office specific information. “what’s our pinter-est strategy?” is not a legitimate question. “how are we relevant to our advocates’ advocates?” is.
•Less ‘user,’ more ‘experience.’ i may have said that communications need to be about the user. But a big mistake many of us user-centric marketers make is that we over-emphasize the user and forget about the experience – resulting in a static understanding of the consumer and point-in-time program design. Chal-
lenge your creatives to really think through what this
consumer viscerally wants, needs and will spark to.
•Don’tassumeyouknow. if you assume you know
what your consumers want, chances are you’re wrong.
take the time to work with real people. a few rela-
tionships now will yield millions post program launch.
The reason re-humanizing digital DTC is a provocative idea is not only because we
marketers are falling short of paying off on the emotional, but because what is emotionally-
resonant has dramatically changed.
What you can’t say, sing!i’m enamored with these lyrics:
Hold me, hold me
Never let me go
Until you’ve told me, told me
What I want to know
And then just hold me, hold me
Make me tell you I’m in love with you
i’ve spent a lot of time with health consumers. this is
exactly what i hear them saying they want from us marketers
(sans the poetry and 50’s sentiment).
other industries do this. soap. hotels. phone services.
phones. But health is as human as it gets. the stakes are simply
higher for us. dtC marketers need to, to borrow from apple,
“think different.” we need to re-think human and re-think
digital. if we think about digital dtC in a different way, we
will do it differently. Let’s use technology to hold and thrill
our consumers. it is well within our reach. DTC
References1 abraham verghese, treat the patient, not the Ct scan, The New York Times,
published: february 26, 2011
2 the social Life of health information, 2011, pew internet & american Life
project
3 the surprising science Behind word of Mouth Marketing, andrew Levitt,
DTC Perspectives, fall 2012
Reid Connolly brings more than 15 years of experience in the inte-grated healthcare marketing field. As CEO, he is responsible for driv-ing evoke’s strategic vision and partnering with clients to develop rich, insight-driven strategies that shift brand business. Prior to founding evoke, Reid has held numerous senior and executive leadership roles with agencies such as Digitas Health, imc2, and Saatchi & Saatchi Healthcare. He can be contacted via reid.connolly@evokeinteraction.com.
ADVERTISING AWARDS
ad
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rt
is
in
g
aw
ar
ds
2
01
3
New categories include “Most Innovative Campaign” and “Best PR Event or Program”, plus additional category divisions such as
Branded TV – Large Brand, Branded TV – Small.
For full entry details, please visit the Awards tab on www.dtcperspectives.com.Please call the DTC Perspectives offi ce at 973-521-7475 with questions.
Enter the 2013 DTC National Advertising Awards – Now With Expanded Categories
Act Now! Entry Deadline – January 31st
2013
24 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
Make Sense of Your Multichannel Data:Developing a One-to-One Patient Relationship
The need for a data-driven, integrated marketing strategy is more relevant than ever. Marketers face pressure to optimize within ever-shrinking budgets, while moving from a siloed, tactic-driven strategy to a fully integrated patient experience that creates high-value one-to-one relationships. To get there, one must understand the latest technology available, identify data sets to gather insight, and garner internal support.
by elinor soriano & erik PrinCe
There has been a dramatic shift within the past few years in how consumer marketers are using multichannel data to communicate with patients. Marketers are faced
with the challenge of building a one-to-one relationship with patients in a landscape of patent expirations, shift towards generic medications and shrinking advertising and promotional budgets. Creating a brand strategy that optimizes the channel mix, derived from multichannel data brand insights, will allow marketers to create a personalized dialogue with patients and increase engagement in market conditions that make getting through to patients more important than ever.
Proliferation of channels & dataMarketers have an astounding breadth of online and offline
channels to choose from when creating an ideal marketing mix. digital channels continue to grow in number and com-plexity, even as many offline channels remain on the table. a recent Manhattan research survey of 8,745 u.s. adults found that 73% of u.s. adults (ages 18 and older) use online health information and tools, and new research finds that these resources are shaping consumers’ choices of health products and services. from those adults who use online health infor-mation and tools, 54% say the online information or tools have influenced their choice of healthcare providers, treatments, and services.
these many sources, while adding complexity, also increase the ability for marketers to connect with the types of tools, resources and messaging that matter to patients. Being able to interpret the types of data that can be derived both online and offline within the organization’s data privacy parameters is essential to developing one-to-one relationships with patients. patient channel preferences, opted-in email address, online tracking of tools and resource downloads can help marketers drive a patient experience with brands that are unique and per-sonalized – beyond traditional push messaging based on aggre-gate market research.
Prioritize & leverage multichannel datasorting through consumer data that is available can be
daunting. a first step is taking an inventory of tactics that capture explicit opt-in data (which may require working with your organization’s legal team and their interpretation of the privacy policy as it relates to the tactic) and determining which of these data sets can be applied to create a two-way dialogue.
in order to organize the multichannel data to gain brand insight, a marketer should have the target patient’s behavioral pathway mapped out. the questions to ask when developing a patient behavioral pathway are:
•Howdoesapatientfindoutabouttheirdiseasestatepre-doctor’s office visit?
DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013 | 25
D I S T I L L I N G M U LT I C H A N N E L D ATA
•Howdoes thepatienthave thedialoguewith thephysi-cian regarding medication to be prescribed? what drives the patient to get to the pharmacy to fill the initial pre-scription?
•What factors weigh in regarding the patient staying onthat prescription or switching to a competitor product?
•What keeps a patient compliant on that prescription forthe length of time it is prescribed?
once a marketer has a patient behavioral pathway mapped out, they can identify which opted-in information could be used during each stage. identifying the types of opted-in patient data can also help the marketer identify other influ-encers within the patient’s behavioral pathway, for example, caregivers that are responsible for administering the patient’s prescription. (see related sidebar below.)
once these types of opted-in information are identified, marketers can consolidate that data into an integrated data management platform to derive segments and plan personal-ized online and offline campaigns based on the patient’s prefer-ences. data integration allows for a patient marketing strategy that is not only more personalized, but also focuses advertising and promotional dollars on messaging and channels that matter to the patient. By integrating this information, marketers can focus a&p dollars on the tactics that gain the most return on investment, moving from a “push,” tactic-focused strategy to an integrated two-way patient dialogue focused on the right messaging at the right time. (see figure 1.)
The role of enabling technology for marketingfor the past 20 years pharmaceutical companies have spared
no expense building technology capabilities that support the
sales force – be they sales force automation systems, reporting tools or ipads. Meanwhile the marketing function has been significantly underserved in most organizations, operating without sufficient tools to manage their data, deliver integrated campaigns, or gather insights necessary for optimization.
this is changing as marketing becomes increasingly data-driven as well as more influential within organizations. as a result, there is currently a major shift taking place toward investment in marketing capabilities. according to gartner, by 2017 CMos will spend more on technology than Cios. this means marketers need to understand the current technology landscape, particularly tools that enable them to develop a 360 degree of the patient, personalize content or trigger messaging to keep the patient engaged, and garner insights to drive seg-ments and campaign optimization.
Marketers can then work with the players inside and out-side their organization that can help them leverage enabling technology to implement an integrated marketing strategy. these may include commercial operations, digital/multichan-nel centers of excellence, it, and agency partners.
Understanding the technology landscapethe integrated/multichannel marketing space offers a num-
ber of different solutions each of which has a fit in different organizations and/or situations.
•Cloud-Based/Software-as-a-Service(SaaS)Platforms: Cloud-based, software as a service solutions are gener-
ally designed for fast implementation, flexible to scale and provides broad access. there is no hardware to procure or lengthy development timelines. frequent software upgrades mean marketers have the latest tools and func-
Examples of Explicit Opted-In Information that May be Used* (refer to your organization’s data privacy policy)
Branded Websites: Opt-In for a patient to register online. if the site includes registration, a mar-keter can track unique patient information such as web engagement on certain areas of the web-site, downloads of patient education tools/PDFs, interaction with cost-comparison tools, etc.
Third-Party Sites (such as WebMD, Quality Health): Banner ads, other online ads that drive to online branded patient registration page.
Patient Social Media Communities: Banner ads, etc. that drive to an online branded patient reg-istration page.
Healthcare Associations [such as the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF), Ameri-can Health Association]: opt-ins during a patient conference to receive more information about your product.
Patient Loyalty Programs, Savings Cards and Voucher Programs: opt-ins when a patient regis-ters via online registration or business reply card into a patient savings card/voucher program or an ongoing program.
26 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
D I S T I L L I N G M U LT I C H A N N E L D ATA
tionality to gain a competitive advantage. this is ideal for those marketers who would like to be in control of multichannel campaign planning, execution and insights without having to rely on internal systems or traditional technology providers.
Pros: agile, flexible, allows data management, campaign execution and business intelligence to be placed in hands of marketers and partners through real-time application, can be easily integrated with other data sources, systems (e.g., sales force automation), and vendor programs.
Cons: Less flexible for extensive customization, need to ensure appropriate resources are in place to drive cam-paigns using the technology, either through internal resources or by professional services partner.
•Commercial IT: Onsite Data Warehouse and EnterpriseMarketing Software
on-site physical data warehouses and marketing tech-nologies require that organizations have the infrastructure and resources to build and maintain a system. the initial implementation can be quite lengthy and costly. organi-zations that go this route are usually interested in leverag-ing internal assets and want to hold on to all intellectual property, with strong belief that the data and systems are safer if it resides internally. these solutions often leverage older technologies, require extensive customization, and
are slower to evolve. Pros: all of the multichannel data can be controlled
internally, no reliance on third-parties; allows for exten-sive customization of systems.
Cons: extensive internal it resources required to main-tain, often leverages older technologies which are not as agile to respond to market events, multiple software pack-ages must be integrated to create fully-functional platform, upgrades and new features may require long cycle times.
