Archive for the ‘Social Marketing’ Category

Meet the Multiscreen Patient

By Brian Simmons

The use of technology as a healthcare marketing tool continues to evolve, while all marketers search for the most effective uses to get the best return for their marketing dollars. Hospitals are no exception.

In a recent Medical Marketing & Media online article, it was reported that Cleveland Clinic has already shifted its marketing spend to digital through paid media, mobile optimization, email marketing and online video content generation as a means to attract patients locally as well as nationally. In the past 12 months, the health system’s combined efforts created 75,000 internet leads –surfers who clicked on links from paid search and downloaded information – which led to a conversion rate of 6,500 patients using their facility.

The reason they went digital? Patients today have a wide array of sources they tap into to inform their medical decisions, and 84% of that information comes through a screen, according to a 2012 Google Hospital Study.

What used to be a simple sales funnel of creating local brand awareness through billboards, TV ads and radio spots is now a mash-up of touch points that can include these mediums as well as desktop and mobile screen experiences. In fact, according to the Google Hospital Study, 83% of patients who booked an appointment visited a hospital’s website before doing so. And roughly 1/3 of this group did so on a tablet or mobile device.

Enter the era of the multiscreen patient. Now more than ever, patients are using multiple devices—desktop, smart phone, iPad—to do their hospital research, whether they are looking for physician reviews, health plan networks, or other relevant information to help them make their decisions.

Hospital marketers who want to engage multiscreen patients should keep these tips in mind:

  • Recognize that no two paths are the same – Messaging needs to scale to fit different devices, at different times and in different contexts. A website that works on the desktop may not make sense to the consumer who is pulling it up on their smartphone as they look for a hospital. Define some possible consumer scenarios, then adapt accordingly.
  • Avoid dead-ends – The surest way to turn off potential patients is to abandon them on a path that leads to nowhere. As hospital marketers, we need to make sure that every touch point leads patients to the next logical connection. That series of touch points is an extension of the brand experience. So if a patient uses their mobile device to respond to a call to action, but the site isn’t mobile-friendly, you’ve effectively shut down a potential patient experience. Map your patients’ journey and craft a digital content strategy that spans all channels and connecting touch points.
  • Embrace the informed patient – There’s no getting around the wealth of healthcare information online thanks to sites like WebMD, as well as provider and payer sites themselves. The best a hospital can do is provide clear brand messaging that speaks to the reputation of the facility and physicians, and eases the patient journey to conversion.

Know your patients. Understand how they approach a healthcare decision, and make sure your brand is where they are. Today that means taking a holistic approach to digital content to ensure your consumers have a rewarding experience at every step of their journey, no matter which device they use to access it.

This post was also contributed by Christine Pierpoint, VP of Emerging Media at IMRE

By Social Marketing Team

If you’re not calling upon social advocates as an extension to your wellness brand’s advocacy efforts, it’s time. Nielsen’s Global Trust Advertising Survey found 92% of consumers around the world say they trust earned media, such as word-of-mouth and recommendations, above all forms of advertising. Online consumer reviews are the second most trusted form of advertising. While these influential brand ambassadors make up just 1% of a brand’s social community, they are primarily the ones driving the conversation and the shares. This group of loyalists can drive up to 70% of traffic to any given campaign. Identifying these influencers who are driving the conversations is the first step to understanding the audience in your social community.
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By Brian Simmons

As we head into 2013, social media continues to establish a strong presence across all industries, with healthcare being no exception. As we move forward in the New Year, it’s important to reflect on success stories in 2012 to extract key learning’s as we continue to enhance social media strategies. Below are a few healthcare social media success stories from the past year, as well as a few key trends we see taking shape in 2013.

In the past year, we saw one major pharmaceutical company begin to rewrite the rules of social media by jumping online and networking with a specified disease category via Facebook and Twitter. What we’ve learned from this pioneer is that transparency from the pharmaceutical manufacturer is key – introducing the moderator of the group, outlining the purpose of the group, and offering a Q&A session with the company’s head of U.S. regulatory affairs to discuss how the site would function. In this instance, the approach quarantined posts internally – meaning posts were sent to an administrator for the brand for approval before appearing on the site, which allowed time to ensure product information was correct and no protective health information (PHI) was being shared – a strong move to meet FDA and HIPAA guidelines.
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By Christine Pierpoint

There’s a new Internet domain coming out this fall as a way to identify adult entertainment websites. The nonprofit Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) regulates website domains. Last year they announced a move to create the .xxx domain as an alternative to the more common .com or .org domains. In theory, this will be a way for businesses and consumers to clearly identify adult content.

