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Where Do Your Patients Live On The Web? Effective Targeting For Digital Campaigns
by Sarah Van Heirseele, Tuesday, January 21, 2014 9:32 AM
Targeting is a key benefit of online marketing, but anyone who has worked in the online healthcare space knows that it’s easier said than done. A
digital tactic that effectively engages one population may work dismally with another. New tactics are being developed all the time, but since many are unproven for healthcare direct response, they
can pose a risk to your campaign. The best way to successfully target in the digital space is to take a deep dive into your audience’s
digital consumption habits. Different patients go online for different reasons. Without compromising specific patient/caregiver identity, marketers can assess:
- How they use the internet to research health-related information
- Whether they connect on social networks with
advocacy groups/healthcare professionals/other patients
- Whether different geographies discuss specific diseases more than
others
Understanding the digital landscape for your patient population will give you key insights on how and where to deliver your
message.
Digital Research Tools There are a variety of
tools to help flesh out this landscape, including:
- Primary and secondary market research
- Social listening tools
- Competitive intelligence tools
Primary and secondary market research allows for some initial profiling of your audience in order to understand key features of their demographic, lifestyle and media habits. There may be
sufficient insights available through secondary research, while primary research can be conducted to gain a deeper, more specific understanding of your patients. Social listening tools monitor all public conversations on the internet and can provide valuable feedback on the following:
- What kind of conversations are patients having?
- Are they actively engaged in conversations, or more
passively seeking information?
- In which websites or social networks are these conversations taking place?
- Who are the most influential people talking about the topic (i.e., bloggers, key opinion leaders, healthcare professionals, patients)?
Competitive intelligence tools can also be utilized to measure the volume of searches relating to a disease state. You can see historic trends to look for
key seasonality of when people search certain terms, and can estimate the amount of competition you may have during a specific timeframe.
Digital Tactics Once these insights are gathered, you can develop a well-informed strategic plan and determine digital tactics
with the most potential to succeed. There are new digital marketing opportunities every day, but some of the more tried and true tactical elements typically fit within the following
categories:
- Paid media
- Examples: SEM, social advertising,
mobile/display ads, email marketing
- Advocacy Groups
- Examples: Banner ads on advocacy websites, email marketing to members, posts on their social network pages
- Blogger
Outreach
- Examples: Blog posts, Twitter posts, Facebook content
Two Patient Groups = Two Different Campaigns Two examples illustrate two different patient populations, and how we used these
tools to develop very different — but successful — targeted campaigns. First, we needed to identify patients who had a heart
attack or stroke to participate in a clinical trial. Through our market research and social listening tools we identified that these patients were:
- Prevalent in the U.S.
- Active online researchers of treatment options
- Heavy online searchers, more likely to click on banner ads
- Not actively participating in social discussions about
heart attack and stroke, but tend to be heavy users of Facebook
Because this was a large patient population that was relatively
passive in their online habits, we developed a broad digital campaign, including:
- Paid search
- A variety of display advertising tactics
- Facebook advertising
- Advertising in heart health communities
Facebook and paid search were the most efficient ways to reach this
population. In contrast, we had another clinical trial for patients with celiac disease. Celiac has a much smaller patient population with
very different characteristics:
- Only about 1.8 million adults in the U.S.
- They are a tight knit group who actively participate in online communities
- They are less likely to engage when they feel
“marketed” to (i.e., banner ads); information needs to come from a trustworthy source
- They are very loyal to one another and
their thought leaders; they receive much credible content from bloggers they trust
This population needed more narrowly focused
tactics coming from a trustworthy source. Some of the digital tactics included:
- Blogger outreach
- Facebook advertising targeting established celiac/gluten-free communities
- Advocacy outreach (email blasts,
Facebook posts, website ads)
The most efficient tactic for this campaign was advocacy outreach. While the beauty of digital marketing is its ability to be laser focused, it is even more incumbent on the marketer to understand where to best point that focus. Once you
understand how and where your patient lives online, you will be in a much better position to identify a strategy to reach them. This upfront investment in time and intellectual capital will surely pay
great dividends as you engage patients in the digital world.