Category Archives: Healthcare Trends

Rise of the Millennials

 

Corrigan Partners Webinar-Rise of the Millenials April 12 2016

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Join Us for an April 12 Webinar on Millennials and Healthcare

Some 80 million strong, Millennials are now the largest generation in U.S. history. Like the Baby Boomers in the 60s and 70s, they are taking the world by storm and will change it in radical and fundamental ways. Born between the mid-70s and early 2000s, they are digital natives, social communicators, ethnically diverse. And they are healthcare consumers (the leading edge of the Millennial generation is entering their late 30s) seeking maternity, pediatric, wellness, prevention and access for urgent care needs.

Are you ready for them?

Corrigan Partners is hosting a webinar on April 12, 2016 from 12 noon to 1:30 pm EDT to explore Millennial values, expectations and behaviors when it comes to healthcare. Presented by BVK senior vice president Tamalyn Powell, who led the firm’s research project on this topic, the session will offer an overview of what makes this generation tick, how they make buying decisions in general, as well as unique insights on their expectations of healthcare providers.

Please join us. The webinar is free of charge but requires advance registration to receive the login information for the program. Registration is easy. Simply send an email to Lisa Burris (lisa@corriganpartners.com).

 

What Americans have to say about healthcare

Survey FindingsPerspectives, expectations and insights for healthcare marketers. 

Want to know what the average American thinks about your tax exempt status? How they’re using online ratings to choose doctors and hospitals?  The importance of smart phones and mobile apps for managing health?

Join Rob Klein, Founder & CEO, Klein & Partners; William (Bill) R. Gombeski, Jr., Director of Strategic Marketing, UK HealthCare; and me at 11:30 am CST on a January 22, 2015 webinar for an examination of key consumer perspectives revealed through Klein & Partners’ latest “kitchen sink” research.  The survey asks Americans a variety of questions about different healthcare topics – from their opinions about the Affordable Care Act to use of retail health clinics.  We’ll talk about the findings and explore the implications for healthcare marketers.

The webinar is sponsored by the Forum for Healthcare Strategists.  There is no charge for Forum members; others pay $125.

Register here.

Five Forces that will Change Healthcare Marketing

In the healthcare industry, powerful demographic, economic, societal, technology and legislative forces are converging to change the underlying basis for competition. For health systems, new economic models, disruptive technologies and transformation of care delivery systems are front and center – challenging marketing executives to better understand and anticipate the impact of this change.

Here are five forces marketers must watch:

One – the new economics of health care reform.

While it is difficult to predict with certainty the future of legislated mandates for reform, the wheels of change have been set in motion. Reimbursement models featuring bundled payments and warranties to deny payment for errors, rework and readmissions are being developed and implemented. If health insurance exchanges survive political challenges, they are set to roll out at the state level in 2014. Insurance mandates could result in many more insured individuals and providers worry whether they have capacity for the newly insured, particularly at primary care access points.

Marketers can play a critical role in how health systems better understand and relate to consumers under these new structures. And must know not only the top line revenue implications of customer acquisition, but also the bottom line impact of key customer segments.

Two – market restructuring and emerging delivery models.

Consolidation and alignment among health systems, hospitals, physician groups and post acute care providers will continue as organizations move to create the critical mass, economies of scale and geographic coverage to improve market leverage. Competition for physician alignment remains fierce in many markets and employment is the primary model for integration. These strategies are core to creation of accountable care delivery models where financial performance hinges on care coordination, quality outcomes and cost effectiveness, and will command executive attention for some time to come.

When it comes to market restructuring and emerging delivery models, marketers will be challenged on many levels, including brand building across a diverse portfolio and in multiple markets, and developing marketing systems to support multiple SBUs.

Three – evolution of brand in physical and virtual environments.

As in other industries, healthcare is seeing a rise in brand driven competition. Brands that align core elements of competitive positioning, operational design, brand architecture, and service experience, will begin to establish value that ultimately equates to brand loyalty, growth and expansion. Other critical aspects of brand evolution for healthcare marketers will be brand building and brand management for multi-facility, multi-market and multi-service health systems and standardizing brand experience across health system-branded, employed physician groups.

Additionally, as organizations invest in clinical information systems such as electronic health records, and embrace web, social and mobile technologies, marketers will find that the complexity of building and managing brands in the digital space also increasing.

Four – technologies that disrupt and transform.

We’re witnessing an amazing shift in terms of how people are relying on web, social networking and mobile technologies, and that’s changing everything for how providers engage with customers. The rise of smart phones and tablets such as the iPhone and iPad have put information, communications and commerce just a click or voice command away. Digital strategies have to move beyond the hospital website and Facebook page to a fully integrated approach for reaching and engaging consumers, supporting patients with care management, facilitating workplace communications and promoting clinical decision-making.

