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Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 1 Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy Introduction In the current fast-paced landscape of digital technologies and communication at breakneck speeds, marketers around the world face challenges that reflect 21st century living. Whereas once marketing leaders had clarity in their goal and vision, today’s marketers find themselves charged with heavy workloads and competing interests in a constant and, in many cases, fruitless, balancing act. In no such marketing segment is such difficulty more prevalent than in hospital marketing. Services that hospital marketers took for granted in previous decades are now unstable, such as reimbursement and operating budgets. These items are often in flux within the hospital environment, as hospitals sometimes struggle with cash flow issues and complex initiatives. When combined with a highly competitive environment in which hospital marketers must constantly work to stay ahead, as well as potentially understaffed marketing teams where hiring is slow or may have ceased completely, this may be a recipe for frustration and anxiety. The frustration can then seep into all areas of marketing, which can create a challenging environment in which to run a successful marketing program. Hospital marketers face uncertainty and instability in various aspects of their jobs. These challenges are unique to an industry where marketers aim to balance the desires of each level of the organizational hierarchy, many of whom have differing job functions and therefore different ideas as to the role of the marketing team. These two most fundamental basic hospital marketing objectives are: 1) marketing to meet hospital business objectives and 2) keeping physicians happy throughout the process. These objectives can sometimes come into conflict with one another, causing stress and tensions between the hospital marketers and the doctors they mean to serve. This paper presents a strategy for running parallel tracks in the marketing department to meet both needs through an integrated strategy of balancing personnel and budgets and maximizing resources to help accomplish objectives on all fronts. The dual-line strategies should serve as a guide to help make hospital marketing more efficient and effective. While each hospital has its own marketing team composition, making a universal set of systems virtually impossible, the ideas delineated in this paper serve to help guide hospital marketers in their daily mission to meet the hospital staff’s needs. BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 2 Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy Situation Analysis Hospital marketers often face the challenges of limited staff and increasing demands. Hospital systems generated business objectives which require substantial marketing support, while physicians in service lines face daily challenges of driving business, increasing patient satisfaction and managing outcomes. An overview of the current landscape may initially seem bleak, but the efforts of marketers are not in vain. A breakdown of some common problems that plague hospital marketers includes: Current landscape makes reimbursement and marketing budgets unstable: Because successful marketing tactics do not always lead to immediate return on investment, the marketing department is one of the first to be slashed when budget cuts are in order. This requires marketers to then undertake difficult marketing tasks on a limited budget. Such endeavors may lead to heavy workloads and high stress levels. Competition is always present: Because of the number of hospitals and the types of services they provide, there is always a hospital (or, in some cases, many hospitals) competing to get the business of people in the local community. Such a highly competitive environment may lead to difficulties trying to manage tasks and workloads to stay ahead of the competition. Hiring is slow or has stopped: Due to a lack of funding and budget cuts, the hiring process in some hospital marketing departments may have slowed or stopped completely. In hospital marketing divisions that are experiencing these sorts of staffing setbacks, this can place a tremendous burden on the people who must stretch their own workloads to compensate for the loss Departments are understaffed: Regardless of whether there is a hiring freeze, or that workloads have simply outgrown the marketing staff, many hospitals suffer from understaffing in the marketing department. In times when parties are unable to complete their work in a normal 8-hour day, hospital marketers may find themselves working harder and less efficiently to accomplish difficult tasks. The purpose of this white paper is to drive home the point that in spite of these challenges, hospital marketers can revamp their current systems to address the fundamental difficulties of managing business objectives while also keeping physicians happy by implementing a dual track system that addresses both concerns. By offering some ways in which hospitals can rectify a fragmented process, they can strive to make effective systems that offer success in all fronts. BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 3 Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy The following marketing scenarios commonly occur within the hospital marketing setting. Executive team creates strategic plan or business objectives related to the entire system: The leadership team is focused on the strategic plan for the organization, taking a 3, 5 or 10year look at direction. Brand, awareness, perception and preference are generally critical to the success of the plan, and therefore the plan requires marketing support. Additionally, the strategic plan drives annual business objectives, which drive marketing campaign direction. Rarely are organizational objectives focused on a singular service line or physician group: Organizational objectives tackle big picture issues for the hospital system, and don’t usually focus on a single service line. This is an appropriate strategy for a hospital system as it sets a long-term plan for the future. However, individual service lines, physician groups or practices need marketing support at the same time that hospital organizational objectives are being supported. Physicians can feel ignored, left behind, and frustrated: If the marketing department focuses solely on the organizational objectives, physicians can feel neglected. The