“The creation of .xxx will create a clearly signposted place where adult entertainment can be accessed and allow surfers to have a clear idea of the nature of the site before they click, rather than after,” according to a statement posted on the ICM Registry website, which is the organization responsible for .xxx domain registrations.

Regardless of the intent of the new .xxx domain, there is still the potential for brand names to be hijacked during the initial bidding for URLs. Each time a new top-level domain (such as .tv, .eu or .xxx) is introduced, new Internet “real estate” is created. Depending on the equity of your brand, that real estate can be extremely valuable. For example, imagine someone leveraging a brand name like “Nike” to drive traffic to “Nike.xxx.”

As marketers, we do have options to stop cybersquatters who may try to prompt a bidding war or otherwise cause damage to brand names. We’ve put together the following tips to help you mitigate potential risks:

  1. Trademark holders – If your brand is trademarked, there is a “sunrise” period during which you can block your brand from becoming a .xxx domain. Beginning Sept. 7, 2011, you can apply to the ICM Registry to be designated a “reserved – trademark.” Once accepted, your domain name will be removed from the pool of eligible domains. The sunrise period expires on Oct. 27, after which time there will be a “land rush” period from Nov. 8 – 25 during which the adult entertainment industry will be able to apply for .xxx domains.
  2. Non-trademark holders – if you have a domain name that is not a registered trademark (i.e. tires.com) you have to wait until the “general availability” period begins on Dec. 6, 2011. At that point .xxx domains will be registered on a first-come, first-served basis. You will then be able to register your name as a non-resolving .xxx domain. What that means is that you own that .xxx domain and thereby prevent anyone else from using it.


We’re recommending that all companies take proactive measures to prevent cybersquatting or potential misalignment of their brand with an adult entertainment website. In addition to brand names, you should also consider taking steps to protect your organization’s product names and the names of key executives or spokespersons. Opting out now will help protect against reputation management issues or potential legal battles to defend your trademarks.

Christine Pierpoint is IMRE’s Vice President of Emerging Media. She can be reached at 410.821.8220.

By Daphne Swancutt

HiRes 300x300 AstraZeneca’s #Rxsave Twitter Chat:  Shake, Rattle and Roll—or Much Ado About Nothing?Depending who you’re talking with, last week’s @AstraZenecaUS chat (hashtag #rxsave) on Twitter was either a PR stunt or the shot heard ‘round the world. The one is cynical, the other hyperbolic.

So let’s forget the extremes, and talk about what comes in the middle. First, AstraZeneca did attempt to demonstrate leadership in an industry notorious for being skittish on social media. Twitter can be especially unnerving for pharmaceutical companies, and moderating a wide-open chat would make most of them break out in to a cold sweat. (more…)

By Daphne Swancutt

iStock 000010062821Small 300x225 Healthcare Needs Rx for Internal CommunicationsBy most accounts, 2011 will be the start of a watershed in the healthcare industry. From HIT spending, meaningful use and HIPAA 5010 and ICD-10, to ACOs, M&As and the demand by consumers for more sophisticated digital technologies.

Imagine the communication challenges. (more…)

Get Lit, or Else?

By Daphne Swancutt

iStock 000005926987Medium1 300x199 Get Lit, or Else?Two people in the United States just died in the last hour. Seventeen more will die in the next 7 to 8 hours. Over a year, that number will accumulate to about 7,000.

The reason? Medical errors that include misread or otherwise misinterpreted handwritten prescriptions. Believe it. This means that doctors are being sloppy, pharmacies are making mistakes and people are getting dead.

Even more disturbing about this statistic is that 85 percent-plus of pharmacies are equipped to receive electronic prescriptions, yet only one-third of the nation’s prescribers use this system.

It seems appropriate, then, to draw some attention to this stupid and nonsensical tragedy during Health Literacy Month and to ask: What’s the deal? (more…)

We’re Back!

By healtheditor

It’s official. We’re now blogging at IMREHealthIQ. Stay tuned for expert content and continued industry insight.

You can subscribe to our new feed by RSS or by email. You can also follow us on Twitter at @IMREHealthIQ. For anyone who’s been following @HealthIntel, we haven’t changed the Twitter feed, just the name. You won’t have to re-follow under our new name.

Thanks for your patience!

By Daphne Swancutt

conveyor 300x290 Hospitals Gotta Get TheirGroove BackLast week, I was part of a group judging hospital and healthcare organization marketing campaigns for a national awards program.

I left disgruntled. Not because of the experience itself. The coordinators were great; the other judges were thoughtful, thorough and serious about their roles. There was a nice camaraderie.

But the work we were judging was predictable and unmemorable. For me, at the center of “why” were three things:

  • Plucked passion
  • Gaping holes in the use of social media
  • Little apparent effort to talk with “customers” instead of at them

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