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Maximize Your Drug Delivery Opportunities with OTC/Consumer Healthcare Companies Susan Levy-Cantor Director, Business Development Schering-Plough Healthcare Products January 21, 2008 Agenda • Who is Schering–Plough Consumer Healthcare? • How does SP Build OTC Brand Loyalty? • OTC Companies and Drug Delivery • What does SP seek in a Drug Delivery Company? • What are the Criteria for Successful Drug Delivery Partnerships? Schering-Plough Consumer HealthCare About Schering-Plough An Integrated Global Healthcare Company Rx Businesses • R&D • Sales & marketing Consumer Health • R&D • Sales & marketing Animal Health • R&D • Sales & marketing Supply Chain & Shared Global Functions Business, research, manufacturing and sales operations in over 120 countries More than 50,000 colleagues worldwide 2006 revenues: $10.6 Billion 2006 Sales by Business & Region Total = $10.6 Billion Net Sales U.S. $4,192 Pharmaceutical $8,561 40% 81% 9% 9% 8% 11% Animal Health $910 Consumer Health Care $1,123 42% Europe/Canada $4,403 Does not include sales from the Merck/SP cholesterol JV which are recorded as equity income. Latin America $990 Pacific Area and Asia $1,009 Schering-Plough Consumer HealthCare Organizational Highlights • $1.1 Billion in North American sales • Broad Range of Leading OTC Products • Leader in Rx-to-OTC Switches* – Claritin – MiraLAX • Leading Footcare and Suncare Franchises * Source: CHPA Rx to OTC Switch List Schering-Plough Consumer HealthCare Net Sales Growth ($MM) 1200 $1,085 $1,093 $1,123 1100 $1,026 1000 900 800 $715 $758 $691 $670 700 $626 $588 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Schering-Plough Consumer HealthCare Commercialization Capabilities • Rx-to-OTC Switch Expertise • Strong, Experienced Marketing Department • Premier Sales Organization • State-of-the-art distribution and customer service/logistics operation center • Complete Manufacturing Capabilities • Extensive, dedicated R&D facilities—all aspects • Alliance Management Expertise How Does SP Build Brand Loyalty? One of the Largest OTC Switches Ever Comparison of First Year Retail Sales: FDM ex. Wal-Mart & Club $343MM $256MM $238MM $249MM Building Brand Loyalty: Switches • At OTC Launch: – Create a meaningful difference from what is already available OTC • Create/Redefine a Category – Create an ownable brand identity that can compete against generics/private label • Sustainable ethical heritage Building Brand Loyalty: Switches • Post Launch: – Provide Identifiable Consistency • In brand equity • In communications – Meaningful Product Innovation • Maintain growth in base business with new packaging, dosage forms, strengths, etc. • Introduce meaningful line extensions to expand the franchise user base and build business efficiently • Extend the brand with new indications Review of Claritin Switch Results • Strongest Brand in the Category – Highest brand awareness in the Category•93%•OTC or Rx – Highest loyalty levels in the category. – Highest advertising awareness in the crowded Allergy category - OTC or Rx. • Stellar Sales Results and Executional Excellence – Drove +100% growth in the OTC allergy category – Achieved cumulative sales of $1 Billion just 28 months after launch – 2007: Claritin continues to grow, despite “D” placement behind-the-counter, while private label declines Dr. Scholl’s Innovation • New dual wave design - Soft gel waves cushion and absorb shock. Firmer gel provides added support • Gel insoles launched in 1997 • “Are you gellin?” launched in 2003 • Campaign drove 129% growth on this flagship item Dr. Scholl’s Innovation • Custom Fit Orthotics – 2007 Test Market – 2008 Roll-out Coppertone Innovation - 2007 Protection Convenience OTC Companies and Drug Delivery Pharmaceuticals vs. Consumer (OTC) Pharmaceuticals Consumer (OTC) • Fewer decision makers (doctors) making objective decisions • Many decision makers (consumers) making objective and subjective decisions • Higher profit margins, smaller unit volume • Lower profit margins, greater unit volume • After a long patent life, Generics erode majority of market share • After a typically shorter period of exclusivity, compete with Private Label • Overall lifecycle may not be much longer than patent life • Via innovation, brand can evolve and enjoy long lifecycle Healthcare Company Profit Margins Company Pharmaceutical Segment Sales (MM) Bayer €7,478 Profit (MM) €1,686 Margin 22.5% (EBITDA) Consumer Health Segment Sales (MM) Profit (MM) €4,246 € 927 Margin 21.8% (EBITDA) GSK ₤20,078 ₤7,125 (Op) 35.5% ₤3,147 ₤ 683 (Op) 21.7% Wyeth $16,884 $5,186 (EBIT) 30.7% $2,530 $ 516 (EBIT) 20.4% Novartis $22,576 $6,203 (Op) 29.7% $6,540 $1,068 (Op) 16.3% J&J $23,267 $6,894 (Op) 29.6% $9.774 $1,374 (Op) 14.1% Source: Most recent company annual reports Private Label “Intrusion” Percent Unit Sales in Category attributed to Private Label Products 50.0% 47.1% 41.8% 38.9% 40.0% Source: Nielsen 52 w/e 10/27/07 Anti-Itch Hydrocortisones Oral Laxatives Athlete’s Foot Cream 0.0% Headache Remedies 10.0% Adult Cold Remedies 20.0% Cough Remedies 23.2% 24.1% Multi-Vitamins 27.3% Medicated Nasal Products 30.1% 