marketing department can become so focused on the big picture, that it fails to meet the day-to-day needs of physician groups. Marketing team has limited budget and resources to deal with both the organizational business plan and the individual physician requests: This complicated issue is often at the heart of many marketing department challenges. However, in today’s digital space, there are ways to efficiently and effectively address this issue. The system has far more physicians than marketing personnel: Sometimes, the marketing team ends up short on the organizational goals and short on fulfilling physicians’ expectations, and it feels like a lose-lose for all parties involved. Marketing teams must find a way to run parallel tracks in order to help them all succeed. In finding parallel tracks, each marketing team is able to work its own strengths and develop effective marketing initiatives. When managed well, a hospital marketing team can balance the need to market the hospital’s business objectives while addressing physician-focused marketing needs. BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 4 Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy Addressing the Business Objectives The first step in alleviating some of these issues is to work toward addressing business objectives. The following is a three-step process to help ensure long-term hospital marketing success. Step One: Identify Organizational Business Objectives While the executive leadership team draws the strategic plan, they should also be creating business objectives. If the plan does not include business objectives, marketing leadership should meet with the executive team to discuss them. A hospital marketing team is set up for failure without present, defined business objectives. Business objectives at a hospital aren’t specific to marketing, rather they’re goals for the hospital over a set period of time. For instance: • Increase patient load in cardiovascular unit “Concrete, measurable goals offer a straightforward approach, leaving no confusion as to the desired outcome of the year’s annual strategic marketing initiatives.” • Increase market share by 2% • Feature research and intellectual capital of physician team A Strategic Plan Agreed Upon by Senior Leadership While the hospital marketing team will ultimately be responsible for creation and execution of the plan, it should be agreed upon by senior leadership. This helps to ensure that the leadership team points the direction for the marketing team which should allow them to support marketing initiatives through the year. Business Objective Goals Should be Measurable Over the Course of a Year. Goals help drive the hospital’s marketing efforts. Concrete, measurable goals offer a straightforward approach, leaving no confusion as to the desired outcome of the year’s annual strategic marketing initiatives. After understanding the business objectives, the marketing team can get to work creating a plan to support them. Step Two: Create a Marketing Plan for Business Objectives Marketing plan development is the most important step in executing a solid hospital marketing initiative. After receiving business objectives, the marketing team should create a plan to address the objectives. If the business objective is to increase market share by 2%, the marketing plan would include budget, initial measurement, research, campaign strategy, measureable campaign performance indicators, media schedule, creative strategy and projected outcomes. BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 5 Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy Budget: In a landscape with limited resources, it is important to properly estimate the amount of funds to be designated to each project. Underestimating the financial and resource cost may create problems or, in some cases, may jeopardize the initiative. When allocating resources, planners must remember to take into account aspects such as personnel, project costs, technological considerations (web hosting platforms, project management systems) and designing and printing fees. Performance indicators: Choosing the correct performance indicators is contingent upon knowing what is important to the hospital or service line. If the goal is to increase awareness of a new medical unit, increasing the hospital’s email list is not necessarily the best performance indicator; better metrics may include the number of new customers acquired, or data measured by patient questionnaires. Delineating these as part of the marketing plan will help hospitals keep relevant data sets, which can be useful in evaluating campaign success, in future marketing efforts or in budgeting. Media schedule: A media schedule will help a company keep track of assets, project launch dates, costs and hours worked. The media schedule should be careful to take into consideration both digital and print media schedules, as well as social media pages and the resources required to keep them up-to-date. Creative strategy: The creative strategy needn’t encompass every piece of creative work expected throughout the course of the year; rather, it should focus on only the baseline message, assets and resources. The creative strategy should help copywriters and art directors see the bigger picture of the marketing plan and can help the creative team adhere to these guidelines throughout the year. Projected outcomes: Predictions help solidify goals. If, for example, performance indicators show that the hospital marketing team is coming up short of desired outcomes, this offers leeway for the team to amend the project, conduct a post-mortem and to determine the cause of the shortcomings. Over time, a collection of such data can help the team to stay on course to help ensure growth and stability within the hospital. BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 6 Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy Present the Marketing Plan to Leadership Team: Once the plan is in place, it is important to determine whether it is fully in line with the desires of the leadership team. A marketing team can accomplish this by taking the time to review the document with the leadership team, ideally in the form of a presentation or working meeting where the marketing team members are available to answer questions. Leaders offer valuable insights and feedback, particularly pertaining to the overall goals and strategies of the organization, and how marketing efforts might affect those goals and strategies. Though a feedback loop