•Marketing Service Providers that Bundle Technology andServices
Marketing service providers (Msps) both build and main-tain the technology (typically systems that are similar to the enterprise it platforms described above) and also provide staff to run the systems and campaign programs on a full-service basis. Msps are often used by large orga-nizations that don’t want to rely on internal it teams and can afford the higher costs for implementation and ongoing support. these organizations may not prioritize having direct access to their data nor have a strong pref-erence in the technologies used (technology-agnostic). the solution often involves integrating different toolsets (campaign planning and management, business intelligence and reporting) which can be a weak link if not built with a long-term vision in mind. the organization’s primary
Figure 1: The Roadmap to Relationship Marketing
Figure from Appature Relationship Marketing Roadmap (Consumer Relationship Marketing)
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D I S T I L L I N G M U LT I C H A N N E L D ATA
focus is having a dedicated team of people that will take
their direction and execute accordingly.
Pros: dedicated account teams to execute campaigns,
provide reporting. Customized/complex multichannel
marketing systems can be built.
Cons: Leverage enterprise it technologies (see afore-
mentioned pros/cons), data typically stored within the
Msp’s data warehouse which can limit direct and fast
access to data for marketers, inability to change service
providers if dissatisfied due to “lock in” with Msp tech-
nology platform and data warehousing.
Change management: ‘Selling’ internallyChange management is often the most neglected aspect of
changing to a data-driven environment and often the one that
prevents it from being successful. Marketers need to under-
stand that there are processes that need to change and that
people will be impacted. the changes often run the gamut
from getting data faster to reviewing marketing materials in an
accelerated manner. Marketers need to reach out early on in
the project to gain the support and input from those that will
play a role in supporting the change, no matter how minor.
Marketers should take the needs and constraints of other
departments into consideration because what might seem like
a clear win for them might not be seen in the same light by
others.
Putting it all togetherMaking sense of your multichannel data and integrating
into relationship marketing tools and strategies that work for
your brand and your organization requires commitment and
effort. however, focusing on the right enablers – understand-
ing which data are available to use to make informed decisions,
utilizing technology solutions that help manage data, execute
campaigns and provide patient insight, and garnering inter-
nal support within your organization – will help move you
towards developing a unique patient experience with your
brand and driving one-to-one relationships. DTC
Elinor Soriano is an Engagement Manager at Appature with over 11 years of pharmaceutical marketing industry experience. Prior to joining Appature, Elinor was been responsible for consumer CRM strategy and execution for clients such AstraZeneca, Bayer and Sanofi-Aventis. Erik Prince is a Marketing Solution Architect with Appature where he brings 15 years experience in designing and devel-oping digital solutions for brand marketers to engage both patients and healthcare professionals. Prior to Appature, Erik was an IT Director of Innovation and New Customer Channels at Sanofi. Please contact Elinor and Erik at info@appature.com.
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DTC Perspectives • Spring 2012 | 17
The Holy Grail in DTC Advertising Measurement
Television is becoming a more accountable and measureable medium of promotion, largely due to advancements in digital technology. By using single-source data, marketers are better able to validate and optimize their DTC investments in television.
by FaRIba ZaMaNIyaN
Before a DTC commercial goes on-air, precedence of
how much and how often to expose the TV audi-
ence to your brand message has set the course for
how advertisers plan and then execute their investment.
Once in market, alignment to sales tracking along with cus-
tom research to survey consumer recall and intent to talk to
the doctor following ad exposure have been a primary means
to validate the impact of TV promotion and confi rm if the
investment has yielded a positive return on investment.
But as we continue to face downturn in discovery and
blockbuster drug launches compounded by a growing num-
ber of patent expirations taking over $500 million in ad
spending out of the equation, the pressure to prove the causal
relationship of DTC TV exposure on new patient acquisi-
tion and sales has magnifi ed. Once proven, the mandate to
increase sales for the same or less DTC budget now puts the
effi ciency of the TV media plan under the microscope.
Today, advancements in digital technology are making
television a more accountable and measureable medium
of promotion. The television set-top-box, which is pres-
ent in the majority of households across the U.S., has now
become a research vehicle. Second-by-second click stream
data digitally captured, aggregated (non-identifi able) and
then matched to aggregated and anonymized patient-level
data has now made single-source TV consumption and
behavioral data available to marketers in the prescription
drug industry among other leading categories advertised
(e.g., consumer packaged goods and automotive). This sin-
gle-source of information is a non-survey, non-recall based
approach that’s bringing the “holy grail” of ROI measure-
ment to reality because of the technological advancements
available today.
TRA, Inc. | Validate and Optimize the DTC TV Investment 1
The Holy Grail in DTC Advertising Measurement
Using single-‐source data to validate and optimize the DTC investment in TV
By Fariba Zamaniyan Senior Vice President
TRA, Inc.
Before a DTC commercial goes on-‐air, precedence of how much and how often to expose the TV audience to your brand message has set the course for how advertisers plan and then execute their investment. Once in market, alignment to sales tracking along with custom research to survey consumer recall and intent to talk to the doctor following ad exposure have been a primary means to validate the impact of TV promotion and confirm if the investment has yielded a positive return on investment.
But as we continue to face downturn in discovery and blockbuster drug launches compounded by a growing number of patent expirations taking over $500 million in ad spending out of the equation, the pressure to prove the causal relationship of DTC TV exposure on new patient acquisition and sales has magnified. Once proven, the mandate to increase sales for the same or less DTC budget now puts the efficiency of the TV media plan under the microscope.
Today, advancements in digital technology are making television a more accountable and measureable medium of promotion. The television set-‐top-‐box which is present in the majority of households across the U.S. has now become a research vehicle. Second-‐by-‐second click stream data digitally captured, aggregated (non-‐identifiable) and then matched to aggregated and anonymized patient-‐level data
has now made single-‐source TV consumption and behavioral data available to marketers in the prescription drug industry among other leading categories advertised (e.g. consumer packaged goods and automotive). This single-‐source of information is a non-‐survey, non-‐recall based approach that’s bringing the “holy grail” of ROI measurement to reality because of the technological advancements available today.
Therefore, it is well poised to define the success of a DTC TV ad campaign:
1. Quantify the causal affect of advertising on sales.
• How many new patients and incremental prescriptions were acquired by the brand following ad exposure?
2. Quantify the effectiveness of the media plan on this performance.
• How much media weight was required to affect this performance? • How did the flight plan support or depress the speed of new patient acquisition? • How efficient was the programming selected to reach the actual patient audience?
In order to secure a place within the brand budget, marketers must validate television’s impact on prescription drug sales. Even with
TV Exposure Second-‐by-‐Second Set-‐
Top-‐Box Data
Rx Behavior Aggregated
and Anonymous
Pa[ent-‐Level Data
DTCP_0312.indd 17 3/28/12 3:02 PM
PROVEN SALES LIFTMEASURABLE ROITARGETED MEDIA
Patient-Centric Marketing viaSpecialty Point-of-Care Networks
Awareness:
1 million patients arewatching each month
Compliance:
94% of patients arepurchasing products
immediately
Action and Acquisition:
51% of patients areasking their HCP
PROVEN SALES LIFTMEASURABLE ROITARGETED MEDIA
Patient-Centric Marketing viaSpecialty Point-of-Care Networks
Awareness:
1 million patients arewatching each month
Compliance:
94% of patients arepurchasing products
immediately
Action and Acquisition:
51% of patients areasking their HCP
PROVEN SALES LIFTMEASURABLE ROITARGETED MEDIA
Patient-Centric Marketing viaSpecialty Point-of-Care Networks
Awareness:
1 million patients arewatching each month
Compliance:
94% of patients arepurchasing products
immediately
Action and Acquisition:
51% of patients areasking their HCP
Patient-Centric Marketing Via Specialty Point-of-Care Networks
Awareness:Millions of patients are watching each month1
Action and Acquisition:
51% of patients are asking their HCP2
Compliance:94% of patients are purchasing products
immediately3
1. Monthly Affidavits, 2010. 2. Deibler Consulting, 2008. 3. Audits & Surveys Worldwide, 2001
ContextMedia owns and operates a portfolio of the largest condition-specific in-office digital networks
For more information, contact:Shradha Agarwal,
Chief Marketing Officer312.239.6656
shradha.a@contextmediainc.com
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1115a-CM_DTC_Ad_7'11.indd 1 7/28/11 11:13 PM
R E V I E W
Top 20 Promoting Brands Post Significant Increase in 2011Lipitor, Cymbalta Held Respective Top Spots Throughout Year
Media Type 2010 2011 $ Change % Change
62% Television $2,454,711,781 $2,417,753,863 -$36,957,918 -1.5%
31% Magazine $1,202,459,080 $1,210,586,441 $8,127,361 0.7%
6% Newspaper $236,489,957 $243,331,835 $6,841,878 2.9%
1% Radio $51,253,012 $35,125,883 -$16,127,129 -31.5%
0% Outdoor $3,784,790 $1,841,888 -$1,942,902 -51.3%
Grand Total $4,445,695,163 $4,432,648,830 -$13,046,333 -0.3%
Source: Nielsen for DTC Perspectives
Nielsen is the leader in innovative advertising information services and tracks advertising activity across 18 media types. For more information, send an email to Marisa Grimes at Marisa.Grimes@nielsen.com.