A comprehensive web, social and mobile capability, integrated with clinical IT systems such as EMR and patient portals, and embedded in physical environments, is no longer optional for organizations that want to remain relevant.

Five – growing, changing, graying, connected consumers.

The United States is experiencing a dramatic increase in the numbers of people who live to old age, challenging Americans of all ages as they cope with retirement funding, health care, lifestyle and other issues that are important to an aging population. People 65 and older numbered 39.6 million in 2009, representing 12.9% of the U.S. population – or about one in every eight Americans. By 2030, there will be about 72.1 million older persons, more than twice their number in 2000 and will count for nearly 20% of the population (Administration on Aging, DHHS).

For demographers, 2011 was significant in that it marked the first year that baby-boomers began turning 65; and for the next 15 to 20 years, about 10,000 people will turn 65 years old every single day. They will be a driving force for healthcare services in the coming decades – not just for ‘what’ is delivered, but ‘how’ it will be delivered.

So, what’s a marketer to do?

In the short term, one of the most important roles chief marketing officers can play is helping organizations understand and address the competitive dynamics of restructuring markets and intensifying competitor activities. Longer term, the over-arching objective is to create a future-ready, high-performing marketing capability that can address the changing basis for competition and drive growth, innovation and better business performance.

In a future post, I’ll address five critical roles for healthcare marketing executives to embrace in this new era. Please let me know if you have ideas and examples that you’d like to share.

 

Expect Modest Growth in Health Spending through 2013

New estimates released by CMS project aggregate health care spending in the US will grow at an average annual rate of 5.7 percent for 2011 through 2021, or 0.9% faster than the expected growth in GDP.  The health care share of GDP by 2021 is projected to rise to 19.6 percent, from its 2010 level of 17.9 percent.

These projections indicate an increase in spending over the near historic low growth rates of recent years. Growth in consumers’ use of health services remained sluggish in 2011. And the slow economic recovery, modest growth in disposable personal incomes, insurance coverage, and employment rates will continue to limit expenditures through 2012 and 2013.

If the coverage expansions associated with the Affordable Care Act kick in, the growth rate for health spending is projected to increase 7.4 percent in 2014, with notable increases in spending on physician services and prescription drugs by the newly insured. Throughout the latter half of the projection period, incomes are expected to be higher, and a large number of baby boomers are anticipated to be receiving coverage under Medicare.

By 2021, government spending for health care will reach nearly 50 percent of total national health expenditures.  The federal government will account for two-thirds of that share.

Learn more at Health Affairs.  The full article provides an analysis of how Americans are likely to spend their health care dollars in the coming decade, with projections for spending by different sectors, payers, and sponsors.

Want to Experience Best Practices in Service Excellence? Come to Scottsdale.

I’m looking forward to the PRC Excellence in Healthcare Conference June 3 – 6, 2012 in Scottsdale, Arizona.  Hosted by Professional Research Consultants, Inc., the conference provides healthcare professionals with information, case studies, best practices and tools to develop, implement and improve service excellence.  The conference agenda offers dozens of important and timely topics – like “The C-suite’s Role in Building a High Performing Culture” to “Achieving Physician Loyalty through Service Excellence” to “A Roadmap for Improving Healthcare Service Quality:  Lessons and Tools from the Mayo Clinic.”

Candace Quinn of Brand = Experience, Carla Bryant with Corrigan Partners and I will present “The Future of Healthcare Marketing” on June 4, 2012 at 1:00 pm.  Our two-part session will focus on trends shaping the future of marketing practice in healthcare, five critical roles for chief marketing executives and steps for transforming marketing performance.  We’re excited about this topic and look forward to engaging conference attendees in dialog and ideas to effect change.

The conference will be held at one of my favorite Scottsdale resorts – the Hyatt Regency Scottsdale Resort and Spa at Gainey Ranch .  Will we see you there? 

 

Greetings from the 17th National Summit – Healthcare Marketing Strategies

The 17th National Healthcare Marketing Strategies Summit kicked off yesterday at the Ritz Carlton Grande Lakes here in Orlando, Florida.  I need a clone to take advantage of the many great sessions, speakers and networking opportunities. 

What’s up today?  Here are just a few of the sessions and speakers worth checking out:

  • Aligning brands across digital channels – Jessica Carlson (Sentara) and Carla Bryant (Corrigan Partners)
  • Integrating new media into physician marketing – Lyle Green (MD Anderson Cancer Center), Jill Lawlor (Cooper University Hospital) and Dan Dunlop (Jennings Health)
  • Improving patient experience: a marketing and clinical partnership – Suzanne Hendrey (Baystate)
  • Driving results with marketing analytics – Marc Beaumont (UAB Health System), Danny Fell (Neathawk Dubuque & Packett), and Linda MacCracken (Thomson Reuters)
  • Breaking the rules of website design – Chris Boyer (Inova) and Chris Bevolo (Interval)
  • Digital marketing – focus on conversations – Suzanne Sawyer (Penn Medicine) and Rob Grant (eVariant)
  • Physician trends: the impact on marketers – Peter Brumleve, C. Josef Ghosn (Florida Hospital) and Steve Sloate (Cirra)

Hope to run into you – if you’re here, stop by the Brains on Demand booth in the exhibition hall and say hello.

