Social Media Wiki

Wiki Update (Finally) and 2011 Dosie Awards Info

Okay…I’ll admit it. It’s been way too long since I updated the Pharma and Healthcare Social Media Wiki. I won’t say exactly how long, but let’s call it 24 weeks (sounds better than 6 months). Thank you all for continuing to send me updates and for accepting my promises that I’d be updating soon. If you’d like to submit something for the Wiki, there’s a form at the end of this post. Please feel free.

Please take a moment and read through the entire post. I’ve got some information in here about this year’s Dosie Awards at the end of this post that I’d like everyone to take a look at (including how to become a judge or sponsor). (Click to read the rest…)

In Social Media, Take Some Baby Steps First…Share

Each day there are more and more new additions to the ranks of companies that are using social media. Okay, it’s pretty much everyone and that includes pharma and healthcare companies. If you don’t believe me, then be sure to check out the Pharma and Healthcare Social Media Wiki while you’re here (and its 350 examples of pharma/healthcare social media programs). Some of what’s out there is conservative, toe-in-the-water type stuff, while others are jumping in with both feet. However, still others are finding it hard to get started at all.

This post is for all of you who are still trying to get started and also for those who have quite a bit going on. Today I’m going to give you the easiest way to get started in social media and also something that is a basic tactic that everyone should be doing. It’s something that gets you on the board and has basically zero risk. It’s also ridiculously simple and should take a matter of minutes in the hands of the right person.

The mystery tactic? Sharing.

Here’s my big assertion: Before you do anything else in social media, you should make it easy for people to share your content via social media. That’s right…before you start tweeting or fire up the Facebook page, how about enabling and encouraging sharing of your own content from your websites?

I addressed the sharing issue a bit recently when we announced the launch of some new features to ShareThis that our company, Bridge Worldwide, helped co-develop. For those who don’t know, ShareThis is a simple platform that allows site owners to easily integrate sharing into their sites. You can read all about how this issue came about and how it is handled by ShareThis in the post “Social Sharing Tools in Pharma and Healthcare — A New Solution.” The gist is this: Novartis received a warning letter from the FDA because of how one of its sharing tools worked. Panic ensues across the industry. Solution emerges and everyone realizes that it’s not as bad as everyone thought. You can read the full story in the post.

Suffice it to say, you can now integrate ShareThis in such a way that you control exactly what is shared. This includes the title, description and even the URL and image if you’d like. You can do all of this without adjusting anything else on your site. Just figure out where you want the share buttons to be, what you want them to look like, and what you want to be shared. Add a few lines of code and you’re done. (Take a look at the top and bottom of this page for some examples…and do press a few while you’re there).

Why am I telling you to do this as a first step? Two reasons. First, it will help you show your conservative regulatory and legal teams that there are things that can be done that are essentially zero risk that are social media based. Second, it will help you understand just what of your content is actually shareable and who shares it and where. By shareable I mean does anyone think it is important or interesting enough to share. If you find that no one is sharing anything you have (ShareThis has some nice analytics so you can track this), then you have a different problem. You need better content. This will help you answer questions like: “why is our time on site so low?” or “why is our bounce rate so high?” If people aren’t sharing, then you need to up your game.

Beyond ShareThis, you need to immediately incorporate the Facebook Like button.

So, you want to be on Facebook? Well here’s your chance. Let people create content for you on Facebook by using the Like button. Guess what? When the first person clicks that Like button, it creates a Facebook Page. That’s right…bet you didn’t know that one. Every piece of content with a Like button also has a corresponding Page on Facebook. These pages aren’t visible to anyone but the administrator (you), but they can be used just like regular Facebook Pages. Chief among these uses is being able to send updates to the news stream of those who liked your content. You see all those updates from pages in your news feed on Facebook from all those Pages you’ve liked, you can do the same thing. For example, if someone presses the Like button on your article about exercise tips for diabetes on your brand site, you can publish an update when you have something to communicate that will appear in the person’s news feed. You might want to let them know that you updated the content or that you have more content on this subject elsewhere. For all the details on how this works, check out this great post on Inside Facebook.

Ta-dah. You’re on Facebook without all the legal troubles. If you chose not to broadcast an update, then no one will ever see the Facebook page that is generated, so you can have the Like button and leave it at that if it makes your regulatory team happy. Of course, your content will still be broadcast by people who do Like it. It will go out on the new feeds of all the friends of these people.

There you have it. Two simple ways to get into social media if  you’re not already there and a basic tactic that everyone should be doing even if they’re deep into social media with their brands. Need help getting started? Feel free to contact me and we’ll help you out.

