Wednesday, December 1, 2010

What kinds of problems can medical marketing help us solve?


 

The answer: Plenty...let's list just a few.
The bottom-line objective in healthcare marketing is usually—but not exclusively—to grow the practice. Often this means attracting more patients, but a well-rounded marketing plan will achieve much more for the provider. Effective and ethical marketing opens the door to benefits for providers to:
  • Attract cases that the doctors either enjoy or have special expertise for;
  • Protect and grow share of voice (SOV) of patients;
  • Build the professional reputation of the provider with the community and peers.
These high-level objectives also translate into answers for challenges and opportunities such as:
  • Attracting better paying or more profitable cases;
  • Reaching "ideal patents," directly and cost-effectively;
  • Changing the mix of patients or types of cases;
  • Winning more professional referrals;
  • Supporting a new location, provider or technology (or all of these);
  • Transitioning to a "all-referral" practice;
  • Standing out from the crowd in positive ways;
  • Answering competitive challenges;
  • Finding more personal time and greater professional enjoyment; and
  • Tastefully building and extending your reputation.

For more enquiries, please call us at 852-25801058 for more information.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Think about Twitter as a place to build relationships - Adapted from best practice of “twitter”



Instead of approaching Twitter as a place to broadcast information about your company, think of it as a place to build relationships. Put into practice, that means you could do things like:
Include in your Bio and/or custom background the names (or @usernames) of the people twittering from your company account. It’s also a good idea to include additional contact info, like email addresses.
Listen regularly for comments about your medical products—and be prepared to address concerns, offer customer service or thank people for praise.
Tip: In addition to keeping an eye on your @messages, you can use our Saved Searches feature to easily track mentions of your medical services, etc. From your Twitter home page, simply run a search, and then at the top of your results page, click “Save this search.” A link with your search term will appear on the right side of your page, and whenever you click it, you’ll get real-time results for that query. To delete a search, just head to the top of your results and click “Remove this search.”
Use a casual, friendly tone in your messages.
While you shouldn’t feel compelled to follow everyone who follows you, do respond to some questions or comments addressed to you.
Post links to articles and sites you think folks would find interesting—even if they’re not your sites or about your company.
Make sure your tweets provide some real value. You know better than we do what is valuable, but here are few examples to spark ideas:
  • Offer Twitter exclusive coupons or deals
  • Take people behind the scenes of your company
  • Post pictures from your offices, stores, warehouses, etc.
  • Share sneak peeks of projects or events in development
Don’t spam people. Twitter’s following model means that you have to respect the interests and desires of other people here or they’ll unfollow you.
For more enquiries, please call us at 852-25801058 for more information.
www.medicalmarketing.com.hk

Monday, November 29, 2010

How Medical Marketing is Like Drilling for Oil



There's a five-step process that makes for best practice success.

Medical marketing is very much like drilling for oil. Success requires a proven system not a shovel.

Suppose you want to drill for oil. You can begin making random holes in your backyard, or you can use a method that's based on knowledge, experience and the right tools. You could begin looking for oil by randomly drilling in your own backyard. Then you try your friend's backyard. And then you start buying properties until the zoning commission shuts you down. It's highly unlikely that you'll hit a gusher, but some people try.
OR
You can hire a geologist to locate land with a defined set of characteristics that have proven to yield oil. The first field you try may or may not be fruitful, but over time, you are much more likely to find a gusher than if you go out haphazardly and start digging - like most people do when it comes to marketing.

Even though there is always an element of risk in marketing, you vastly improve the probability of sustained success with a well-considered, best practices approach.
It turns out that there are only five key steps in drilling for oil. It's a page from heavy industry that transfers nicely to successful healthcare and medical marketing. And the comparison is useful to medical practices, healthcare organizations, hospitals and others who want to minimize risk and maximize results.

FINDING OIL

It's wasteful to drill where there isn't any oil. Marketing is not about being everything to everybody. It's about answering a specific need with a specific solution. Geologists look for the right conditions for oil. Market research helps define the audience (demographics, psychographics, geographics, etc.) and the products and services that are in demand or will appeal to this target. You also define the media that communicates with them.

PREPARING TO DRILL

A 12-month marketing plan sets strategies, tactics and budget in place to achieve defined goals. What considerations (and possible adjustments) are needed for seasonal variations, operational steps, facilities and equipment? Is everyone aware of the plan and goals? And properly trained for their role? And, perhaps just as important, have responsibilities been assigned?

SETTING UP THE RIG

Experience counts; you need the right tools to get the job done. The creative make-ready steps define your compelling message and produce the professional marketing tools (ads, brochures, billboards, broadcast, online) necessary to reach the oil - ah, audience.

DRILLING

Drilling operations begin with a starter hole; it's the marketing equivalent of testing, tracking and making any necessary adjustments in advance of roll-out. Do the test results validate the preparation assumptions? Is the media mix right? How about the price or the offer? The testing cycle further reduces risk and expenses, and increases the prospect of bringing in a gusher.