Five Forces Healthcare Marketers Must Watch

I got together with our Brains on Demand partners* recently and did a little brainstorming about trends shaping the future of healthcare.  We came up with five key forces that we believe marketers should pay attention to, as these will impact future demand and delivery models, and require ever greater levels of strategic thinking, planning and execution by marketing executives.

One – the new economics of health care reform. 

While it is difficult to predict with certainty the future of legislated mandates for reform, the wheels of change have been set in motion.  Reimbursement models featuring bundled payments and warranties to deny payment for errors, rework and readmissions are being developed and implemented.  If health insurance exchanges survive legislative challenges, they are set to roll out at the state level in 2014.  Insurance mandates could result in many more insured individuals and providers worry whether they have capacity for the newly insured, particularly at primary care access points.   

Marketers can play a critical role in how health systems better understand and relate to consumers under these new structures.  And must know not only the top line revenue implications of customer acquisition, but also the bottom line impact of key segments.

Two – market restructuring and emerging delivery models. 

Consolidation and alignment among health systems, hospitals, physician groups and post acute care providers, among others, will continue as organizations move to create the critical mass, economies of scale and geographic coverage to improve market leverage.  Competition for physician alignment remains fierce in many markets and employment is the primary model for integration.  These strategies are core to creation of ‘accountable’ delivery models where financial performance hinges on care coordination, quality outcomes and cost effectiveness, and will dominate executive suites for some time to come. 

When it comes to market restructuring and emerging delivery models, marketers will be challenged on many levels, including brand building across a diverse portfolio and in multiple markets, and developing marketing systems to support multiple SBUs. 

Three – evolution of brand in physical and virtual environments. 

As in other industries, healthcare is seeing a rise in brand driven competition. Brands that align core elements of competitive positioning, operational design, brand architecture, and service experience, will begin to establish value that ultimately equates to brand loyalty, growth and expansion.  Other critical aspects of brand evolution for healthcare marketers will be brand building and brand management for multi-facility, multi-market and multi-service health systems and standardizing brand experience across health system-branded, employed physician groups. 

Additionally, as organizations invest in clinical information systems such as electronic health records, and embrace web, social and mobile technologies, marketers will find that the complexity of building and managing brands in the digital space also increasing. 

Four – technologies that disrupt and transform. 

We’re witnessing an amazing shift in terms of how people are relying on web, social networking and mobile technologies, and that’s changing everything for how providers engage with customers.  The rise of smart phones and tablets such as the iPhone and iPad have put information, communications and commerce just a click or voice command away.  Digital strategies have to move beyond the hospital website and Facebook page to a fully integrated approach for reaching and engaging consumers, supporting patients with care management, facilitating workplace communications and promoting clinical decision-making. 

A comprehensive web, social and mobile capability, integrated with clinical IT systems such as EMR and patient portals, and embedded in physical environments, is no longer optional for organizations that want to remain relevant. 

Five – growing, changing, graying, connected consumers. 

The United States is experiencing a dramatic increase in the numbers of people who live to old age, challenging Americans of all ages as they cope with retirement funding, health care, lifestyle and other issues that are important to an aging population. People 65 and older numbered 39.6 million in 2009, representing 12.9% of the U.S. population – or about one in every eight Americans. By 2030, there will be about 72.1 million older persons, more than twice their number in 2000 and will count for nearly 20% of the population (Administration on Aging, DHHS). 

For demographers, 2011 was significant in that it marked the first year that baby-boomers began turning 65; and for the next 15 to 20 years, more than 7,000 people will turn 65 years old every single day. They will be a driving force for healthcare services in the coming decades – not just for ‘what’ is delivered, but ‘how’ it will be delivered.

So, what’s a marketer to do?

In the short term, one of the most important roles chief marketing officers can play is helping organizations understand and address the competitive dynamics of restructuring markets and intensifying competitor activities.   Longer term, the over-arching objective is to create a future-ready, high-performing marketing capability that can address the changing basis for competition and drive growth, innovation and better business performance.   

We’ll be publishing and speaking on this topic throughout the year, as well as on how marketers can make these critical changes.  Please let us know if you have ideas and examples that you’d like to share.

* Brains on Demand is a unique partnership of leading healthcare consultants offering seamless access to a full menu of research, brand, marketing, communications and social media expertise – served á la carte.  Its partners are Karen Corrigan and Carla Bryant from Corrigan Partners; Rob Klein with Klein & Partners; JK Lloyd with Eruptr; and Candace Quinn with Brand=Experience.