0%1%
6%
31%62%
Overall DTC Spend Drops Minimally in 2011 Media Market Shares Remain Constant
NOTe: excludes Internet Advertising
Brand Manufacturer 2010 2011 $ Change % Change
Lipitor Pfizer $250,331,453 $220,823,562 -$29,507,891 -11.8%
Cymbalta (Pain) Lilly USA $0 $166,165,453 $166,165,453 N/A
Cialis Lilly USA $178,886,984 $143,765,922 -$35,121,062 -19.6%
Abilify Bristol-Myers/Otsuka America $131,462,953 $131,242,141 -$220,812 -0.2%
Viagra Pfizer $103,787,648 $127,584,914 $23,797,266 22.9%
Celebrex Pfizer $34,196,914 $114,218,078 $80,021,164 234.0%
Pradaxa Boehringer Ingelheim $60,822 $108,893,188 $108,832,366 178,935.9%
Cymbalta (Depression) Lilly USA $190,943,859 $104,231,906 -$86,711,953 -45.4%
Lyrica Pfizer $99,228,195 $103,223,320 $3,995,125 4.0%
enbrel Amgen/Pfizer $37,882,656 $99,604,383 $61,721,727 162.9%
Pristiq Pfizer $122,749,023 $96,332,352 -$26,416,671 -21.5%
Seroquel XR AstraZeneca $22,528,814 $94,139,680 $71,610,866 317.9%
Uloric Takeda Pharmaceuticals $38,587,016 $93,583,531 $54,996,515 142.5%
Advair Diskus (COPD) GlaxoSmithKline $105,873,750 $81,959,648 -$23,914,102 -22.6%
Chantix Pfizer $100,222,625 $80,484,336 -$19,738,289 -19.7%
Spiriva Boehringer Ingelheim/Pfizer $68,250,055 $75,212,984 $6,962,929 10.2%
Crestor AstraZeneca $96,262,484 $61,864,316 -$34,398,168 -35.7%
Symbicort AstraZeneca $63,336,887 $58,599,594 -$4,737,293 -7.5%
Boniva Genentech/Roche $84,145,641 $54,078,711 -$30,066,930 -35.7%
Vimovo AstraZeneca $20,503,693 $53,692,973 $33,189,280 161.9%
Total Spending for Top 20 Brands $1,749,243,482 $2,069,703,003 $320,459,521 18.3%
Top Pharma Spending $4,445,695,163 $4,432,648,830 -$13,046,333 -0.3%
12 | DTC Perspectives • Spring 2012
DTCP_0312.indd 12 3/28/12 3:02 PM
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DTC Perspectives • Spring 2012 | 17
The Holy Grail in DTC Advertising Measurement
Television is becoming a more accountable and measureable medium of promotion, largely due to advancements in digital technology. By using single-source data, marketers are better able to validate and optimize their DTC investments in television.
by FaRIba ZaMaNIyaN
Before a DTC commercial goes on-air, precedence of
how much and how often to expose the TV audi-
ence to your brand message has set the course for
how advertisers plan and then execute their investment.
Once in market, alignment to sales tracking along with cus-
tom research to survey consumer recall and intent to talk to
the doctor following ad exposure have been a primary means
to validate the impact of TV promotion and confi rm if the
investment has yielded a positive return on investment.
But as we continue to face downturn in discovery and
blockbuster drug launches compounded by a growing num-
ber of patent expirations taking over $500 million in ad
spending out of the equation, the pressure to prove the causal
relationship of DTC TV exposure on new patient acquisi-
tion and sales has magnifi ed. Once proven, the mandate to
increase sales for the same or less DTC budget now puts the
effi ciency of the TV media plan under the microscope.
Today, advancements in digital technology are making
television a more accountable and measureable medium
of promotion. The television set-top-box, which is pres-
ent in the majority of households across the U.S., has now
become a research vehicle. Second-by-second click stream
data digitally captured, aggregated (non-identifi able) and
then matched to aggregated and anonymized patient-level
data has now made single-source TV consumption and
behavioral data available to marketers in the prescription
drug industry among other leading categories advertised
(e.g., consumer packaged goods and automotive). This sin-
gle-source of information is a non-survey, non-recall based
approach that’s bringing the “holy grail” of ROI measure-
ment to reality because of the technological advancements
available today.
TRA, Inc. | Validate and Optimize the DTC TV Investment 1
The Holy Grail in DTC Advertising Measurement
Using single-‐source data to validate and optimize the DTC investment in TV
By Fariba Zamaniyan Senior Vice President
TRA, Inc.
Before a DTC commercial goes on-‐air, precedence of how much and how often to expose the TV audience to your brand message has set the course for how advertisers plan and then execute their investment. Once in market, alignment to sales tracking along with custom research to survey consumer recall and intent to talk to the doctor following ad exposure have been a primary means to validate the impact of TV promotion and confirm if the investment has yielded a positive return on investment.
But as we continue to face downturn in discovery and blockbuster drug launches compounded by a growing number of patent expirations taking over $500 million in ad spending out of the equation, the pressure to prove the causal relationship of DTC TV exposure on new patient acquisition and sales has magnified. Once proven, the mandate to increase sales for the same or less DTC budget now puts the efficiency of the TV media plan under the microscope.
Today, advancements in digital technology are making television a more accountable and measureable medium of promotion. The television set-‐top-‐box which is present in the majority of households across the U.S. has now become a research vehicle. Second-‐by-‐second click stream data digitally captured, aggregated (non-‐identifiable) and then matched to aggregated and anonymized patient-‐level data
has now made single-‐source TV consumption and behavioral data available to marketers in the prescription drug industry among other leading categories advertised (e.g. consumer packaged goods and automotive). This single-‐source of information is a non-‐survey, non-‐recall based approach that’s bringing the “holy grail” of ROI measurement to reality because of the technological advancements available today.
Therefore, it is well poised to define the success of a DTC TV ad campaign:
1. Quantify the causal affect of advertising on sales.
• How many new patients and incremental prescriptions were acquired by the brand following ad exposure?
2. Quantify the effectiveness of the media plan on this performance.
• How much media weight was required to affect this performance? • How did the flight plan support or depress the speed of new patient acquisition? • How efficient was the programming selected to reach the actual patient audience?
In order to secure a place within the brand budget, marketers must validate television’s impact on prescription drug sales. Even with
TV Exposure Second-‐by-‐Second Set-‐
Top-‐Box Data
Rx Behavior Aggregated
and Anonymous
Pa[ent-‐Level Data
DTCP_0312.indd 17 3/28/12 3:02 PM
PROVEN SALES LIFTMEASURABLE ROITARGETED MEDIA
Patient-Centric Marketing viaSpecialty Point-of-Care Networks
Awareness:
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Compliance:
94% of patients arepurchasing products
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Action and Acquisition:
51% of patients areasking their HCP
PROVEN SALES LIFTMEASURABLE ROITARGETED MEDIA
Patient-Centric Marketing viaSpecialty Point-of-Care Networks
Awareness:
1 million patients arewatching each month
Compliance:
94% of patients arepurchasing products
immediately
Action and Acquisition:
51% of patients areasking their HCP
PROVEN SALES LIFTMEASURABLE ROITARGETED MEDIA
Patient-Centric Marketing viaSpecialty Point-of-Care Networks
Awareness:
1 million patients arewatching each month
Compliance:
94% of patients arepurchasing products
immediately
Action and Acquisition:
51% of patients areasking their HCP
Patient-Centric Marketing Via Specialty Point-of-Care Networks
Awareness:Millions of patients are watching each month1
Action and Acquisition:
51% of patients are asking their HCP2
Compliance:94% of patients are purchasing products
immediately3
1. Monthly Affidavits, 2010. 2. Deibler Consulting, 2008. 3. Audits & Surveys Worldwide, 2001
ContextMedia owns and operates a portfolio of the largest condition-specific in-office digital networks
For more information, contact:Shradha Agarwal,
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R E V I E W
Top 20 Promoting Brands Post Significant Increase in 2011Lipitor, Cymbalta Held Respective Top Spots Throughout Year
Media Type 2010 2011 $ Change % Change
62% Television $2,454,711,781 $2,417,753,863 -$36,957,918 -1.5%
31% Magazine $1,202,459,080 $1,210,586,441 $8,127,361 0.7%
6% Newspaper $236,489,957 $243,331,835 $6,841,878 2.9%
1% Radio $51,253,012 $35,125,883 -$16,127,129 -31.5%
0% Outdoor $3,784,790 $1,841,888 -$1,942,902 -51.3%
Grand Total $4,445,695,163 $4,432,648,830 -$13,046,333 -0.3%
Source: Nielsen for DTC Perspectives
Nielsen is the leader in innovative advertising information services and tracks advertising activity across 18 media types. For more information, send an email to Marisa Grimes at Marisa.Grimes@nielsen.com.
0%1%
6%
31%62%
Overall DTC Spend Drops Minimally in 2011 Media Market Shares Remain Constant
NOTe: excludes Internet Advertising
Brand Manufacturer 2010 2011 $ Change % Change
Lipitor Pfizer $250,331,453 $220,823,562 -$29,507,891 -11.8%
Cymbalta (Pain) Lilly USA $0 $166,165,453 $166,165,453 N/A
Cialis Lilly USA $178,886,984 $143,765,922 -$35,121,062 -19.6%
Abilify Bristol-Myers/Otsuka America $131,462,953 $131,242,141 -$220,812 -0.2%
Viagra Pfizer $103,787,648 $127,584,914 $23,797,266 22.9%
Celebrex Pfizer $34,196,914 $114,218,078 $80,021,164 234.0%
Pradaxa Boehringer Ingelheim $60,822 $108,893,188 $108,832,366 178,935.9%
Cymbalta (Depression) Lilly USA $190,943,859 $104,231,906 -$86,711,953 -45.4%
Lyrica Pfizer $99,228,195 $103,223,320 $3,995,125 4.0%
enbrel Amgen/Pfizer $37,882,656 $99,604,383 $61,721,727 162.9%
Pristiq Pfizer $122,749,023 $96,332,352 -$26,416,671 -21.5%
Seroquel XR AstraZeneca $22,528,814 $94,139,680 $71,610,866 317.9%
Uloric Takeda Pharmaceuticals $38,587,016 $93,583,531 $54,996,515 142.5%
Advair Diskus (COPD) GlaxoSmithKline $105,873,750 $81,959,648 -$23,914,102 -22.6%
Chantix Pfizer $100,222,625 $80,484,336 -$19,738,289 -19.7%
Spiriva Boehringer Ingelheim/Pfizer $68,250,055 $75,212,984 $6,962,929 10.2%
Crestor AstraZeneca $96,262,484 $61,864,316 -$34,398,168 -35.7%
Symbicort AstraZeneca $63,336,887 $58,599,594 -$4,737,293 -7.5%
Boniva Genentech/Roche $84,145,641 $54,078,711 -$30,066,930 -35.7%
Vimovo AstraZeneca $20,503,693 $53,692,973 $33,189,280 161.9%
Total Spending for Top 20 Brands $1,749,243,482 $2,069,703,003 $320,459,521 18.3%
Top Pharma Spending $4,445,695,163 $4,432,648,830 -$13,046,333 -0.3%
12 | DTC Perspectives • Spring 2012
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MAGAZINEVol. 11, No. 2 • Summer 2012
P E R S P E C T I V E S
T H E S O U R C E F O R D I R E C T T O C O N S U M E R T H O U G H T L E A D E R S
Regarded as one of the strongest DTC Nationals yet, discover insights and advice from the 2012 speaker
faculty in this special report
DTC NATIONAL CONFERENCE
September 13–14 See Ad on Page 2
Discover the Future of Digital Marketing
eDTC eDTC Revolution
The eDTC eDTC
The The
Join the Revolution!
