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Biotechnology ! Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology 2013 Jonathan Mackinnon, PhD http://es.linkedin.com/in/jonathanmackinnon https://twitter.com/JAGMackinnon www.farmantra.com Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Summary! Biotechnology is a billion dollar industry that is predominantly composed of small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) that Outlined within are the fundamental considerations that need to be taken into account before developing a social technology strategy. engage in R&D and/or professional services. These Biotechnology SMEs are highly-educated and highly-skilled innovative This document provides a brief overview of the Biotechnology Industry before delivering a current assessment of the methods enterprises that operate in four “colour” divisions; Red (Health),White (Industry), Green (Agriculture), and Blue (Marine that a Biotech SME utilises to market itself. Using case studies I outline methods by which SMEs can market their biggest asset, and Aquatic). Yet, despite the high level of education Biotech Knowledge, before identifying the methods by which this can be SMEs are failing to capitalise on their knowledge to improve business development. analysed. In essence this document should act as a guide on which a Social technology has significant untapped potential that is strategy can be built up over a pre-determined period of time. beginning to be explored by business. The impact that these technologies will have on business-to-business (B2B) and Incorporation of a gradual tailor-made strategy across all levels of the SME requires an investment of time but little financial cost. The business-to-consumer (B2C) communication will become more prevalent over the coming years. This accelerated adoption of competitive advantages gained extend well beyond increasing revenue and can be used to promote all areas of business social technology networks provides Biotech SMEs with development. unprecedented potential to refine and improve business operations whilst in parallel increasing employee productivity and collaboration. With few resources and limited time Biotech Firms can develop a fully-integrated social technology strategy with clearly defined benchmarks of success. This will not only improve internal and external collaborative efforts but also increase the SMEs profile on the global Biotechnology stage. I hope this is informative, and I welcome any discussions on the topic. Jonathan Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Contents! 1. The Biotechnology Industry: An overview……………… 1 2. Biotech approaches to Marketing………………………5 3. Marketing Knowledge……………………………………12 4. Social Technology Applications…………………………18 5. Website Marketing Metrics……………………………...23 6. References……………………………………………….31 1. The Biotechnology Industry: An overview Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Biotechnology: Definition “The application of science and technology to living organisms, as well as parts, products, and models thereof, to alter living or non-living materials for the production of knowledge, goods, or services” Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)! Promoting the combination of research and innovation to drive economic growth is a humans first started to use microorganisms to produce food and selectively breed priority of many industrial and political agendas. Unlike the 300 years that the livestock for farming. The modern Biotechnology Industry originated in the Pharmaceutical Industry has had to late 1970´s thanks to innovative scientific establish its place within the global breakthroughs in Biochemistry and economy the Biotech Industry is a young Microbiology that led to the formation of emerging industry that consists of a few big players but many small players. Genentech. Over the proceeding decades the industry has grown in four “colour” divisions that have attracted over $300bn The concept of Biotechnology has been Medical & Healthcare Industrial applications & products Agriculture Marine & Aquatic in investment 1. practiced for thousands of years since 2 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Biotechnology: Global presence In 2011, publicly traded Biotechnology firms in established centres generated revenues of $83.4bn. Global Biotechnology Report 2012 2! From a modest 20 Biotech firms that emerged in the late 1970´s the industry has seen significant growth to reach over 15,631 firms presently listed by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) (Figure 1). The US considerably dominates both in number of biotech firms (6,213) and the highest proportion ($22bn) of the global $35.3bn spent annually in R&D (Figure 2). Other global players include European countries such as France and Germany, and nonEuropean countries such as Japan and Korea. Interestingly, the Spanish and Australian Biotech Industries are established in terms of population , however, significantly less capital is spent on R&D. Conversely, Switzerland and Belgium invest heavily in R&D but possess comparatively fewer Biotech Firms. United Kingdom! 3%! Japan! 3%! Other! 20%! Australia! 3%! Germany! 4%! Korea! 6%! United States! 40%! Spain! 11%! France! 