Pharma and Healthcare Social Media Wiki September Update

It’s been a while and many of you have asked what happened to the update you’ve submitted, so here they are. Welcome to the latest update to the Pharma and Healthcare Social Media Wiki. The last update came in late June,  so it’s been a while. Thanks to everyone for your patience.

This month’s update includes 37 new additions to the wiki bringing the total to almost 650 entries. Some highlights from this month:

  • Six new HCP communities
  • Seven new Facebook pages
  • Two new corporate blogs (including one from Lilly)
  • Seven new industry Twitter accounts

Instructions for recommending an addition to the Wiki are included on the page. A couple things to consider before you submit. Currently, we’re not adding hospitals or healthcare groups (such as large physician group practices). The main reason for this is because there’s a great source for this already in Ed Bennett’s Hospital Social Networking List. In addition, I’m happy to include your blog (especially for you “industry observers”) on the list, but I ask that it be somewhat established before you ask for it to be included. There’s no set rule, but 10 posts as a minimum is probably a good rule of thumb. Also for “industry observers,” there’s currently not a place for your Facebook, YouTube, etc. page. For now, it’s just your blogs and Twitter accounts. If you have questions, just contact me.

If I sent you a note saying that you’d be included in the next update and you don’t see your listing, please contact me and I can explain why it was not included.

Here’s the link to the wiki:

Pharma and Healthcare Social Media Wiki

Announcement

If you’re someone who’s really interested in the wiki, then you probably will enjoy the upcoming 2010 e-Patient Connections Conference. I’ll be chairing the “Social Pharmer” track along with Shwen Gwee from Vertex Pharmaceuticals. It’s next week, so you’ve only got a few more days left to register.

For those who didn’t attend this conference last year (its debut), expect another top notch event with a slate of great speakers on numerous topics (plus some nice gifts).

You can also register for my pre-conference workshop: “The Social Media Accelerator.” This highly interactive workshop provides a quick way to catch up on social media in healthcare, including a review of the most and least effective social media marketing programs across industries. You’ll learn about the social media platforms used by patients and physicians and discuss opportunities and challenges of social media marketing, including within the context of DDMAC regulations. You’ll leave with a “best practice” process for creating and approving social media programs within your organization. Bring your questions, as there will be some good discussion time.

You can register now  2010 e-Patient Connections Conference. Readers of this blog get $300 off  registration if you use code “rx2010″ when you register.  [Disclosure: I am co-chair for this conference and I receive a referral fee for registrations from this blog.]

Supporting the Wiki

Many of you have asked what you can do to support the wiki, as you’ve found it so useful. Well, there are a few things you can do since you asked:

  • First and foremost, without your contributions, the wiki wouldn’t be what it is today and it would quickly become outdated. You can submit your recommendations for inclusion (including your own site) using this form.
  • Click the “Recommend” button at the top of the page to share this page on Facebook.
  • Share with your network. Here are some shortcuts: Send a tweetupdate your LinkedIn or Facebook status, and/or whatever your preferred means of sharing is. You can just copy and paste this: “Pharma and Healthcare Social Media Wiki. http://t11.me/HCT-ER. (via @jonmrich)”
  • Write about it. Feel free to blog about the wiki and use some of the examples in case studies or presentations you’re developing.
  • Get a badge. That’s right, if you’re listed on the wiki, you can now add a badge to your site to show that you’ve made it to the list. We’ve created a couple of options to choose from. (If you’re not listed and think you should be, see the first bullet above on how to do that.)

Option 1

Dose of Digital Pharma and Social Media Wiki Badge v1

Copy and paste the code below onto your site:

<form><a href="http://www.doseofdigital.com/healthcare-pharma-social-media-wiki/" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.doseofdigital.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/doseofdigitalwikibadge1.jpg"/></a></form>

Option 2

Dose of Digital Pharma and Social Media Wiki Badge v2

Copy and paste the code below onto your site:

<form><a href="http://www.doseofdigital.com/healthcare-pharma-social-media-wiki/" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.doseofdigital.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/doseofdigitalwikibadge2.jpg"/></a></form>

Again, thank you all for your contributions. If you have any suggestions on how to improve the wiki, please let me know.

10 Things I’d Like to Start Hearing About Pharma Social Media

Dose of Digital Mini White Paper

About a week and a half ago, I wrote a post called “10 Things I’m Tired of Hearing About Pharma Social Media.” As you might imagine, it stirred up a little controversy (check out the comments and discussion at the end of the post). The big concern that some people had was that if we stop talking about these “10 Things” then some “beginners” in the area of social media will suffer. So, in response, I put together a post called “The Beginner’s Guide to Pharma Social Media.” It included a ton of resources for any beginners who really want to catch up. I also promised that I’d write the positive version of the “10 Things” post by focusing  more positive areas. That’s why today you’re getting “10 Things I’d Like to Start Hearing About Pharma Social Media.”