can take time, it is necessary to allow the leadership team to offer insights into the marketing plan in its entirety. Once the leadership team buys into “Marketers should develop timelines in order to review the results of marketing efforts.” the marketing plan; marketers can move confidently toward executing the plan. Step Three: Measure, Analyze and Report Upon executing the plan, hospital marketers should take care to monitor the efforts of the plan. Too often, the data analysis aspects of marketing are overlooked, especially within teams with limited resources. However, campaign analytics tell the success stories of the campaign, and point to issues that arose or still require attention. These insights will be used in future marketing efforts. Marketers should develop timelines in order to review the results of marketing efforts. Different metrics may be measurable within different increments, so it is important to set these parameters in advance and to keep up to date with data input in order to help the team recognize patterns in growth and development. The data sets should tie in with business objectives in order to keep the campaign on track. Most importantly, the data that’s acquired should be used to inform hospital leadership of the status of the campaign. These reports should be concise, focused on organizational objectives and delivered on a regular basis. Favorable results can be published in an internal memo, to keep the hospital staff abreast of marketing efforts and successes. If supplied on a regular basis, these internal communications help to keep the staff apprised of system-wide objectives and successes. This helps let the medical staff know that the marketing team is working diligently with the leadership team to pursue new marketing avenues, which also helps keep physician and staff interest and morale up as the groups continue to see payoffs due to strategic marketing efforts. BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 7 Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy Addressing Physician Needs Once hospital marketers establish business objectives and work to determine how to best meet those objectives, they can then begin on the second line of efforts: addressing physicians’ needs. As experts in their fields, physicians have a duty to care about their patients and provide them the best services possible. Doctors often hold vast knowledge and deep understanding of difficult and sometimes complex medical conditions, and in some cases may even be renowned experts in their chosen profession. Therefore, it is imperative hospital marketers take the needs of physicians seriously, in order to make hospital marketing efforts as effective as possible. However, doctors themselves are not marketers, and therefore they often do not fully understand the challenges that the hospital marketing department must face on a daily basis. This is why it is important to have an open line of dialogue between the marketers and the physicians, to ensure there is plenty of communication as to hospital marketing objectives, physicians’ needs, and marketers’ role within the dual lines of service. What follows are some common physician requests, followed by a strategy that hospital marketers can use to understand the physicians’ needs and develop a plan to help meet those needs. Part One: Common Requests from Service Line Physicians The following are some common requests hospital marketers may hear from service line physicians. More visibility: In the vast world of healthcare, some physicians often may feel that they’ve been lost in the shuffle. Often this leads to physicians telling marketers that they want specific media channels – like billboards, or custom websites. At the heart of the issue, it’s likely that the physician is feeling ignored and buried in other hospital messages. More patients: As more patients translate to more economic gain, this is a common physician request with measurable goals. Smart marketers know how many referrals specialists need to make a campaign worthwhile, and can craft a budget around the expected return. Better materials (online and print): In the digital age, physicians expect that their marketing will be rounded out with print, digital and social media materials. In some cases, this may involve investing more resources BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 8 Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy in providing a steady stream of content by way of a blog or other content initiative, which typically requires both financial and human resources to develop and maintain. “One of the best things a hospital marketer can do is show genuine knowledge of and respect for physicians’ duties and responsibilities by learning about the service line.” Events: Events may vary in scope, but are undoubtedly prime opportunities for marketing efforts. Events may encompass anything from large-scale conferences to small seminars and meetand-greets with referring physicians. They are an excellent way to help the community stay informed of recent updates and additions to hospital practices, and provide networking opportunities. Events can also offer content-creation opportunities for blogs, newsletters and social media channels. Often times, physicians who come forward with these issues offer solutions, but neglect to identify the underlying problems. This is problematic in that many times, the medical staffs lacks sufficient understanding of larger marketing objectives, budgetary constraints and other factors that may impede the ability of the hospital to, for example, host an event highlighting a recent staff achievement. While such an event may sound like an effective use of company resources, it must be balanced with other considerations to determine whether it is as effective when pitted against marketing agenda items with measurable results, such as an email campaign or social media push, both of which also cost additional time and resources. In these situations, the marketing staff must help the physician focus on the fundamental business problem, and then ask for some time to craft a marketing plan to address the business problem. Part Two: Knowing and Understanding the Service Line One of the best things a hospital marketer can do is show genuine knowledge of and respect for physicians’ duties and responsibilities by learning about the service line. This shows a demonstrated commitment to service, and will allow the marketing team to adequately address physician’s concerns with