POINT OF CARE: THE CORNERSTONEOF DTC STRATEGY
PERSONALIZATION:HEALTHCARE IS PERSONAL,SO SOCIAL MEDIA SHOULD BE
FAMILY CAREGIVERS:IF I MARKET TO THEM, WILL THEYSTILL RESPECT ME IN THE MORNING?
DTCP_0612.indd 1 7/25/12 1:34 PM
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30 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
As a trusted resource, pharmacists are uniquely positioned to support and encourage patients to properly adhere to their medication regimens. Through behavioral coaching and engagement, pharmacists can utilize branded or unbranded programs to provide a more thorough understanding of an illness and prescribed treatment.
by staCey irving
Adherence. Compliance. persistence. all terms asso-ciated with how well – or not – patients take their medications as prescribed.
while these terms are often used interchangeably, there are key differences that are relevant to encouraging patient engagement to drive lasting behavior change. Compliance typically implies treatment decisions that are physician-directed with a passive or unequal role for patients. however, adher-ence suggests a collaborative relationship between clinicians and patients and is more respectful of the role patients play in treatment decisions.
this collaboration, where the patient is involved in mak-ing and adhering to their own treatment decisions, is a criti-cal distinction. in order to maintain lifestyle changes and be adherent, patients must first be engaged and believe that they can do so.
Pharmacist-patient engagementthis article will explore how community pharmacists have
a unique opportunity to help patients adhere to their medi-cation regimens and improve outcomes through behavioral coaching and engagement, giving brands an effective channel to reach patients.
serving as trusted and accessible resources, pharmacists have the ability to engage with patients through targeted behavioral-based patient conversations delivered in the pharmacy. these conversations are designed to help patients better understand their disease or illness, the role and function of their medica-tion, and the importance of adherence.
Building on the benefits of this patient-centric approach, there are a growing number of opportunities for pharmacies to participate in branded and unbranded programs targeted at improving medication adherence, including pharmacist behav-ioral coaching sessions, pharmacy reminder programs, and rela-tionship marketing programs provided on behalf of the brand.
Engaging patients in a two-way conversation driven by the patients’ needs involves a shift in
approach for many pharmacists.
for example, Mckesson’s pharmacy intervention program found patients who received face-to-face behavioral coaching from their pharmacists showed significant adherence benefits. for example, Copd patients who received coaching showed an average of 1.6 incremental fills over 12 months and patients coached by top-performing pharmacies in multiple diabe-tes programs showed an average of 4 incremental refills over 18 months when compared to patients who did not receive behavioral coaching. it is also worth noting that a statistically significant difference still existed between intervention and control at the 18-month mark, which means a program can drive true and lasting behavior change for many patients.
Driving behavioral changehow is behavioral coaching different than legally required
counseling (e.g., oBra 90), and how can brands leverage this emerging channel to reach patients?
How Pharmacist and Patient Engagement Drives Behavior Change
(Continued on page 38)
DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013 | 31
Legally required counseling is essentially a one-way nar-rative in which a pharmacist describes side effects, dosing guidelines and other medication-specific information patients need. in contrast, behavioral coaching takes it a step further in encouraging a two-way, patient-led conversation to uncover barriers to adherence, express empathy, and offer personal support that results in a collaborative action plan to maximize adherence.
research shows that the use of behavioral techniques improves the likelihood of behavior change by 14 to 20%. (see table 1.)
Evolution of the pharmacisthaving strong relationships with their customers, more
and more pharmacists are actively engaged in helping support patient adherence. they perceive adherence programs as a way to not only improve patient care, but also to provide additional revenue from sales and reimbursements and differentiate the pharmacist and pharmacy’s services.
as pharmacists and pharmacy owners are embracing their expanded clinical role, many are adding patient-support servic-es and making physical changes to the pharmacy to accommo-date more personalized, one-on-one interactions and counsel-ing. for example, many health Mart® independent pharmacy franchises are creating more discrete consultation rooms and mini clinics. this new pharmacy design allows for product demonstrations and confidential adherence coaching, and sup-ports a variety of clinical-services solutions such as executing MtM (medication therapy management) or other alternative revenue opportunities.
in addition to being an active participant in the pharmacy intervention program, Christine Jacobson, owner, wasatch
pharmacy Care in ogden, utah, also offers a counseling pro-gram for patients seeking individualized informational sessions with her on topics ranging from the advantages of natural hormone replacement, to concerns over sexual dysfunction, to questions regarding medications for depression and pain man-agement, and to options for combatting aging. Jacobson meets with six to seven patients per day in hour-long sessions to dis-cuss their healthcare concerns in detail and is booked several months out.
Building a network of trained pharmacistsChristine Jacobson and others like her are leaders in this
new era of pharmacist-based behavioral outreach. But just as no two patients are the same, pharmacists have different levels of interest and training in applying behavioral techniques.
Building an effective pharmacist network that presents brands the opportunity to build relationships with pharmacies and reach patients to drive behavior change requires ongoing training and the ability to operate within the normal phar-macy workflow. integrating with pharmacy software to alert pharmacists to sponsored clinical opportunities, established networks provide comprehensive training, and many include compensation for offering behavioral coaching sessions to help patients overcome adherence barriers, enrolling patients in sav-ings programs, and providing information about clinical trials to eligible patients.
patients are often told what to do by healthcare profes-sionals without being asked their opinion and these practitio-ners rarely look for barriers that may impact patients’ success. engaging patients in a two-way conversation driven by the patients’ needs involves a shift in approach for many pharma-cists. however, pharmacists able to engage in collaborative, patient-centered conversations are proven to be more effective at bringing about and strengthening the motivation for change.
in a busy pharmacy, it can be difficult to sit down with patients for lengthy consultations. proven motivational inter-viewing techniques, such as using open-ended questions, help focus the conversation. reframing questions helps pharmacists gain knowledge about the patient’s attitudes and approach to his or her medication therapy. (see table 2.)
when the patient reveals insights and information, pharma-cists are then able to uncover adherence barriers and help the patient create a plan for his or her medication therapy. this contributes to an effective coaching session, which inspires positive health behaviors that may be measured in additional refill rates from more-adherent patients.
as pharmacists elicit information, they can more effec-tively probe to uncover potential barriers to medication adherence, monitor the patient’s progress, and look for ways to reinforce adherence in subsequent conversations. they may also gain insight in how to engage the patient and help
P H A R M A C I S T C O A C H I N G
Table 1: Behavioral Coaching Benefits
Benefit Description
Positive Clinical outcomes
encourage patients to self-mon-itor (e.g., blood pressure, blood glucose monitoring)
enhanced Patient engagement
increase knowledge, confidence and skills for self-management
increased Positive Coping strategies
increase the likelihood that pa-tients will incorporate healthier behaviors, such as diet and exer-cise, into their daily routine
Perceived social support
Provide patients with psychoso-cial support that they need to change behavior
source: Wolever r. et al. (2010). “integrative Health Coaching for Patients with type ii Diabetes: a randomized Clinical trial.” The Diabetes Educator. 36:629.
32 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
Four More DTC PioneersJoin the DTC Hall of FameDTC Perspectives proudly welcomed four outstanding executives into the DTC Hall of Fame for their significant achievements in advancing DTC communications. The 2012 members are: Deborah Dick-Rath, CEO & Founder ofEpic Proportions LLC; Stu Klein, Healthcare Prac-tice Lead at Interpublic; Don Lowy, President & Founder of Donald Lowy Consulting; Sheri Stump, Senior Marketing Director, Pediatric ADHD, Behavioral Health Business Unit with Shire.
The honorees were joined by their peers for the DTC Hall of Fame Induction Cer-emony, a part of the eDTC Revolution Conference. Evening festivities included a celebratory cocktail party followed by the formal ceremony. Each Hall of Famer re-ceived a personal introduction from close peer from the industry, as well as a video presentation of colleagues honoring them with personal anecdotes and words of praise. (Full-length videos can be found on our website, www.dtcperspectives.com, under the Hall of Fame portion of our Awards section.) Profiles of the 2012 mem-bers appear on the subsequent pages.
The DTC Hall of Fame is designed to honor individuals who have demonstrated extraordinary achievement in the advancement of DTC marketing. Industry-wide nominations are collected and then reviewed by the DTC Perspectives’ Advisory Board, a select group of industry experts who serve as counsel. Together with the DTC Perspectives’ staff, the final four inductees are selected. Candidates may be current or retired, must have at least five years of experience, and can be from all sectors of the industry: pharmaceutical manufacturer, agency, media channel, DTC service provider, DDMAC, and academia.