10%! Figure 1: Number of Biotech Firms in 2011 3 ! Other: Switzerland, Italy, Netherlands, Ireland, Israel, Belgium, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Portugal, Austria, Czech Republic, Poland, South Africa, Estonia, Slovenia Spain! Belgium! 2%! 2%! Switzerland! 3%! Other! 11%! Canada! 3%! Korea! 3%! Germany! 3%! Japan! 3%! France! 8%! United States! 62%! Figure 2: R&D Expenditure in 2011 3! Other: Sweden, Italy, Denmark, Israel, Netherlands, Ireland, Austria, Norway, Russia, Australia, Finland, Czech Republic, Slovenia, Poland, Portugal, Estonia, South Africa 3 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology high capacity for creative development and excellent access to new scientific advances 5. Furthermore, with the product pipeline of pharmaceutical companies Japan Korea Belgium OECD Average Industry as they significant drivers of innovation via a Switzerland SMEs are highly valuable members of the Biotech France developed to generate new sources of income 4. These 0 Canada universities in the form of spin-off´s or start-ups that are 20 United States A large proportion of Biotech SMEs originate from 40 Germany expenditure. ! 60 Spain (Figure 3) and account for 36.2% of all R&D 80 United Kingdom sized Enterprises (SMEs) with less than 50 employees 100 New Zealand 73.9% of all Biotech Firms are Small- and Medium- Percentage (%) The value of Small Business Figure 3: Percentage of SMEs by country 3! Data shown (for the 11 countries featured previously. Global OECD average indicated. drying out, SMEs are considered key to replenishing dwindling stocks 6. Consequently, to maintain Industry growth SMEs are indispensible and must achieve commercial success by securing adequate investment for R&D and generate appropriate revenues from launched products. 4 2. Biotech approaches to Marketing Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Biotech and Marketing: A troubled relationship “To maximise success Biotech SMEs need to combine product superiority, competitive strategy, and marketing ability” Kakati,M. 2003 7! Over the last years over 1.5 billion people have joined five Finnish Biotechnology Industry scientist-managers found a online social technology platforms to form global significant inconsistency in understanding the aim and value of communities that have significantly increased the marketing (Table 1). economic value of many commercial sectors 8. Whilst the Due to the young age of the Biotech Industry there are no Pharmaceutical Industry has made appreciable progress in stable business development strategies available that adopting the merits of social technology the Biotech guarantee success 1. Thus, by considering the marketing Industry has been slow to react, primarily due to the strategy early, the SME is forced to develop a clearly-defined devotion of financial resources to R&D and the low human tailored business development strategy that, in combination, resources available. ! can be achieved using resources already available within the ! SME. From the outset this would significantly benefit the SME The prevailing view amongst Biotech Industry professionals is as by developing strategy and marketing approaches not only that social media can be utilised as part of a more general would there be an increase the likelihood of commercial marketing strategy associated with a specific product launch. success but also the ability to acquire risk capital necessary Unfortunately research indicates that many Biotech SMEs have during the start-up phase 10. no commercial business strategy or clearly defined knowledge of their market, competitors, customer needs, or product differentiation and positioning 9. Indeed, a recent interview with 6 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Biotech and Marketing: Insider views Table 1: Biotech marketing interviews with five scientist-managers What does marketing mean for the company?! -Insider view! What marketing activities are performed?! How is marketing organized?! - Outsider view! Case 1! *I do not understand the question … We contact potential customers directly – maybe *Contacting customers *Scientists performing most of this is the best way to describe it. *Presenting at conferences and publishing in academic the marketing activities journals *Giving expert lectures *Gaining visibility through the company website Case 2! *So it meant almost invariably taking the published articles that we had … directly to the pharmaceutical companies, actually to the scientists employed by those companies that were doing the same kind of work. * … trying to create awareness at the larger scientific conferences … presenting scientific data that we´ve generated in our own laboratories and we present that to the community. Case 3! * … since we are dealing with such a special solution there is a lot of business to *Publishing customer news bulletin business communication involved. *Giving interviews to the press * But at this moment we have not taken any general actions in a way that we would *(Company website) have started to build awareness based on this solution, so the next step would be the distribution channel and at the last phase, the consumers would be interested in this matter as well. *The marketing competence of the individual owners is used to perform marketing activities Case 4! * … this is more about informing in a way that we present our products among other companies at universities so that people would know what they could order. * The