competence. When the marketing team meets with physicians, they should conduct this meeting with the answers to the following questions and concepts in mind. What is the ROI? Understanding the return on investment helps to single out projects and initiatives that have the greatest chances of success as poised against the desired marketing objectives. Offering estimates as to return on investment helps the parties determine where to best allocate the hospital’s limited marketing resources, and can help the marketing team to adjust the overall plan where needed. BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 9 Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy Who is the decision maker? Who refers? Each specialty has a unique referral pattern, and marketers need to understand the pattern. In some cases, there is a small group of physicians who would even be able to refer a patient – so highly targeted, personal messages are needed. In other instances, patients can self refer. When that’s the case, a wider more mass media approach may be appropriate. Marketers absolutely cannot develop appropriate marketing tactics for a specialist without understanding the referral pattern. What is the service line? It is important for marketers to take stock of daily activities of the physicians to whom they purport to represent. This demonstrates knowledge and respect toward the practicing physicians an other medical staff. Typical questions may include: • What do they do? • What procedures are most common? • Who’s on staff? • What type of schedules do they keep? • What diseases or health issues do they commonly treat? • Where are they located? Ask the Right Questions Since the marketers have done their homework, a marketing strategy meeting with the physicians should be a highly productive experience. In order to keep the meeting on track, and to keep the end goals in mind, the marketing team should come prepared to ask the following questions: What’s the business problem? As mentioned previously, physicians often come forward with the solutions, without ever addressing the actual problem. If the physicians are unable to properly articulate the underlying issues, follow a rule of thumb and ask them why they think such solutions will be effective. The physicians’ responses may offer some insights into the true underlying issues, which will help the teams in their efforts to work together to create the most practical solutions. BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 10 Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy What’s our point of difference? Why choose us? A common problem in marketing settings is that companies attempt to appeal to the masses, rather than targeting specific niches that may be specifically interested in the business’s services or offerings. In identifying the specialists’ differentiators, the physicians and marketing team are able to begin to create a selling focus. These differentiators provide specific incentives for individuals in the community to elect this particular hospital, as opposed to others in the community. If there are numerous differentiators, it is important to target and tout those where success makes the most financial sense, such as a practice area expertise or a new state-of-the-art facility. What’s standing in the way of success? By defining impediments to success, the teams are able to work through them in order to determine practical and efficient solutions. If there are barriers that need to be addressed, defining them can help the teams prioritize them and offer solutions for combating these roadblocks. Sometimes specialists have operational issues that are standing in the way. For instance, their office doesn’t have appropriate scheduling software, or their office location is hard to find. These are operational issues that come to surface when marketing discussions begin. What’s worked before? Many businesses rely on data sets because they offer insight into what’s worked in previous marketing initiatives. Focusing on the positive, rather than the negative, allows the hospitals to achieve repeated success in marketing efforts by replicating successful past projects. Physicians may be able to relay stories of past successes that can lead decision-making. Remember, many physicians think of their practice as their own business, and can take a lot of pride of ownership in it. Their historical perspective is relevant. Part Three: Make and Execute the Plan Once the marketing team hears the physicians’ concerns and has talked through the pertinent questions with the physician, it’s time to formulate a marketing plan. Listening to the physicians: Many times, physicians simply want their voices heard, as they are experts in a given field and want to be respected and represented as such. Incorporating their feedback will help reduce tensions between the physicians and the marketing team, as well as adding value to the plan. BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 11 Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy Mutually define the goal, and make it measurable and finite: Having concrete goals gives the parties something to work toward. If the parties are in agreement as to the final goals of any marketing objective or initiative, they are then able to work together to comprehensively analyze any results, which they can again use as a basis when working together on future marketing projects. The goals should relate to the business problem – if the problem is low patient volume, then the goal should be a specific, “Marketers are in the unique position of typically having to adhere to strict deadlines in order to ensure project success.” measurable increase over a defined period of time. Formalize a marketing plan: Marketers should be as transparent as possible concerning the marketing plan, but at any point should be willing and able to stand by their decisions as to marketing strategy. In some cases, it is simply not feasible to bend toward every one of the hospital teams’ desires, so instead the marketers can focus on the primary objectives in order to focus on the marketing initiatives that have the potential for the highest returns. Present plan and agree on a timeline: Marketers are in the unique position of typically having to adhere to strict deadlines in order to ensure project success. Often, they will need input from the physicians in order to move these projects forward, and due to busy schedules the physicians may be unable to accommodate such timelines without sufficient