Previous recipients of this distinguished honor are: (from the inaugural 2008 class) Jim Davidson of Polsinelli Shughart PC, Matt Giegerich of Ogilvy CommonHealth Worldwide, Ed Slaughter of Merck & Co., and Len Tacconi of Merck & Co.; (2009 class) Herb Ehren-thal of Herb Ehrenthal, LLC and formerly Schering-Plough, Paula Garrett of Lilly USA, Joe Hoholick of Amgen, and Lucy Rose of Lucy Rose & Associates and formerly DDMAC/FDA; (2010 class) Minnie Baylor-Henry of Johnson & Johnson and formerly DDMAC, Scott Grenz of GlaxoSmithKline, Andrew Schirmer of McCann HumanCare, and Dorothy Wetzel of Ex-trovertic; (2011 class) Mark Bard, Executive Director and Co-Founder of the Digital Health Coalition; Bill Drummy, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Heartbeat Ideas; Joan Mikar-dos, Senior Director, Digital Center of Excellence with Sanofi-Aventis; and Nancy Phelan, VP, Customer Strategy and Operations at Bristol-Myers Squibb.
Congratulations to our DTC Hall of Fame inductees!
Hall of Fame
Deborah Dick-Rath
Stu Klein
Don Lowy
Sheri Stump
DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013 | 33
D T C H A L L O F FA M E
34 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
D T C H A L L O F FA M E
she instituted best practices and provided exper-tise on various topics, from brand development to media strategy to agency management. Her knowl-edge allowed Novartis’ brand teams and agency partners to opt imize performance from pi tch through execution. With numerous industry awards under her belt for creating integrated campaigns as well as an innovative advertising platform, Deborah helped position Novartis as a DTC advertising pow-erhouse. In addition, she led the firm’s first global media agency selection as well as collaborating with her team to craft internal media and produc-tion guidelines to help drive campaign efficiencies. The success of her initiatives helped earn her a position representing Novartis on PhRMA’s initial DTC Guideline committee.
After eight years with Novartis, Deborah moved to Symphony Advanced Media as Senior Vice President of Healthcare Solutions. Utilizing her
background in optimization and strategy, she helped her clients obtain real marketing account-ability through measurement of cross-channel campaign ROI. In May of 2012, she branched out on her own, founding the healthcare communications consultancy, Epic Proportions “to help healthcare brands and their agencies get the biggest piece of the pie by creating dynamic messaging and optimal, integrated media mix.” Unques-tionably we all look forward to the innovative tactics she’ll continue to unveil.
Optimizing theMedia MixWith a knack for creating dynamic messaging, Deborah
Dick-Rath has an unparalleled understanding of strategy,
insight and measurement that uniquely positions her.
By DTC Perspectives staff
Drawing from more than 25 years of healthcare marketing experience, Deborah Dick-Rath is an established pioneer in the DTC industry.
Having started on the ground floor when DTC was first allowed in the 1990s, she has crafted quite the accomplished career path, as seen through her inspiring, insight-based communications.
Prior to DTC marketing’s inception, Deborah worked in the OTC industry, beginning her career at the William Esty Company working with such cli-ents as Unilever, Colgate and Wyeth (now Pfizer). She moved over to the Wyeth brand team, holding the title of Group Product Manager. Here, she was responsible for several OTC brand launches as well as repositioning brands within their Family Planning and Cough-Cold franchises. In 1994, she signed on with Bates Worldwide as Senior Vice President, Management Representative, leading strategy for Carter products and supervising special projects for Warner-Lambert.
Deborah made the leap over to DTC in 1996, starting at one of the first DTC-focused specialty agen-cies in the industry, The Quantum Group (presently Ogilvy Common-Health). She gleaned a wealth of experience working with such phar-maceutical clients as Bristol-Myers Squibb, Schering-Plough, Sanofi, GlaxoSmithKline, Wyeth-Lederle and Johnson & Johnson. After four years of establishing and growing the DTC unit, she transitioned to the client side of the business by joining Novartis Pharmaceuticals. As Exec-utive Director of Global Advertising,
Deborah Dick-Rath
Deborah Dick-rath of epic Proportions receives her award from andrew schirmer of McCann
HumanCare, a former agency partner from her Novartis days.
DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013 | 35
D T C H A L L O F FA M E
CultivatingMemorable DTCStu Klein has created some of the more memorable DTC
campaigns of this era, setting a standard for innovations in
patient communications.
By DTC Perspectives staff
While marketers still need to convey the benefits (and yes, risk information, too) properly to consumers, “the form and
venue of those communications will continue to evolve at the rapid pace we’ve seen transform our industry over the past five years,” noted Stu Klein, currently the Healthcare Practice Lead at Interpub-lic. As one of the pioneers at the forefront of DTC advertising, Stu has a strong understanding of evo-lutionary marketing. He has generated a successful track record comprised of award-winning campaigns deemed significantly memorable by both the indus-try and consumers.
Stu spent nearly two decades honing his skills and knowledge working in consumer goods mar-keting on some of the industry’s premier brands, including Procter & Gamble, Nestle, and Camp-bell’s. But feeling drawn to a higher calling in pharmaceutical marketing, he joined The Quantum Group as President in 2000. He and his team grew the specialty agency, turning into the DTC Mid-Sized Agency of the Year from 2002-2004. In 2005, Stu expanded upon his knowledge of the healthcare market-ing industry by switching to the pro-fessional side. He spent two years serving as Chief Executive Officer of KPR, one of the first agencies to specialize in healthcare marketing, before moving back to DTC. He later held the title of Executive Vice Presi-dent Managing Director at Draftfcb
Healthcare before signing on with Interpublic Group. Stu continues his tireless efforts as a champion for the patient and brand in his current role, where he is responsible for managing IPG’s pharmaceutical cli-ent relationships.
In addition to his notable creative achievements, Stu is also highly regarded for his pragmatic, yet enlightened, expertise. In fact, he has been asked to present to OPDP twice – once regarding proposed changes to DTC guidelines and again to share study results that analyzed DTC discussions between doc-tors and their patients. Anyone who has ever met Stu will tell you that he is one of the most upbeat, optimistic people out there.
Facing his challenges head-on, he has an innate capacity to get to the consumer-driven insight and turn it into an engaging and relatable experience. As a result, he has created some of the most success-ful campaigns for such blockbuster clients as Scher-
ing-Plough’s Claritin, Clarinex and NuvaRing, GlaxoSmithKline’s Levi-tra, and AstraZeneca’s Crestor, to just name a few. In his decade-plus time working in pharmaceuti-cals, he has had the opportunity to develop DTC and/or professional communications for more than 50 brands across approximately 20 different therapeutic areas. And that number will undoubtedly con-tinue to grow... with exceptional outcomes, one might add.
Stu Klein
stu klein of interpublic is presented with his award by sue Manber of Digitas Health, a former
partner from Lowe alchemy.
36 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
D T C H A L L O F FA M E
A StrategicVisionBoth analytical and creative, Don Lowy has always been
able to strike the balance between being realistic yet a
crusader throughout his career.
By DTC Perspectives staff
Don Lowy has one of the most storied careers in this industry’s history. Over the course of more than three decades, he has proven
to be a premier brand builder in pharmaceuticals, packaged goods, OTCs and digital technology. His passion for knowledge and ability to understand how to unlock the potential of emerging opportuni-ties has helped forge his path when developing his successful consumer-centric approaches.
Starting his career in advertising, he rose through the ranks to eventually become Vice President, Group Management Supervisor at Grey. In this role, he was responsible for managing big-name clients, including P&G, IBM, General Foods, Dura-cell, Bristol Myers and Ciba-Geigy. It was with the Ciba-Geigy account that he worked on the launch of Habitrol Nicotine Patch’s “Portrait of a Quitter” cam-paign, one of the earliest DTC efforts. In early 1995, he left to sign on with The Senior Network, taking on the role of Senior Vice President, Director of Health Care Marketing. He established and grew the health-care practice by developing strate-gies, positioning, grass roots initia-tives and healthcare expertise for such clients as Merck & Co. (Zocor), Novar t is (Miacalc in) , Scher ing-Plough (Coricidin HBP) and Ross Products (Ensure).
After more than five years at the healthcare firm, he transitioned to the client side to join Pharmacia (now Pfizer). Serving as a Senior
Director of Consumer Marketing & Communication, Don managed the development and implementation of campaigns – with a focus on patient education/CRM – for Ambien, Pletal, Mirapex and Xalatan. Don then transferred to Schering-Plough (now Merck & Co.) as Vice President, Global Advertising & Marketing in 2003, where he earned many acco-lades for his work on brands including Nasonex, Zetia, Levitra, Vytorin and NuvaRing, to name a few. With a keen understanding and strong passion for digital opportunities, he was able to spearhead the integration of traditional and digital consumer com-munications for these brands, setting them apart in the marketplace. Additionally, this early e-pioneer formed the “Schering Plough Digital University” as a global eMarketing learning resource for employ-ees. In recognition for his innovative efforts during his marketing tenure thus far, Don has also been selected to serve as a Digital Health Scholar by the
Digital Health Coalition.In 2010, Don decided to start
his own consulting firm, Donald Lowy Consult ing, which would allow him to focus his talents on smal l to mid-sized companies with resource-constrained brands. Combin ing h is out -o f - the-box thinking with his analytical and strategic mind, this seasoned mar-keter will continue creating unique and creative communication solu-t ions on numerous brands for years to come.
Don Lowy
Don Lowy of Donald Lowy Consulting receives his award from longtime colleague Marjorie
reedy of Merck & Co.
DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013 | 37
D T C H A L L O F FA M E
Keeping PatientsAt the CoreUnderstanding the needs and expectations of patients,
Sheri Stump utilizes an “in-service” approach when crafting
consumer communications.
By DTC Perspectives staff
As a veteran marketer, Sheri Stump continu-ally sets her sights on the horizon to improve the communications her brands have with
consumers. Having worked in several therapeutic areas, including women’s health, pain, cardiovascu-lar, oncology, respiratory and CNS, she has always ensured that the patient or caregiver remain at the epicenter. Through an honest, transparent dialogue, the patient communications she crafts are able to properly support individuals as they manage their healthcare issues.