resources of our owner companies are utilized among other things in mailing lists and such and also their visibility at business fairs is much utilized at their stands. *Outsourcing some of the marketing activities *Using owner companies ’ marketing expertise to perform some of the marketing activities *Scientists performing some of the marketing activities Case 5! *Right from the start we have hired experienced sales and marketing personnel *Communicating with marketing experts outside the *Recruiting marketing experts to take care * … so we have contact networks also outside Europe where there are people who company of some of the marketing activities operate in our business field and have worked for similar companies so they have a lot *Presenting in conferences *Scientists performing some of the of experience and contact networks with these customer companies. *Gaining visibility through company website marketing activities *Building and maintaining network relationships with the scientific community *Providing scientific reference lists *Presenting at conferences and publishing in academic journals *Gaining visibility through the company website *Developing partnerships *Informing and creating awareness of company’s capabilities, facilities and services *Brand building *Advertising *Mailing campaigns *Sponsoring *Gaining visibility through the company website *University visits *Recruiting marketing experts to take care of some of the marketing activities *Scientists performing some of the marketing activities Eriksson, P and Rajamäki, H 9! 7 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Marketing Capabilities: A SME´s assets “In SMEs knowledge is usually disseminated verbally. Creating a formal system for storing Knowledge knowledge is percieved as unfeasible due to Products limited resources” Kmieciak 2012 11! Figure 4: SME assets. Prior to developing a strategy Biotech SMEs need to necessary early can prevent entering a collapsing market and identify the assets that they possess. Whilst it can be ensure high commercial success. Furthermore, by aligning the argued that products drive revenue, a more significant firm´s scientific message with its knowledge marketing at an value asset, Knowledge, can be utilised to engage a global early time point it is possible to communicate the potential stage to benefit all aspects of the SME. ! value of products earlier that will, in turn, assist in engaging The current limiting factor of this asset is that knowledge is Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs) and potential customers long disseminated on a local scale. By using this asset as a tool for before product launch 12. promoting the business outside of product marketing it is possible to better assess the unmet need for which the product is intended, the market size, and the growth rate 12. In dedicated Biotech R&D SMEs the delay between concept and market entry/collaboration can be over 10 years. Thus, prediction of competitor goals and global strategies is 8 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Marketing Strategies: Shifting from Outbound to Inbound The majority of Biotech SMEs are founded by scientists that use marketing strategies based on methods that have been proven successful in academic circles and traditional marketing approaches employed by Pharmaceutical companies. These methods are defined as Outbound Marketing strategies. This strategy commonly employs unpaid outbound methods such as presenting at scientific conferences, publishing scientific papers, and interacting with the local scientific network. Paid outbound methods include company brochures/catalogues, attending trade fairs, magazine advertisements, and unsolicited contact, in person or via email. Whilst these methods have merit the impact, they are geographically restricted and limit the overall exposure a company can attain. In recent years a significant shift in marketing has occurred, from Outbound to Inbound Marketing. Inbound Marketing is founded on the concept that interacting and educating potential customers significantly improves the conversion rate from an interested party to actual customer. In order to achieve this, one must develop a marketing strategy that is tied to the business strategy of the company. Once developed, methodologies such as those outlined below can be employed to generate new leads. Outbound Marketing More traditional advertising directed towards finding customers and persuading them to purchase product. Inbound Marketing Directed towards providing content of value in order to educate potential customers. Typically content is free and there is a time delay between potential to actual customer conversion. Outbound Inbound • Conferences • Scientific Papers • Blogs • Podcasts • Local scientific network • Paid advertising • Video • ebooks • Unsolicited contact • Brochures/catalogues • Newsletters • Social Media • Email marketing 9 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Case studies: R&D and service provision In order to provide a reference for generating a knowledge- years away from generating revenue, the second, a Cell-Based based marketing strategy two cases will be presented Assay Screening SME is generating revenue but wishes to throughout. The first case is a Biopharmaceutical SME that is 5 increase its market share. Sample Case 1: Biopharmaceutical SME