EXTRACTING THE OIL

Gushers are a great visual for movies, but are actually wasteful. What you really want is a reliable, producing oil well that delivers results consistently. If one well pays off, the oil industry knows to drill additional wells in the same field. In marketing, you grow with reliable and repeatable results. When you've got a producing marketing formula, drill again. And then repeat the steps in this process for continued growth and success.
Random oil drilling is worse than a crapshoot; the professionals don't do it that way. It's also true for marketing in healthcare, hospitals, pharmaceuticals and provider practices. There's no reason to guess. And there's every reason to get professional marketing help right from the start.
For more enquiries, please call us at 852-25801058 for more information.
www.medicalmarketing.com.hk

Friday, November 26, 2010

Facebook Gets Closer to a Trademark on the Word ‘Face


Abstracted from Kim-Mai Cutler

 
Facebook moved one step closer to securing a trademark on the word “Face” when it’s used with online chat rooms or bulletin boards, after receiving a notice of allowance from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office today.

After this, the company has six months to file a statement of use and pay a fee. An examining attorney can either approve the statement, file a refusal or ask for additional requirements. If it’s approved, then the patent and trademark office will usually issue a registration within two months.
Facebook first filed for this trademark almost five years ago in December of 2005. That was when it had only raised its first venture round of investment from Accel Partners and was still a college social networking site.
The trademark would cover the word “face” when it pertains to:
Telecommunication services, namely, providing online chat rooms and electronic bulletin boards for transmission of messages among computer users in the field of general interest and concerning social and entertainment subject matter, none primarily featuring or relating to motoring or to cars.
If Facebook is awarded a trademark on the word “face”, it shouldn’t interfere with Apple’s mobile video calling service Facetime, since the Cupertino-based device maker has a trademark on that term itself.
Facebook has also tried to trademark other words. It has at least 15 trademark applications around the “like” buttons it launched in April, some of which cover the word “like” itself.
The social network tends to be more aggressive with its trademarks than its patents, which it has implied it acquires mostly for defensive purposes. The company is currently embroiled in a dispute with parody site Lamebook, which takes user-generated screenshots of off-color interactions on the social network. It also sued social network aggregator Power.com for trademark infringement last year.

For more enquiries, please call us at 852-25801058 for more information.
www.medicalmarketing.com.hk

Thank your patients, referral sources, and staff



Take the time to give thanks to those who help your practice succeed. Thanksgiving is a time to give thanks for all of the things that you should be thankful for. In addition to being thankful for your family and your health, make sure you take the time to thank those that help your practice thrive – your patients, your referral sources, and your staff. Without them, you wouldn’t be able to practice the healthcare that you’ve been trained to do and you’re so passionate about.

Brand clinic materials, newsletters, thank-you card, email marketing or even a simply follow-up call make different impression for the patients.

For more enquiries, please call us at 852-25801058 for more information.
www.medicalmarketing.com.hk

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Email marketing for your healthcare practice



Email is the communications means of choice for many individuals, but it's a surprisingly neglected strategy that never gets off the ground for the simple lack of opt-in email addresses. Here are seven easy ways to build a permission-based contact list and grow a new provider revenue resource.





One of our big moments of frustration in working with healthcare providers around the nation is when we discover that they don't have an email marketing strategy.
The reason? Many offices have a record of only 100 email addresses, often less. That strategy is dead before it begins.
Email is a popular and effective marketing communications tool. It's accepted, even preferred, by a large segment of the public. Better than 90 percent of Internet users use email, most on a daily basis.
An email strategy is completely appropriate for many, although not all, providers. It is nearly immediate, easy to use and low cost. It's an effective way to increase patient satisfaction, retention, referrals and revenue.
To be clear, we're not talking about doctor-patient email involving medical matters where there are legitimate concerns about privacy, liability, reimbursement, workload, etc. This is a permission-based email strategy, and for many medical and dental practices, hospitals, orthodontists, cosmetic surgeons and other providers - principally in elective care - the healthcare marketing opportunities are strong and varied.
The bottom line is that email works, but the first step is to have a system to regularly collect email addresses. In all cases, we're talking about asking for their permission (opt-in, decline or opt-out), and that they opt-in with an understanding of what will be sent and that it will be pertinent and valuable to them.
These are individuals who want to hear from you; often they prefer email over phone calls or regular mail, and they are happy to provide their email information. (And with an understanding of the type of information you will be sending and that it is something they will value.)
In fact it's easy to build an email contact list. Many providers can use email successfullly in their marketing mix, but they are shy about the idea, unaware of its value, or are too busy to introduce a new office routine.
For more enquiries, please call us at 852-25801058 for more information.
www.medicalmarketing.com.hk