30.0% 32.0% Adult Allergy Sinus Remedies 34.5% OTC Brand Life Spans • With innovation, strong consumer brands can maintain their relevance for a longer time-frame than an Rx drug: – Listerine – Dr. Scholl’s – Halls – Coppertone – Tylenol 1895 1904 1930’s 1944 1955 Listerine Innovation “The taste you hate twice a day” 1992: Mint taste provided greater acceptance 2001: Enhanced portability Listerine Innovation Continues 2003: Less Intense Citrus Flavor 2005: Pocket Paks Oral Care Mist 2006: Agent Cool Blue Plaque Detecting Rinse Hall’s Innovation 1930’s: Halls Mentholyptus introduced in the UK 1990: Halls Plus – the only cough drop with a soothing liquid center 1999: Halls Defense with Vitamin C Hall’s Innovation 2002: Pectin-based Hall’s Breezers 2003: Halls Shotgum introduced – UK/Ireland 2006: Halls Max – 8 hour cough relief Tylenol Innovation Headaches Muscle and Body Aches Arthritis Pain Pain Relief Allergy & Sinus Cold, Flu & Cough Pain & Sleeplessness Children & Infants Tylenol Innovation Tylenol Rapid Release Gels “Fast Pain Relief” Tylenol Go Tabs “Fast Chewable Portable Pain Relief” Is this True Innovation? • Which of these innovations changed the game? • Which kept these brands only a half step ahead of private label competition? What Does SP seek in a Drug Delivery Company? Drug Delivery Checklist 9Provides meaningful advantage for consumers 9Does it change the drug profile? 9Faster 9Longer-lasting 9Fewer side effects 9Or does it keep you one step ahead of Private Label? 9Easier to use 9Better tasting 9More portable Drug Delivery Checklist 9Can you “own” it via patents or other exclusivity? 9IP and know-how can add value if they stave off Private Label competition 9Is the technology clinically proven? 9What can be communicated to consumers? 9Is the Manufacturing process robust? 9What is the impact on COGs? What are the Criteria for Successful Drug Delivery Partnerships? What Should each Party Seek? • Considerations: – Tangibles • Short-term gain vs. Long-term sustainability – OTC brand lifecycles allow for longer-term benefits – Innovations that “change the game” are more valuable than those that keep the brand a half-step ahead of Private Label • OTC profit margins vs Rx profit margins – May not be conducive to double-digit royalties – Especially when the costs associated with launching a new product or new brand are included in the equation Consumer Healthcare Profit Margins Marketer (Division) P&G (Health Care) Sales (MM) Profit (MM) Margin $8.964 $2,148 (EBIT) 24.0% €4,246 € 927 (EBITDA) 21.8% ₤3,147 ₤ 683 (Op) 21.7% $2,530 $ 516 (EBIT) 20.4% $ 228 20.3% $6,540 $1,068 (Op) 16.3% J&J (Consumer) OTC pharma & nutritionals, skin care, women’s health, baby & kids care $9.774 $1,374 (Op) 14.1% Merck KGaA (Consumer Health Care) € 398 € 13.8% ¥149,486 ¥17,384 (Op) Pharma, OTC, diagnostics, oral care Bayer (Consumer Health) Consumer care (OTC), diabetes care, animal health GSK (Consumer Healthcare) OTC, oral care, nutritionals Wyeth (Consumer Healthcare) OTC, supplements Schering-Plough (Consumer Healthcare) $1,123 OTC, foot care, sun care Novartis (Consumer Health) OTC, animal health, CIBA Vision 55 (Op) OTC medicines, natural remedies, VMS Taisho (Self-medication) Tonic drinks, OTC Medicines, VMS Source: Most recent company annual reports 11.6% What Should each Party Seek? • Considerations: – Intangibles • Culture – Decision-making process, speed – How are hand-offs handled? • Alliance Management – May be advisable for “innovations that change the game” Comments on Alliance Management • The statistics*are concerning – 70% of alliances fail • The route cause for failure is surprising – Due to poor or damaged working relationships • Relationship issues matter and managing them is integral to productivity and long term alliance success – Trust, ability to jointly resolve conflict, openness and quality of communication is key *Vantage partners – report on 150 alliances 10 Key Capabilities Aligned with Alliance Success 1. 2. Building and Maintaining Internal Alignment Evaluating relationship fit with potential partners 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Building a strong relationship while negotiating a deal Establishing common ground rules for working together Having dedicated alliance managers Having collaboration skills in alliance employees Having a collaborative mindset Managing multiple relationships with the same partner Auditing alliance relationships Managing changes that affect alliances Some Conclusions • There are many advantages in partnering with OTC companies – Commercialization of drug delivery technology tends to be faster with OTC products (than with Rx drugs) – Established OTC brands are easier to extend with new technology • Innovations that change the game are in greater demand than those that maintain edge versus Private Label • New technologies help maintain brand loyalty • Aesthetics matter – Consider both the tangible and intangible aspects of the partnership between a drug delivery company and OTC organization Questions? Susan Levy-Cantor Director, Business Development Schering-Plough HealthCare Products 908-473-1992 [email protected]