Type R&D Founded 2008 Employees 1 CEO, 6 dedicated R&D staff, 3 support staff Pipeline 5 lead compounds, 2 compounds in PII trials (outsourced) Marketing Approach Marketing currently seen as low priority. All resources directed towards R&D with occasional participation in conferences Visibility Poor Sample Case 2: Cell Based Assay Screening SME Type Service Provider Founded 2010, spin-off from University Employees 2 CEOs, 6 screening staff, 2 sales staff Pipeline 1 platform operational,1 platform in development (in collaboration with University) Marketing Approach Marketing seen as high priority. Sales staff very active but few leads Visibility Medium 10 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Biotech Value Chain: Areas of operation Both case studies operate in separate value chains. The first stages of its value chain, with the initial discovery phase case operates within the initial stages of drug development originated from the university it is in collaboration with,. up until pre-clinical. From here it is outsourcing its Clinical Trials and has no formal arrangement for Manufacturing or Marketing & Sales. Case study 2 operates across the later Biopharmaceutical SME Basic R&D Target ID & Validation Lead Development Clinical Trials Marketing Manufacturing & Sales Cell Based Assay Screening Discovery R&D Service operation Marketing & Sales 11 3. Marketing Knowledge Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Why?: Benefits significantly outweigh risks • Up to $1.3 trillion annual value can be unlocked by social technologies • >1.5 billion people use social networking • 90% of companies using social technologies report business benefits • 2-fold increase in enterprise collaboration and communication • 20-25% potential productivity improcement in knowledge-based environments. • 60% executives believed that the benefits outweighed the risks McKinsey Global Institute 2012 8! 13 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology How?: Develop networks using internal resources If firms are performing well in an industry this can be explained by their use of internal Company resources and accumulated capabilities Vanhees 2006 13! Vast amounts of information can be acquired from external sources using internal resources that form networks in overlapping areas of interest. This information can subsequently be disseminated through networks using social technology for the benefit of the individuals and the company as a whole. ! There are three sources of information that are linked via overlapping regions of interest. The first is the company´s Employee Customer Figure 5: Regions of information interest internal information that is correlated to its business strategy (incorporating mission values, responsibility, and customer profile). This area of interest overlaps with customers, The largest area of interest belongs to the diversity of employees individually and in combination. Employees´ areas customers. Different geographical locations play a significant of interest is significantly larger due to the diverse professional role in this context in addition to the diversity in education and and educational backgrounds. Interests are partially aligned professional backgrounds. These overlapping areas of interest with the company, however, significant additional interests can be used as a platform for engagement using social exist. technologies. 14 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Case studies: Developing networks Biopharmaceutical SME Employees 1 CEO, 6 dedicated R&D staff, 3 support staff Areas of interest • CEO has established local network and global contacts in industry related to company activity. • R&D staff already engage in social network activities outside of work and maintain contact with colleagues and friends from PhD/university/other. Areas if interest/ experience include many areas of bioogical sciences, biotech, and pharmaceuticals. 1 maintains well-developed international networks. • Support staff engaged locally with individuals across many areas of expertise. Cell Based Assay Screening SME Employees 2 CEOs, 6 screening staff, 2 sales staff Areas of Interest • 1 CEO originates from university with Professor status, 1 originates from Pharma research, M.Sci by education. Both have acquired well developed international networks. Primarily engage through email. • Screening staff possess PhD´s, 4 from host country, 2 others from other countries. Social technologies heavily utilised outside of work to maintain professional networks. • Sales staff very well connected with clients. Use social technologies to complete work goals. Each operates individually, no technological collaboration. 