Sheri began her healthcare career over 25 years ago as a sale representative for Johnson & Johnson before moving into marketing, working on prescrip-tion and OTC brands, including Children’s Tylenol, Motrin and Imodium A-D. After 10 years with the pharmaceutical giant, she decided to switch to the agency side, holding various roles at Dorland Swee-ney Jones, 30 West Advertising (Wyeth) and Medi-cal Broadcasting Company (Digitas Health). The additional experience she gained managing a number of healthcare accounts for major phar-maceutical clients led her back to being a client herself as she was hired by AstraZeneca in 2001.
During her nine-year tenure with AstraZeneca, she held several mar-keting positions, including Director Consumer and Alternative Commu-nications, where she led the profes-sional training and career develop-ment for consumer brand managers.
Also in this role, she developed the corporate strate-gy and organizational structure for multicultural mar-keting – further demonstrating the commitment she has to patients. Multicultural marketing is a unique entity in an already challenging industry, and is oftentimes overlooked; establishing such a program shows the understanding and foresight she has when it comes to ensuring patient comprehension and compliance, as well as recognizing the potential business opportunities. After some time in this role, she then moved over to the Crestor team as the brand’s Consumer Director. Here she spearheaded a number of successful, innovative campaigns for the cholesterol treatment, collecting several awards along the way – including quite a few DTC National Advertising Awards.
Nearly three years ago, Sheri took on a new endeavor: ADHD marketing at Shire. Starting as the Consumer Brand Director, she and her team culti-
vated award-winning campaigns, both educational and branded. Most recently, she assumed the role of Senior Marketing Direc-tor, Pediatric ADHD, creating and executing the integrated marketing strategies for Vyvanse and Intuniv, in both the professional and con-sumer spaces. She continues to be a fearless champion for her patients, driven by a passion for and keen understanding of going beyond the standard DTC mes-saging to being “in-service” for patients and caregivers.
Sheri Stump
sheri stump of shire is presented with her DtC Hall of Fame award by her manager,
Mike Yasick.
P H A R M A C I S T C O A C H I N G (Continued from page 31)
38 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
them visualize what being adherent could mean by tying the reason to take their medicine with their life goals and what’s most important to them. for example, a patient may want to keep their glucose levels under control so that they can prevent future complications from diabetes and see their grandchildren grow up.
Creating a plan for successwhile patient engagement is critical to improve adher-
ence, it does not automatically result in behavioral change.
to ensure lasting impact, the pharmacist-patient team needs to create a plan with long-term goals. this plan needs to be based on what the patient thinks the next steps should be, how important being adherent is to them, and how the phar-macist can help to support them. perhaps, most importantly, the pharmacist must encourage the patient to commit to the plan that they helped to create.
Behavioral coaching enables pharmacists to uncover and address potential barriers to adherence. when done well, these coaching sessions allow pharmacists to go beyond the requirements of legally required counseling – to engage patients in ways that can lead to realistic and effective plans that can give their therapy the best chance of working and lead to positive clinical outcomes. DTC
Stacey Irving has over 12 years’ experience in business development and management consulting and has spent 10 of those years specifically focused on the healthcare industry. She is currently the Vice President of Sponsored Clinical Services for McKesson Patient Relationship Solutions, where she is responsible for the development of the com-pany’s pharmacy-based adherence platform and Sponsored Clinical Services Pharmacy Network. Stacey can be contacted via email at Stacey.Irving@McKesson.com.
Table 2: How to Use Open-Ended Questions
Instead of … Try saying ...
Do you have any questions?
What questions do you have about your medicine?
Do you understand how to take this medicine?
What instructions were given to you for taking the medication?
Are you going to take the medicine like you are sup-posed to?
How do you plan to remem-ber to take it as your doctor prescribed?
MicroMass Communications hired Julie Jelenewski as account supervisor and Linnea Warren as behaviorist. Jelenewski will work on an oncology product as well as on a company-wide patient-focused initiative for a pharmaceutical giant. she joins from BeaconLBs, a laboratory benefit solutions company, where she served as network operations administrator. warren will work across all brands at MMC to develop patient education programs for the company’s growing list of accounts. Most recently, she was a research assistant for the university of north Carolina, Chapel hill.
Cadient Group has hired Amy Everingham and Colleen Burns as account managers and Kelly Jo Schenck as project man-ager. everingham will support the agency’s efforts on behalf of a rapidly growing specialty biologics client. she joins from M3 health, an interactive healthcare marketing agency, where she was interactive project lead and account executive on products in the areas of oncol-ogy, haematology and enterology. Burns will support activities on behalf of a unique, personalized oncology therapy as part of her role within Cadient’s diversified and specialized life sciences portfolio. she joins from inventiv health where she helped prepare for the launch of a vaccine for infants and toddlers as account executive. schenck will be responsible for the company’s growing involvement in the obesity management and metabolic disease categories. she was previ-ously a project manager at digitas health, handling the development of three launch brand websites, mobile sites, patient brochures, videos and podcasts, and media initiatives.
AbelsonTaylor has promoted account directors Eric Dens-more and Mark Finn to the position of vice presidents. densmore has worked on both professional and consumer accounts in a variety
of ca tego-ries, includ-ing urology, autoimmune disease, and d e r m a t o l -o g y , t o name a few. finn will be working on products for the treatment of psoriasis and for use in sur-gery and aesthetic dermatology. his experience has also encompassed a number of disease states as well, including oncology, dermatol-ogy, hiv/aids, among others. abelsontaylor has also promoted Stacy Gordon and Laura Jansen from account executives to senior account executives. gordon will continue work on consumer marketing initiatives for a gerd treatment. Jansen will work in the rheumatology area, having previously worked on both professional and consumer projects for lupus and osteoporosis treatments.
OgilvyCommonHealthWorldwide announced that OgilvyCommonHealth Consumer Care and Ogilvy Common-Health Insights & Analytics will be rebranded as OgilvyCom-monHealth Wellness Marketing and OgilvyCommonHealthBehavioral Insights, respectively. according to Matt giegerich, Chairman & Ceo of ogilvy Commonhealth worldwide, the rea-son for the name change is the “result of our ongoing determination to provide clarity and focus in all our business efforts.” the wpp brand has an increased focus on helping brands become an integral part of consumers’ lives for healthier living, particularly as they become more and more responsible for managing their own health.
Julie Jelenewski
O N T H E M O V E
eric Densmore Mark Finn
C O N T R I B U T O R S
ADVERTISING INDEX & RESOURCE CENTERCompany Page Website Phone Contact Email
Beacon healthcare Communications 2 beaconhc.com 908-781-2600 adrienne Lee alee@beaconhc.com
Catalina 48 catalinamarketing.com 1-877-210-1917 kristen kaighn kristen.kaighn@catalinamarketing.com
health Monitor network 9 healthmonitornetwork.com 201-391-1911 info@healthmonitor.com
Merkle inc. 7 Merkleinc.com/lifesciences 443-542-4000 deborah furey dfurey@merkleinc.com
parade Magazine 47 parade.com 212-450-7141
remedy health 5 remedyhealthMedia.com 212-695-5581 Jim Curtis jcurtis@remedyhealthmedia.com
DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013 | 39
Elinor Soriano is an engagement Man-ager at appature with over 11 years of pharmaceutical marketing industry expe-rience. prior to joining appature, elinor was been responsible for consumer CrM strategy and execution for clients such astraZeneca, Bayer and sanofi-aventis. elinor can be contacted via
email at info@appature.com. to read the article elinor co-authored with her colleague erik, turn to page 24.
Deb Furey is currently vice president and gM with Merkle Life sciences. drawing from her more than 15 years of experience working with ft500 compa-nies to drive growth through innovative customer relationship strategies, deb is responsible for healthcare client manage-ment, strategy and solution integration.
she can be contacted via email at dfurey@merkleinc.com. to read deb’s article, turn to page 14.
Ellen Hoenig-Carlson is founder of advanceMarketworx, a consulting firm known for powering consumer and healthcare brand growth, through tradi-tional and non-traditional marketing, leveraging critical customer interpreta-tions and insights at key points. voted among the 25 most powerful marketing
executives by advertising age magazine in 1999 and 2000, hoenig-Carlson is experienced domestically and globally in developed and emerging markets. she has led consistently in the field of dtC/p marketing since the august 1997 change in fda regulations permitting mass dtC. she can be reached by telephone at (609) 333-0549, via her blog at blog.advancemarketworx.com, or twitter @ellenhoenig. to read ellen’s article, turn to page 18.
Stacey Irving has over 12 years’ expe-rience in business development and management consulting and has spent 10 of those years specifically focused on the healthcare industry. she is cur-rently the vice president of sponsored Clinical services for Mckesson patient relationship solutions, where she is
responsible for the development of the company’s phar-macy-based adherence platform and sponsored Clinical services pharmacy network. stacey can be contacted via email at stacey.irving@Mckesson.com. turn to page 30 to read her article.
Erik Prince is a Marketing solution architect with appature where he brings 15 years’ experience in designing and developing digital solutions for brand marketers to engage both patients and healthcare professionals. prior to appa-ture, erik was an it director of innova-tion and new Customer Channels at
sanofi. erik can be reached via email at info@appature.com. turn to page 24 to read the article erik co-authored with his colleague elinor.
Reid Connolly brings more than 15 years of experience in the integrated healthcare marketing field. as Ceo, he is responsible for driving evoke’s strategic vision and partnering with clients to develop rich, insight-driven strategies that shift brand business. prior to found-ing evoke, reid has held numerous
senior and executive leadership roles with agencies such as digitas health, imc2, and saatchi & saatchi healthcare. he can be emailed via reid.connolly@evokeinteraction.com. turn to page 20 to read reid’s article.
