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Evidence That Physicians & Patients Aren’t on the Same Treatment Page

August 26, 2011

Physicians (And Patients) Are Moved by Stories, Not Statements

I recently received my second report of a ‘failed’ messaging research project from a client that was looking to ROF for some evidence-based diagnostics (or as I call it . . . sanity check).  Both Clients used the term ‘failed’, not I.  In looking at the stimuli and methodologies for both projects, I came back to a simple tenet that I learned long ago from personal selling.  The tenet is that physicians are moved by stories—not statements—and these stories must be written for them, not by them.

Doctors are not marketers, yet traditional messaging validation techniques often ask them to act as if they were, by laying out dozens of discrete messages before them and then asking them to rank which are most compelling.  This democratic approach to message development is comforting yet suboptimal, because it gives the client a false sense of security that the brand messages are being presented in the right order.

There are two fundamental flaws in this approach at the end of the day.  First, physicians are human beings and as such, they base their decisions on reality, not potential reality. It is really just simple human nature.  Opinions are grounded in what is and not what can be, which allows them to quickly discard messages that don’t align with today’s reality.  There is much evidence within communication theory that demonstrates, quite simply, that we don’t know what we want until it’s been shown to us.

Second, is the difference between presenting robust factual evidence and the power of a compelling story based on these facts.  The vogue term now is “storytelling” because it accurately describes how most people process and internalize information – as part of a story with a beginning, middle, and end.  What physicians ultimately remember is a theme or vision, not a series of disconnected bullet point messages.

It’s time to step out of your comfort zone and start telling your Brand story. Not sure how?  Give us a call.

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March 20, 2011

Credibility is Currency in MD Media Consumption

We’re all frustrated that physicians are spending less and less time with our representatives. The knee jerk reaction has been to try to become their trusted sources through non-personal communication, whether through websites or robust e-mail programs. Physicians, across a range of specialties, have told us that it’s just not our place.

As one MD said, “When I’m looking to evaluate a new car, I don’t go to GM.com, I go to Edmunds.com and ConsumerReports.com.”

The currency for busy physicians is credibility and objectivity. Pharma companies just don’t have it for the most part because in the end, they’re selling a specific product. All one has to do is conduct some quick concept testing on these approaches to see that the same initiative that tanks in testing when offered by a pharma company, comes to life when it’s offered by the specialty association. What is this telling you?

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February 13, 2011

Revolution vs Evolution Marketing

So I’ve got this Client. We’re helping them attempt to recover from a number of bad decisions, but I’m going to focus on the crux of their communication effort.

Flashback…it’s 2007 and this Client is preparing to launch a new brand into a small category with only a single competitor. They have a superior product, or at least they thought so. Essentially the same efficacy as their on-market nemesis, but with more convenient dosing and administration. Easier for the nurses and the patients. No brainer, right?

You would have thought so. But the problem was, this Client promoted this new product as a revolution in the treatment category and not the “evolution” that it was. It backfired. Target physicians downplayed the convenience benefits of the product because they felt the Client had overplayed the brand’s efficacy. Translation—“if you had told us we’ll get all the efficacy we have now plus the added benefits of your brand, we would have gobbled it up. But, since you since you tried to convince me your brand could do more than it actually can, I’m going to stick with what I know.” Our client’s brand was relegated to second-line and it’s a hole they’re still digging out from.

The truth is, in today’s pharma and biotech markets, advances in many categories have become incremental, not monumental, making it difficult to break the hold of inertia in the absence of an obvious, compelling value proposition.

Remember when computer manufacturers touted the speed of the processors inside them as a key point of differentiation? Not anymore. Why? Advances in speed declined and users could no longer perceive the difference in computing power. Computer manufacturers have had to move beyond processing power to convince consumers to upgrade.

This is exactly what is happening in many categories in pharmaceutical and even the biotechnology industry. Too often we’re trying to sell revolution when what we should be selling is ‘upgrade.’ If you’re marketing revolution on a product that is more evolution, inertia is going to win every time!

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January 23, 2011

Stop Asking for Directions and Set Your Brand GPS

Marketing, while certainly a form of science, is not medicine. So why do so many Brand teams allow physicians to decide what they should be saying about their brands? Let’s be real here. We all know doctors are not marketers. Yet, as an industry we often ask them to be—laying out dozens of discrete messages before them, for example, and feverishly tallying up their votes, so we can be sure we’re communicating the right things in the right order.

The fundamental flaw in this approach is that at the end of day, physicians are just human beings and as such, they base their decisions on reality and not potential reality. It is really just simple human nature. Opinions are grounded in what is and not what can be. This approach to message development is especially scary for products in development that may have something new to say. Physicians can quickly discard messages that don’t align with today’s reality. Simply, we don’t know what we want until its been shown to us.

The next time you’re looking to develop or tighten up your messaging, adopt a more strategic approach. Generate a few distinct communication platforms for your brand and let your target physicians react to them. This way, you can be sure that the marketing course for your brand is being set by genuine marketers and not just docs who play one for the day. Don’t fool yourself into thinking this just applies to physician messaging testing!

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December 12, 2010

Evidence That Physicians & Patients Aren’t on the Same Treatment Page

One of the many downsides of a siloed strategy in pharmaceutical marketing (see our additional thinking on this topic) is that the two halves of the marketing equation – physician perceptions and patient perceptions – are never truly connected.

Too often there is the assumption that physicians and patients see a given disease state the same way and that they have open lines of communication with one another that are frequently accessed. These assumptions are not only altruistic, but can prevent a brand team from fully realizing potential opportunities for brand growth. As part of a recent project at ROF, physician perceptions of the impact of a specific condition on patients lives were assessed by mimicking a question set asked of patients in a robust quantitative study. The chart below illustrates only a sampling of the disconnect between physicians and patients.


Clearly, physicians clearly underestimate the impact of this condition on patients’ ability to thrive. From this, a campaign to sensitize doctors to this disconnect and get them to take a more thorough assessment of their patients was developed. Without a full view of this picture, it was impossible for both professional and consumer pharmaceutical marketers on this team to maximize the effectiveness of their initiatives.

Have you been able to quantify the perceptual gaps between physicians and patients when it comes to your disease state and brand? How closely does it resemble what was uncovered here? What were the implications?

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