15 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Network integration: Fostering internal collaborations 70% of value creation opportunities lies in Table 2: Levels of Integration 14 improving communication and collaboration within and across enterprises. Integration Process Structure LOW Communication Network, round table Contribution Knowledge input into network Coordination Task leaders coordinate subgroups Cooperation Subgroup responsibilities Collaboration Complete collaborative efforts McKinsey Global Institute 2012 8! Fostering internal collaborative social technology projects have significant benefits over other avenues of responsibility. Whilst individuals may operate under separate guidelines, or possess divergent HIGH responsibilities, by increasing collaboration information transfer occurs more frequently.! Not only does increasing collaboration enhance internal performance but a fully integrated approach also improves the value of the information generated compared to the information generated by one individual alone. Consequently, a strategy incorporating all members of the Employee Employee Employee Employee Integrated Social Technology Platform SME offers distinct time value advantages compared to a compartmentalised strategy where few members are responsible for social technology 16 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Case Studies: Network Integration Biopharmaceutical SME Employees 1 CEO, 6 dedicated R&D staff, 3 support staff Asset Collaboration • CEO holds overall responsibility and has 1 hour meeting per week with all staff to develop and monitor all social technology development • R&D staff form 3 subgroups with 1 support staff member. • Social technologies divided between subgroups that meet twice per week for 30 min to assign tasks. R&D staff focus on contributing international information whilst staff contribute local information and focus on regional topics. • With 2 hours of meetings per week and 1 hour of personal time employees increase their level of collaboration and trust. Cell Based Assay Screening SME Employees 2 CEOs, 6 screening staff, 2 sales staff Asset Collaboration • CEOs divide responsibility between them and lead one subgroup each. • Screening staff subgroups incorporate 1 sales member to generate information about local and international affairs. • Each subgroup meets once a week where responsibilities are divided andcontent is generated individually. • A summary is presented at a 1 hour weekly meeting between staff. 17 4. Social Technology Applications Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Social Technology: Where to begin? In essence, social technology is a set of network applications that allow individuals to interact on a global stage to directly exchange information with one another and create their own content. The range of applications available is diverse and allow users to interact via many mediums such as video, blogging, conversing in a network, and presenting presentations. ! In order to avoid stretching limited resources across as many platforms as possible it is advisable to choose the technologies that are most suited to the company that should be systematically integrated in turn. In order to ascertain what efforts are successful a series of social Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) should be Table 3: Assessing available network applications Questions Assessment Applications Which applications are most relevant to the business? Impact What technologies have had the most impact on your value chain? What is the level of value for each one? Customers What are your customer profiles? How are they interacting with each technology Features What features of each technology can you use to contribute? What benefits can be measured from your contributions? identified. These social KPI´s differ from website metrics as they measure the impact of social interaction. Website metrics, on the other hand, look to profile and quantify the visitors to the website. KPI´s are a lot more difficult to define as the “success” markers differ for each company. 19 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Social Applications: Most used by professionals Content Social Platforms Networking Blog Technical forum Social Technology applications have numerous benefits. to the website from this professional network. Alternatively, Primarily, networking on a global scale increases the Twitter can be used by an employee to engage with professional network of an individual. When used correctly individuals across different industries and disciplines. This, in these networks can also bring the attention of the potential turn, may lead to increased traffic towards the website. Once customers or investors towards the company itself. LinkedIn, here, if suitably engaged by a blog post or information piece, for example, allows users to develop professional profiles and the individual may return for new information. Once developed then connect with colleagues, both past and present. By into a lead the potential for converting into a customer or developing a company profile interested parties can be drawn investor requires significantly less persuasion. 20 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Social KPIs: Key Performance Indicators Table 4: Key Performance Indicators Metric Assessment Bookmarks Who is bookmarking your information (using website metrics, covered later) Comments Who is commenting on your content? Do they comment on content across different technologies? Downloads How many people are downloading your content? Does this increase with time? How is this affected by the frequency of content generation? Email subscriptions What is the current subscription size? Is this increasing with new technology interaction? Feedback What are the main points of consideration from the feedback generated? If there is no feedback, why? Followers How many people are following your content (only applicable to some applications) Frequency What is the daily / weekly / monthly frequency of interaction? Total contributors How many people are contributing to your content via comments, links etc? Views How many people have viewed your content? Is there a particular demographic viewing the content? 