These are the areas where I think the conversation should be headed and where social media may truly benefit healthcare overall and also be a viable communications channel for pharma and healthcare companies. I wrote the first “10 things” based on near direct quotes I’ve heard from people regarding pharma social media. I’ll do the same here, but these are quotes I’ve yet to hear, but would like to.

10 Things I’d Like to Hear About Pharma Social Media

1. “Participating in social media is a risk for us, but we’re going to do it anyway because we think it’s the right thing for patients.”

Notice that I didn’t say,” the right thing for our market share.” It might very well be beneficial for market share, but that can’t be the only reason why you get involved. You have to get into it because there are people that can benefit from your knowledge about your products. I’m specifically thinking about cases, for example, where there is dangerously inaccurate information about your products published on a disscusion forum. If some random person on a forum somewhere says that it’s “probably” safe to take 10 of your pills at once and you know that this will kill someone, shouldn’t you say something? Here’s how I explained how pharma companies can do this in an objective and beneficial way during my FDA public hearing testimony.

2. “We’ve got a rock-solid measurement plan in place for our social media efforts.”

This would, of course, be in complete opposition to comments like: “there’s no way to effectively measure social media efforts.” There’s a way to measure everything. I explained this in the first “10 Things” post and recommended that you visit Olivier Blanchard’s site, which is completely dedicated to this topic, and read everything. Bottom line, if you can track it, you can measure it. If you can measure it, you can get to an ROI (or certainly very close to it and much closer than you are now). Here are 100 things you can start tracking right now. Don’t throw your hands up in the air until you’ve checked out every one of these.

3. “Our social media efforts are completely integrated into the rest of our marketing efforts.”

Ahh, music to my ears. As I’ve always said, don’t create a “social media strategy.” Create a great brand strategy and use social media as one of the tactics to deliver on those strategies. Nothing more, nothing less. When I say integrated, I’m not just talking about integrating with your website or even all of your digital marketing activities. I’m talking about everything. Online, offline. Remotely, in person. PR team to regulatory team. Social media can potentially support all of your communication efforts, but it has to make sense. No one should look at something you’re doing in social media and think, “where in the hell did this come from?”

4. “We’re using social media to prevent another Vioxx [or insert similar drug pulled from the market because of serious safety issues and leading to massive legal issues].”

Yes, this can be done. It’s not simple, but it can be done. Today.

For example, Google is able to predict with precision the future flu infection rates simply based on search terms and volume changes. Hear me discuss this in the following presentation:

Companies like CureTogether are starting to predict disease correlation and drug efficacy based on user-provided data with only a few hundred people in a database. A comprehensive monitoring plan with some powerful statistical analysis could pick out problems before they start. Simply explained…if your new drug is suddenly being talked about with keywords like “heart attack,” “chest pain,” or the like and you’ve never seen this in your clinical trials, you might have signal that something is wrong. It doesn’t mean that there is for sure, but it’s a valuable “canary in the coalmine” that could prevent a major issue.

But first, you’ll have to do some monitoring. A minor detail, I suppose.

5. “We’ve trained everyone in our company on social media and have opened up access to social media sites completely.”

I mean, seriously…you’re going to do this eventually anyway. Why not do it now? Pfizer just did. At least, they did the latter part. Either one would be a good start, but both would be a big step forward. I’m not sure how company leadership can ask their teams to deliver in “emerging” channels (I cringe to think people still call social media “emerging”) and yet block access to these channels. It’s having the exact same impact that preventing your scientists from reading new research papers would have on your R&D. Not good.

Yes, you’ll need to have some rules in place. And, no, productivity won’t suffer. If someone wants to slack off, there are plenty of places online where they can do it that don’t fit in the social media category. If anything, expect it to have a positive impact on morale, which may lead to better productivity.

6. “Social media is how we’re providing meaningful customer service to patients and doctors.”

Yes, it is that simple. Look at it this way: you already provide great service via your call centers, why not provide the same service using a slightly more modern communication technology called the Internet? For example, when someone sends out this tweet (which I promise is a real)…

…maybe you should respond. But how can you respond to this question effectively in just 140 characters? Answer: you can’t. But you should answer and point people in the right direction. Here’s what AstraZeneca responded with:

If people saw the complaint, give them a chance to see the solution as well. Chances are it’ll spread more through social media than the complaint.