notice. Getting both teams to commit to a timeline offers accountability when either team fails to hold up their end of the marketing plan. It also helps to offer sufficient time to create, develop and run a marketing campaign or project. Execute, measure and present results: Once the plan is in place and the marketing team is working diligently to meet such goals, it is important to parlay the results of those initiatives via internal memorandums, meetings or presentations. Such findings can help the physicians stay engaged and active in the marketing process, which makes it easier for the teams to continue to work together and to have an open dialogue concerning marketing initiatives. BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 12 Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy Thriving in the Balance: Tips for Maintaining Success Marketing hospital business objectives as well as physician needs is a tricky balance, and like any business challenge – requires ongoing attention. The guidelines below should set up a hospital marketing team to best manage the shuffle of these two parallel tracks. Structure your team to be flexible enough to work on either track, when needed, and flex personnel focus to deal with demand: Doing this can help save marketers an enormous amount of headache when they experience push back from the physician group, or when marketing initiative execution seems overwhelming. Training and equipping the marketing team to work on both tracks increases efficiency and encourages flexibility. Structure your budget to anticipate physician requests, and encourage the hospitals to do the same: Allocating enough resources in the budget offers freedom and flexibility to accommodate physician requests. For example, if a physician unexpectedly receives a notable award pertaining to medical achievement, it is important to integrate any related marketing push into the marking timeline to help tout the achievement and to help maximize its significance. Even simple changes, such as updating the physician’s bio on websites and marketing materials, can take time and require additional resources. Individual hospitals should consider budgeting some dollars toward physician marketing requests as well. Paying for unplanned marketing efforts should be a collaboration between the physician office, the managing hospital and the marketing team. Foster a working environment where marketing team members understand both tracks of marketing, and the value both tracks bring to the organization: Some marketing team members will enjoy the more strategic, long term nature of addressing hospital business objectives. Others will thrive on the short-term, clutch nature of handling physician requests. While the perfect world would allow for two well-staffed teams with singular focus, the current healthcare landscape is far from perfect. Marketing leadership needs to educate the team on the value of both hospital marketing and physician specific marketing, and encourage their teams to expect to work on both sides. Make friends in patient accounting and finance who can help determine ROI and measure revenue in ways that are meaningful to marketing: Hospital accounting teams have their own challenges and, in many cases, may be forced to deal with finances by looking to archaic systems and methodologies. However, proving to them that hospital marketing has a demonstrable effect on revenue will encourage them BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 13 Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy to prioritize the marketing team’s need for financial metrics. Success in this aspect helps encourage the proper allocation of resources when it comes time to review budgets and returns. Track everything: In today’s world, data reaps an extremely high value. The ability to analyze behavior allows marketers to pinpoint where items may have gotten off track, and how to resolve those issues going forward. Project information should be tracked internally and externally, with the help of an efficient project manager who can keep track of multiple projects at a given time. Additionally, project successes should be tracked as they relate to business objectives, which the marketing team can then report upon going forward. Have a toolkit: With respect to service line physician marketing, it is essential to have an arsenal of protocols to which the marketers can refer when approached with physician marketing requests. The toolkit needn’t cover every possible avenue of possible physician requests, but should provide an outline of how marketers should deal with such inquiries as they occur. The plans should be designed with minimal feedback loops in mind, as marketing practices tend to require more and more agility in the digital age. What’s in Your Toolkit? • A quality database for marketing leads • Team members who understand and can quickly execute search engine advertising • A flexible website that allows for quick content updates and optimization • Social media marketing opportunities • Short-run video production plans • Maintenance of marketing platforms that provide quality audience and allow for quick execution, such as Facebook pages, blogs, newsletters, in-hospital signage areas and more • A schedule of costs and turnaround times for each marketing platform • Other preparations that ensure your team can act quickly BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 14 Marketing to Meet Hospital Business Objectives While Keeping Physicians Happy Conclusion: Ensuring Satisfaction for All Involved Balancing hospital business objectives with rapid-fire physician requests is an issue that all hospital marketing teams face. The balance boils down to solid leadership, open communications, flexibility and smart marketing. With planning and focus, a hospital marketing team can find a balance. While it is easy to get off course, particularly in today’s era of high-speed digital technologies, a flexible approach such as the one listed above allows hospital marketers to tackle changes in the marketing landscape while ensuring top service to the hospital physicians they represent. While creating an environment that can support both initiatives may require restructure and change, the landscape mandates that hospital marketing teams find maximum efficiency and effectiveness. About the Author: BigEye Creative is a Florida Advertising Agency based in Orlando. Visit our website at bigeyecreative.com BigEye Creative bigeyecreative.com 1.800.994.3844 15