21 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Case Studies: Social Technology Strategy and KPIs Biopharmaceutical SME Technology Adoption • Using the cumulative knowledge of the SME about KOLs, influencial bloggers and scientists the initial goal was to organise how the information should be stored. • Secondly, group decisions led to the generation of new content about R&D news, Biotech investment, and SME-specific science. • Third, a blog, twitter, and LinkedIn profiles were adopted for the SME (sequentially). • In parallel, personal twitter, blog, and LinkedIn profiles were integrated into the strategy. Cell Based Assay Screening SME Technology Adoption • In the first stage customer profiles were developed from existing customer information. • Launch of engagement using social platform was postponed until significant market data had been collected. • Weekly meetings provided enough information to generate new daily content which was posted on the SME blog, twitter, and facebook. LinkedIn profiles were actively encouraged, especially for sales members. • After listening to suggestions the SME also posted videos on YouTube to explain and demonstrate some of their services. 22 5. Website Marketing Metrics Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Marketing Metrics: Easily overlooked A survey of professional marketers found: • 39% had significant amounts of analytics data • Only 37% routinely gained insights from the analytics • 21% lacked the resources to adequately perform analysis • 20% did not have the time required • 52% focused on generating reports rather than gathering insights • 53% will see an increase in metric budget in 2013 MarketingSherpa 2013 15! ! 24 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Marketing Metrics Why measure Marketing Metrics? • To identify what works • To identify what doesn´t work • To identify what can be improved • Improve marketing performance by reinforcing successful initiatives! In order to determine the level of success associated with any available it important to identify the relevant criteria. For marketing strategy some tangible outcome must be recorded. example, a large multinational company focused on the In traditional marketing avenues marketing success is provision of snacks and beverages may define marketing predominantly defined by revenue associated with the specific benefit from the number of “likes” gained on Facebook for a marketing initiative. How can these marketing metrics be particular product. The likelihood of this approach being applied to Social Media Strategies? Thankfully, there are a relevant to a SME that specialised in professional services is number of freely available tools available (for example Google unlikely. Analytics) that can be used. Before launching into the metrics 25 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Website: Traffic Sources Knowledge-based marketing success is defined by company visibility. The more visible interaction a company generates Organic increases the likelihood of lead development which in-turn generates more business opportunities. Thus, Referral overall success can be defined by the amount of traffic that is directed towards the company´s website. This traffic can Direct be divided into three categories; organic, referral, and direct traffic. Table 5:Traffic Sources Type Organic Referral Direct Origin Links from Search Engines Links from other websites Direct URL, website is bookmarked, link from email or document the company has produced How Keyword search leads to information generated by the company e.g. Blog post Links from social media, professional forums, conferences Business cards, conferences, advertising, white papers, 26 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Search Engine Optimisation: Increasing organic traffic Organic traffic to the website Original content can be in many orinates from search engines. How forms, however the most much traffic depends on how well applicable for knowledge-based your website ranks for your specific companies are website keyword keywords. A good marketing optimisation, blog entries, ebooks strategy involves generating high (educational/informative quality orignal content that documents about subjects relevant incorporates specific keywords. to company´s vision). Tools Google Adwords Keyword Tool Identify and evaluate the performance of your website for different keywords and phrases. Evaluation revolves around volume, trends and competition Google Trends Blog eBooks Website Keywords Other original content e.g. Interview posted on internet Compare search trends between keywords or phrases. Results include interest over time, interest by geographic region and related terms Search Engine Visibility 27 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Marketing Metrics: Using Google Analytics Google Analytics allows users to generate significant real-time can rapidly familiarise themselves with the functions. Below is insights into web activity. This highly customisable tool is an overview of some of the metrics on offer. freely available with minimal technological knowledge required to install. The user interface is inttuitive and