7. “Social media has given us a chance to find our biggest brand advocates, so we can start talking with them.”

Yes, even pharma brands have big advocates. Of course, it also has big detractors. Once you get involved in social media, expect to see some of the latter. For an example, review John Mack’s post: “Patient “Unadvocate” Lays Siege to sanofi-aventis VOICES Facebook Page. Where’s S-A’s Social Media VOICE?” John narrates the story of how a Facebook page ran by a division of sanofi-aventis was barraged with negative comments about their chemotherapy, Taxotere, and its side effects. Without going into many more details or discussing how sanofi-aventis should have handled this, I do want to add in one wrinkle.

Instead of the page being dominated by anti-Taxotere comments, what if the opposite happened? There are certainly side effects with this treatment, but there’s also a huge benefit for many people. I’d venture to say that there are a lot of people out their that owe their lives to Taxotere. I’m also sure that these people would be happy to explain that to the world if they thought there was a reason, knew where and when their opinion would be helpful, and had an easy way to share their thoughts. Of course, there isn’t any easier way than Facebook, but the other parts are a bit more of a challenge. Or are they?

If you knew who these advocates were before there was a crisis, then you could turn to them and ask that they weigh in on the situation when something does happen. If you do this successfully, then you don’t have to fight these battles yourself, you let both sides of the story explain it in their own words. You’re free to add in your perspective to the discussion, but which will have more impact on the public’s hearts and minds: your “company line” about the product or an impassioned story from someone who was truly saved by your product? Get to know these people now and get them ready because I’m sure you’ll need them at some point. You can’t try to find them once the crisis starts. It’s too late then.

8. “We’re using our social media resources to do something great for patient advocacy groups.”

Let’s face it. The pharma industry has a lot of resources at its disposal. That’s one of the big criticisms from the public. They don’t like to see their prescription prices increase while they also see more and more commercials for drugs on TV. To them, the solution is obvious: cut the commercials and you can cut the price. Of course, these commercials aren’t cheap; a lot of resources go into making and airing them. At the same time, pharma and healthcare companies have talented people with deep knowledge in specialized areas like government regulations, marketing, pricing and access, managed care, and, of course, medical. And when pharma companies go public with something, people hear about it.

Why not use all of these resources for something more than marketing? Why not use it to create something that’s bigger than your products? Advocacy groups can use your help and you’re looking for a way to reach patients. Instead of figuring out all the legal issues with marketing your product via social media, why not use social media simply to help an advocacy group with their efforts? The benefit to pharma and healthcare companies should be clear. This eliminates many of the legal issues everyone worries about (no fair balance required if you’re not talking about a product), improves the company’s skill and knowledge about social media, and might actually generate some positive PR. Oh yes, and it’s helping an important cause. Some companies have dabbled in this a little bit (see examples on the Pharma and Healthcare Social Media Wiki), but most try desperately to connect the program with their product. Resist this temptation for once and see what happens.

9. “Social media is a great opportunity to hear directly from our patients so that we can improve our products.”

You wouldn’t be the first company in the world to do this. Starbucks and Dell are two that have used this concept effectively. They let people submit their suggestions for improving a product, the public votes on their favorites, and then the company actually does those things that have risen to the top of the list. Think about how great this is for everyone. Customers get a place for their voices to be heard and can see that the company is listening and taking their suggestions seriously. The company gets this positive sentiment, but it also gets product engineering, marketing, production, and operations advice…for free. The next big innovation might not come from your lab, but rather your customers.

For pharma, this might mean a suggestion on how to better explain how your product works, a formulation recommendation, or something simple, but with a major impact. Consider when J&J added different color options to it’s popular OneTouch blood glucose monitors. Sales went through the roof all because of a different color shell. While I don’t know for sure, I’d venture to guess that this idea came from a diabetic somewhere. Create a process around this concept and you’ll have a continuous stream of new ideas and innovations.

10. “We’re moved way past the Dose of Digital ’10 Things I’m Tired of Hearing About in Social Media.’”

That right. Until everyone is saying this, then we’re still going to be stuck. I do mean everyone. It’s not enough for one or two companies to move forward. Everyone needs to move forward together. We’ll all learn more together, have a bigger impact on patient health, press government regulations, and find new approaches that benefit everyone. And we’ll do it all more quickly than if we each go at it alone.

__________

So that’s the new list of what you should start talking about in pharma and healthcare social media. If you didn’t like the idea of not talking about certain topics, that’s okay, but then you do have to promise to start talking about these topics at the same time.

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