Register Now! www.dtcperspectives.com ■ 973-239-2051 ext. 221Passes starting at $1995 Includes full access to the conference, events and exhibit hall
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Multicultural
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multicultural.indd 1 12/11/12 11:45 PM
by JonatHan isaaCs
40 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
Come As You AreIn cyberspace, you can be anyone you want. But have we lost touch with our commitment to remain true to ourselves in everyday reality? Authenticity can set you apart with your colleagues, clients or consumers.
Recently, over bad dim sum and The Good Wife, my mother casually mentioned, “i’ve met someone online.” now she’s been widowed for 6 years, so
being the encouraging, supportive son i am, i answered back, “what???!!!”
“oh yes,” she said. “he’s a retired 4-star general who com-manded our forces in afghanistan. he’s very handsome. he wants to meet me.”
“Yes well, before you and general Zod hold hands at the Chat n’ Chew, why don’t i take a look at his profile page.”
My mom is a vibrant, highly intelligent woman, but when it comes to online behavior, she is a neophyte and, thus, far too trusting. sure enough, it didn’t take long to smell a scam. there was a patriotic shot of a real general (taken from a wikipedia page) and a nicholas sparks-level note about how he had dedicated his life to military service and now he was looking for the right woman to share his hobbies: reading, long walks, and killing terrorists with high-altitude predator drone strikes.
of course, that’s one of the deep attractions of cyberspace. You can be anyone you want when you’re alone at 3 am in your hulk pJs discussing honey Boo Boo in a chat room. people love you for who you pretend to be. But in real life, in agency life, you have to be true to who you are, don’t you? well… only if you want to be spectacular at what you do.
we preach the power and glory of authenticity to our cli-ents every day. But perhaps we’re the ones who need to do a better job of living up to that ideal ourselves. Many of us work at legendary consumer agencies where the overall body of work reflects, embodies and ultimately enhances what the organization stands for. But when it comes to the health-care offering, can we say the same? i think that far too often, somewhere between the electrifying creds deck and the final execution, something goes awry. and i’m not talking about all of the fun outside forces that impact the work. i’m talk-ing about something closer to home and, in many ways, more influential: our unwavering commitment to being who we say we are.
tell me, who is the goodby of healthcare? the weiden? the r/ga? who lays claim to the throne? it feels more like the nfL. Lots of talent but also lots of parity. on any given Monday, you win some, i win some. and to me, one big rea-
son is we don’t hang on tightly enough to the things that make us special. the things that set us apart. how can you do your best work when you don’t fully embrace your best self?
of course, being authentic is difficult.first off, it’s hard to have an honest conversation with
yourself. it’s tough to say, “we’re great at this and not that” or “we stand for this and not that.” Because if you say it out loud, you have to do something about it or risk looking like the biggest hypocrite since nixon. You have to align your val-ues, structure, business portfolio and people and take a bubble bath in the truth of your wisdom. You won’t always succeed, but to be authentic you always have to try, and that takes time and money.
which leads me to number two: the money. now, i don’t think anybody in advertising is under the impression that they work for amnesty international. everyone likes to get paid. the question is, what are you getting paid for? donuts or transformational ideas?
i would argue that we are in an idea and talent based econ-omy, not a commerce-driven one. But if you think the ideas follow the money, that’s fine. Just be honest about it. other-wise, how can you excel at it? it’s difficult to hire great people and keep them inspired and motivated if every day there are glaring signs that what your agency “believes” and what it does is a contradiction in terms. Like deniro says in The Deer Hunter while holding a bullet up in John Cazale’s face, “this is this. this ain’t something else. this is this!!!”
do you hear that giant sucking sound? it’s a power vacuum. a huge opportunity for someone to step up, truly embrace their inner-awesome and dominate. i think my organization has the vision, the talent and the will to get there first. But if you beat me to it, remember this: no matter how good you are, even if your fake facebook page says you are an admiral in starfleet, you will never be good enough to date my mom.
Jonathan Isaacs is Chief Creative Officer of Ogilvy Healthworld, NY, part of Ogilvy CommonHealth Worldwide. Drawing from his position as a marketing authority, he identifies the latest advertising and creative trends, and shares his astute views. He can be reached by email at jonathan.isaacs@ogilvy.com or telephone at (212) 237-4713.
O N T H E E D G EMarketing
Register Now! www.dtcperspectives.com ■ 973-239-2051 ext. 221Passes starting at $1995 Includes full access to the conference, events and exhibit hall
Join the Discussion @MCHNational
Washington, DCOctober 17-18, 2013
Marriott Metro Center
Proudly presents the latest health marketing conference
Multicultural
M a r k e t i n g t o a D i v e r s e A m e r i c a
HealthNational
multicultural.indd 1 12/11/12 11:45 PM
Released Fall 2012
• SomeofMyBestFriendsAreBlack with Tanner Colby, Author, Some of My Best Friends Are Black • MarketingtotheNewMajority with David Burgos, VP, Millward Brown and Ola Mobolade, Managing Director,
Firefly Millward Brown• WelcometoPleasantville with Anthony Marucci, Director Healthcare Strategy & Business Development• Global Advertising Strategies • Cross-CulturalDifferencesinHealthandWellnessAttitudeswith David Bersoff, Chief Insights Officer,
The Futures Company• CulturallyRelevantMarketingtoaMulticulturalAudiencePanel• ExamplesofaSuccessfulMulticulturalCampaignPanel• HowtoDevelopYourTotalMarketStrategy with Eric Talbot, VP Brand Solutions, Univision• CommunicatingDiseaseAwarenesstoaMulticulturalAudiencePanel• TheRulesforMulticulturalMarketing with Thomas Tseng, Founder, New American Dimensions
Multicultural
M a r k e t i n g t o a D i v e r s e A m e r i c a
HealthNational
2012 Conference Video Collection
Featuring:
Visit www.mchnational.com to purchase the Video Collection or call 973-521-7475 for more information
multicultural.indd 3 12/11/12 4:37 PM
O N T H E H I L L
by Jim DaviDson
The 2012 campaign season is long gone and it’s time to get back to business. Business advertisers can
freely place their ads now that the last super paC has closed up shop – for the moment – and relinquished the airwaves. enough time also has passed that we can justifiably tweak those who haven’t thrown out their political yard signs or bumper stickers along with their Christmas trees in the new Year. indeed, the newly sworn-in 113th Congress must now resume its official duties and tackle the long list of legislative items it failed to address in the 112th.
By now, the irony is not lost on anyone that the costliest campaign season in american history yielded zero shift in the balance of power. the presidential race alone cost the rom-ney and obama campaigns more than $2 billion. approxi-mately another $3.8 billion was spent on senate and house races. with a near status quo outcome, only a few people in the administration or in Congress will have to schedule a moving day. the senate democrats expanded their still filibuster-vulnerable effective majority from 53-47 to 55-45. republicans in the house of representatives held onto their majority, albeit with six fewer seats, completing the divided government trifecta. while the end product of this record political spending spree may strikingly resemble its starting points, both parties did emerge changed, with democrats feel-ing emboldened and republicans reflecting the need for more reflection. But there is little time for pondering the results when we count the number of issues awaiting resolution in 2013.
Tax Reform. this big-ticket item likely will take center stage for much of this year. tax reform, as a stand-alone issue, is long overdue but the urgency of addressing expiring Bush-era tax rates, expiring unemployment benefits, and the manda-tory spending/entitlement cuts called for in sequestration legis-lation, have dragged reform to the forefront early. no deal had been reached as of printing, but it would be nearly impossible to avert a fiscal crisis in the long-term without a major reex-amination of the tax Code. Luckily for dtC, discussions to avoid the fiscal cliff have centered specifically over individual
rates and deductions rather than corporate taxes, but anything could be put on the table once the tax Code is opened this year.
Health Care. the best domestic pol-icy change that republicans could have hoped for if they had won the white house was to defund parts of the afford-able Care act. hhs can resume its sched-
uled implementation now that this funding threat largely has evaporated. the challenge in 2013 will shift to the responsibil-ity of the states and the federal government to establish health exchanges in 2014 and to hammer out who ultimately will be responsible for covering the uninsured. at printing, one-third of the states had declared their intent to run their own exchanges, one-third had kicked the responsibility of running them over to washington, and the other third is split between undecideds and those opting for a partnership exchange with the federal government.
Entitlement Reform. this issue is intertwined with the pre-vious two items and might be where prescription drug manu-facturers should pay the most attention. the post-election proposals offered by the president and house republicans clearly reflected different ideologies but both were united in proposing savings to Medicare: $350 billion in the president’s first offer and $600 billion in the house gop counter-offer. this is an arena where even the mention of benefit changes to the under-55 crowd is a non-starter to many in Congress and in advocacy groups. so it wouldn’t be surprising if a less anti-populist idea, like negotiating prescription drug prices, is circulated among Members on both sides who either want to appease core demographics or make good on their promise to seriously cut spending and manage the debt.
it’s going to be a busy year. fasten your seat belts.
Jim Davidson is an attorney and founder of the public policy firm Davidson & Company. He currently chairs the Public Policy Group at the Washington law firm of Polsinelli Shughart PC, and he has been actively engaged in supporting the advertising industry on Capitol Hill for more than 20 years. He can be reached by e-mail at jhd@davidsondc.com.
A Look at the Year Ahead in WashingtonThere are a number of important issues ahead of us in this New Year after the political results in 2012. It will be a fast and busy year as we tackle tax reform and the implementation of health reform.