users Table 6: How to measure your website metrics Section! Metric! Measurement! Overview All visits How many visits your website is achieving Unique Visitors Visitors that are viewing your website for the first time Page views How many pages your visitors are viewing Bounce rate How quickly people are leaving your website Lanugage What languages do your viewers speak Location Where your website´s audience originates from. Aim to increase global reach New vs. Returning How many visitors are new and how many are returning Frequency What frequency do visitors return? How many pages do they view when they return? Engagement How long are visitors spending at the website Overview Are people accessing your website from mobile? Demographics Behaviour Mobile 28 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Case Studies: Website metrics Biopharmaceutical SME Results • Search Engine Optimisation provided instant increase in organic traffic as the content was much more accessible. • Regular, daily, blog posts also served to increase organic traffic by 40%. • Social technology engagement led to an increase in referral traffic, especially from twitter as the cumulative knowledge allowed several employees to lead discussions in professional forums. • As website traffic rose and users became more engaged an increase in external collaboration with academics and industry professionals was noted. • Social technology engagement also attracted interest from VC´s that are in negotiation. • Increased global exposure has also led to an increase in highly-skilled applicants. Cell Based Assay Screening SME Results • Initial exposure was delayed by the time taken to generate customer profiles. • Assisting forum members who were suffering screening technical issues (but were not using the SME´s services) built the SME´s reputation amongst academic institutions. • Upon uploading YouTube posts potential customers were much more likely to visit the website. • The website, in turn, saw an increase in the number of people downloading content and the amount of traffic from referral sites such as Facebook. • Revenues increased 49% within 7 months and two additional employees were hired to run a screening advice forum on the SME website. 29 Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology Conclusion Social Technologies are evolving at an ever increasing pace fostering these networks, and engaging with website visitors with significant reward to SMEs that incorporate them into their SMEs can increase their business development pace. More business operations. Biotech SMEs, the drivers of commercial rewardingly, SMEs can gain more important rewards such as scientific innovation ,find themselves in a more unforgiving an increase in performance, collaboration, knowledge, and global economy where investment capital is harder to find and competitive advantage.. Outlined here are the initial steps the capacity for companies to invest in professional services necessary to develop such a platform and, as the benefits are is diminishing. In order to survive in this new global economy realised, behaviours can be modified to lead to optimal Biotech SMEs need to adapt to increase their professional performance. With the majority of executives agreeing that the appeal outside of local networks. benefits outweigh the costs social technologies cannot afford to be ignored Biotech SMEs posess retain a significant amount of internal resources, namely the knowledge of the employees. With minimal financial investment a SME can leverage this knowledge to form networks that reach across the globe. By 30 6. References Biotechnology: Marketing Knowledge using Social Technology References 1. 2. 3. 4. Pisano, GP. Can science be a business? Lessons from biotech. Harv Bus Rev. 2006 Oct;84(10):114-24, 150. Ernst & Young. Global Biotechnology Report 2012. Beyond Borders OECD, Biotechnology Statistics Database December 2012 Powers, JB and McDougall, PP. University start-up formation and technology licensing with firms that go public: a resource-based view of academic entrepreneurship. J. Bus. Vent. 2005 (20) 291-311. 5. Walsh, V., Niosi, J. and Mustar, P. Small-firm Formation in Biotechnology: A Comparison of France, Britain and Canada, Technovation,1995 15 (5), 303-327. 6. Jonsson, T. Competitiveness of the European biotechnology industry, 2007. European Commission, E&I DG 7. Kakati, M. criteria in high-tech new ventures, Technovation,2003 23, pp. 447-457 8. McKinsey Global Institute. The social economy: Unlocking value and productivity through social technologies. 2012. 9. Eriksson, P and Rajamäki, H. Biotechnology marketing: Insider and outsider views. 2010. J. Comm. Biotech 16, 98-108 10. European Commission. Biotechnology SMEs and competitiveness. Enterprise and Industry. 11. Kmieciak, R, Michna, A, Meczynska, A. Innovativeness, empowerment and IT capability: evidence from SMEs. 2012. Industrial Management & Data Systems Vol. 112 Iss: 5, pp.707 – 728 12. Loffler, A. The Role of Marketing. Biotech Ventures Course 2004. Kellog School of Business. 13. Vanhees, Lobke.The Effect of a Biotechnology SMEs' Network Position on Its Innovative Performance. 2006 14. Taylor-Powell, Rossing & Geran. Evaluating Collaboratives: Reaching the Potential. 1998. University of Wisconsin Extension. Madison, WI. 15. MarketingSherpa Benchmark Report: 2013 Marketing Analytics ! 32