42 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
Released Fall 2012
• SomeofMyBestFriendsAreBlack with Tanner Colby, Author, Some of My Best Friends Are Black • MarketingtotheNewMajority with David Burgos, VP, Millward Brown and Ola Mobolade, Managing Director,
Firefly Millward Brown• WelcometoPleasantville with Anthony Marucci, Director Healthcare Strategy & Business Development• Global Advertising Strategies • Cross-CulturalDifferencesinHealthandWellnessAttitudeswith David Bersoff, Chief Insights Officer,
The Futures Company• CulturallyRelevantMarketingtoaMulticulturalAudiencePanel• ExamplesofaSuccessfulMulticulturalCampaignPanel• HowtoDevelopYourTotalMarketStrategy with Eric Talbot, VP Brand Solutions, Univision• CommunicatingDiseaseAwarenesstoaMulticulturalAudiencePanel• TheRulesforMulticulturalMarketing with Thomas Tseng, Founder, New American Dimensions
Multicultural
M a r k e t i n g t o a D i v e r s e A m e r i c a
HealthNational
2012 Conference Video Collection
Featuring:
Visit www.mchnational.com to purchase the Video Collection or call 973-521-7475 for more information
multicultural.indd 3 12/11/12 4:37 PM
Give Bob a call at 561-455-2394 or email him at bob@dtcperspectives.com
Ehrlich Consulting ServicesExperience Count$.
If your drug or device brand is currently doing or considering DTC advertising ask Bob Ehrlich to help improve it.
Bob Ehrlich has been involved in DTC for 17 years as a consultant, writer, and speaker. As CEO of DTC Perspectives, Bob has been a leader in the drug and device Industry. Prior to starting DTC Perspectives in 2000, Bob was responsible for the consumer launch of Lipitor in 1997.
Bob will help make your new or existing DTC program more effective. He can help with pre-launch, at launch, or at any point in the DTC cycle. Services
include agency selection, strategy development, copy development, market research planning, ROI targets, media selection, and digital and social media.
Bob will personally work on all projects. No delegation to junior partners.
You have only one chance to launch a DTC effort. Make sure you have the best advice.
multiculturalmag1bobad.indd 31 12/10/12 9:32 PM
Dr. otis webb Brawley is a noted oncologist from the american Cancer society who was a fellow at the national Cancer institute. he is also an african-
american and has that unique perspective in understanding the underserved minority population. he likes to be called otis so i will honor his wishes in the rest of this review.
otis has a basic message throughout the book. that is, we generally over treat and in doing so doctors can do serious harm. this is book of stories and recollections from his long career of clinical practice. otis teaches us by telling power-ful and graphic case studies. his introduction involves edna, a single working mother, who walks into the er with her detached breast in a bag. edna had breast cancer that was untreated and the tumor ulcerated and caused the breast to fall off. this horrifying tale illustrates how the poor are treated so differently in america. edna could not afford to take off from work to get treatment and did not have insurance. what could have been diagnosed and treated a decade earlier was neglected and she had metastatic cancer and was doomed.
otis takes on his fellow doctors who like to treat exces-sively. he says they over treat because some are plain greedy, doing tests and procedures because they like the income. oth-ers over treat because they follow some outdated protocol which always prefers aggressive action over watchful waiting.
his case study of ralph, a 70 year old man with low level prostate cancer, is a great study in how the desire to test and treat caused great harm. ralph was urged by his wife to get a free psa test offered at some mall. he had elevated psa and was advised to get a biopsy. the biopsy showed some cancer still isolated on part of the prostate. ralph decided to have the prostate removed and did a davinci robotic procedure. he ended up with urinary incontinence and sexual dysfunction. unfortunately, the surgeon left in a small part of the prostate and that still showed an elevated psa. ralph was advised to have some radiation treatment, did that and then had an ulcerated rectal area from the radiation. he had infections and eventually died.
the point otis was making is that screening is not always good. ralph probably had cancer that never would have spread. he would have lived a good life had he never known about the cancer. he cautions that this trend toward screening
causes needless tests, harm from those tests both p sycho log ica l and physical.
who is behind this desire to screen everyone for possible disease? otis blames fee for service medi-cine which incents doctors to treat. he also blames drug and device companies who need a pool of diagnosed candidates for their drugs, cat scans, and stents. he is not against aggres-sive treatment when it is needed. he just feels we have devel-oped this health system that is perverse in putting profit before patients. he calls for evidence based medicine and demands proof that extra care is good care.
in one of the best chapters, otis describes the end of life care issue. in this section he describes the case of fred huzjak, a smoker whose lung cancer had progressed to the brain and he was unresponsive. he advised the family to end efforts to treat him because he had no chance to live with any quality. the family demanded all care needed to keep fred alive even though this care would cause fred much pain and discomfort. a series of costly tests, procedures and surgeries were done on various parts of fred’s system. spinal taps, scopes, breathing tubes, feeding tubes, chest tubes, and other futile measures were demanded by his family. otis estimates that at least $250,000 was spent making fred miserable with no chance to save him. he died mercifully but only after being put through agony.
otis has written a wonderful book and should be must reading for Congress, physicians and advocacy groups. it is rare to have these complex issues so artfully distilled into anecdotes that illustrate the problems and solutions we face. otis might be a bit harsh on drug companies as he dislikes dtC for creat-ing demand for drugs, but he deserves to be heard.
Robert Ehrlich, chairman and chief executive of DTC Perspec-tives Inc., regularly reviews books about the pharmaceutical industry, marketing and advertising for DTC Perspectives Magazine. He also writes a weekly e-newsletter providing insights on pharmaceuti-cal marketing trends. To subscribe to this FREE weekly analysis, sign up at the website, www.DTCPerspectives.com. Ehrlich can be reached by email at Bob@DTCPerspectives.com.
How We Do HarmBy Otis Webb Brawley, M.D. with Paul Goldberg
Published by St. Martin’s Griffin / 2012 / 304 pages
revieweD by robert eHrliCH
O N B O O K S
44 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
Give Bob a call at 561-455-2394 or email him at bob@dtcperspectives.com
Ehrlich Consulting ServicesExperience Count$.
If your drug or device brand is currently doing or considering DTC advertising ask Bob Ehrlich to help improve it.
Bob Ehrlich has been involved in DTC for 17 years as a consultant, writer, and speaker. As CEO of DTC Perspectives, Bob has been a leader in the drug and device Industry. Prior to starting DTC Perspectives in 2000, Bob was responsible for the consumer launch of Lipitor in 1997.
Bob will help make your new or existing DTC program more effective. He can help with pre-launch, at launch, or at any point in the DTC cycle. Services
include agency selection, strategy development, copy development, market research planning, ROI targets, media selection, and digital and social media.
Bob will personally work on all projects. No delegation to junior partners.
You have only one chance to launch a DTC effort. Make sure you have the best advice.
multiculturalmag1bobad.indd 31 12/10/12 9:32 PM
yesterday
an apple a day is so
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Debacle might be too kind a word to describe the exploding Medicare bill. in 1965 when we had plenty
of young folks to support the old folks, and medical treatment was priced modestly, there was no problem paying for the Medi-care program. the average age of death was 70, so the Medicare program expected to pay for five years. there were no Mri’s, angiograms, $100,000-a-treatment cancer drugs, and few expensive specialists.
turning to 2013, the average person lives to 78. that means Medicare will be expected to treat you for 13 years. there are all of those extraordinary and costly treatments available to keep you going longer. there are wonderful and expensive diagnostic tests to find whatever ails you. there are specialists for every part of your body willing to send you for any test imaginable. if you have a pain in the chest, expect a full bat-tery of heart related tests all covered by Medicare.
politicians on both sides extol the virtues of Medicare. everybody loves it. patients have a wide choice of doctors and broad coverage. providers like the certainty of payment and their ability to have most things covered. in fact, Medi-care is a cash machine for them since their pockets are deep and they are not very astute as to what the doctors are asking them to cover. Medicare admin costs are touted as being so low compared to private insurers. this is because Medicare pays first and asks questions later. there is about 10% fraud in the system as shady providers game the system.
so what can we do about a program that is so insidious, it will behave as a budget cancer eating up all discretionary funds the government takes in from the taxpayers? we hear both sides of the aisle say no one should get between the doctor and their patient. the senior lobby wants nothing touched in their Medicare. the people who are near Medicare age expect
promises fulfilled and to have access to rea-sonable care like current seniors.
the reality is we cannot expect those under 55 to give up all of their tax money to fund Medicare excess for current and near seniors. it is not feasible and not fair. we are robbing our kids and grandkids to give current seniors a program that is unsus-tainable.
there are common sense changes that can be made which involve relatively minor sacrifices. first, the life expectancy must be taken into account. if we have gained eight years of added life, what is unfair about starting Medicare at age 67 or 68? second, we need to end unlimited fee for service. good care does not mean in all cases every diagnostic test available. providers need to
be incentivized not to use an elderly patient as a diagnostic cash machine. third, we need to decide when end of life care is just too much to give. when someone else pays it is always nice to give grandma the full ride. the problem is that someone is us. Most of us will see the government spending $200,000 on a relative who is dying and has lost any quality of life. finally, the fraud aspect needs to be swiftly addressed. patients do not report fraud much because they are not expert at reading bills, or loathe questioning their provider, and frankly do not care much if someone else is paying. here is where government needs to add fraud specialists and increase penalties for criminal behavior.
Medicare is a great safety net that must be preserved in an affordable way. if we avoid the real issues, the bubble will burst and everyone on the program will face rapid and drastic restrictions. it is better to have a frank discussion now while minor pain is still an option with shared sacrifice pushed by both parties. president obama must do this and perhaps he is the only one who can really reform Medicare. if he does, maybe he deserves another nobel prize for economics or medicine.
E D I T O R I A L
The Medicare DebacleEveryone loves Medicare – politicians, patients and providers. But in today’s society, it is no longer feasible nor fair to sustain the current program. With minimal sacrifices, common sense changes can be made to prevent the bubble from bursting.
46 | DTC Perspectives • Winter 2013
yesterday
an apple a day is so
PARADE offers Americans practical steps for better living with a dose of wellness, nutrition, beauty and medical news.
mediakit.parade.comGfK MRI Fall 2011, dash based on Spring 2011 publisher-defined prototype;comScore, January 2012 (Parade Partners [E] and Dashrecipes [E])
64.6 million readers • 50.2 million uniques 36 million readers • 6.8 million uniques
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