1. • Cognizant 20-20 Insights
Adaptive Social Media in Life Sciences
Executive Summary the healthcare system have forced life sciences
companies to be more nimble and innovative. An
In 2011, 74% of pharmaceutical companies had
example is the adaptive clinical trial process that
adopted social media technologies — a higher rate
has been rapidly adopted and approved by the
than financial services and retail.1 While many
FDA. In 2006, the Pharmaceutical Research and
pundits argued that the lack of Federal Drug
Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) put forth the
Administration (FDA) guidance would restrict the
following definition: “Adaptive design is referred
use of social media channels, pharmaceutical and
to as a clinical trial design that uses accumulating
other life sciences companies are holding their
data to decide on how to modify aspects of the
own by adapting to the regulatory ambiguity to
study as it continues, without undermining the
meet the needs of their diverse customers and a
validity and integrity of the trial.”2
mandate for rapid change.
Applying the adaptive design to social media
Adding to the regulatory risks of violating
means that life sciences companies accumulate
existing or impending FDA regulations is a rapidly
data to decide on how to modify aspects of
changing landscape of social media monitoring
customer engagement as it continues, without
and analytics solutions. There are hundreds of
undermining the trust and equity in the brand or
free, paid, integrated, standalone or platform
organization.
solutions vying for attention. The complexity of
using advanced technology to collect social media What is common to the adaptive design in clinical
data for insight into customer preferences and trial and in social media strategies is:
behaviors seems well-suited to the data-driven
approach that life sciences companies adapt to • Big data: Accumulation of large amounts of
many aspects of their business models to remain data.
agile and customer-centric.
• Descriptive and predictive analytics to
This white paper lays out how life sciences reduce options to the best set.
companies can apply their expertise in data • Continuous learning, creating multiple
collection and analysis to harness the potential sequential learning opportunities.
upsides of social media, while mitigating the
downsides. • Well-defined endpoints.
In both cases, the adaptive process also leverages
Adaptive Design data and analytics to reduce cycle times and
Over the past decade, increased shareholder improve success rates in a complex operating
pressure, global competition and complexity of environment.
cognizant 20-20 insights | january 2012
2. Social Media Usage Maturity Curve
Converse
Engage
Listen
Social CRM (franchise
Planning and execution complexity
or enterprise)
Social marketing
(brand)
Social marketing
(corporate)
Social monitoring
(launch or mature
product)
Social listening
(pipeline product)
Regulatory complexity
Source: Google Insights for Search, http://www.google.com/insights/search
Figure 1
Constraints and Opportunities Corporate Culture
Life sciences companies are prioritizing social Scientific and technological innovation, custom-
media initiatives based on five key aspects of er-centricity, operational excellence and risk
their business. management affect an organization’s choice of
social media activities. Customer-focused orga-
Product Lifecycle nizations may deploy listening devices through
While large life sciences companies are managing social media channels at the corporate level to
mature brands with impending patent expiry, the open a dialogue with customers (e.g., extending
industry also has more than 3,000 potential new their customer service departments). Commercial
treatments in development.3 operations experts can add social media to
The quality of the Mature products require more existing promotional channels to improve
information and the careful use of social media due engagement (e.g., support existing offline and
digital promotions).
amount of customer to adverse event and off-label
reporting requirements. Social
interaction is a media monitoring and analysis Regulatory Environment
driver of when and can be performed against Regulatory compliance teams are challenged to
interpret the limited set of rules that apply to social
how life sciences a larger set of information media to ensure compliance. The complexity of
and analytical objectives for
companies engage. product positioning, physician digital marketing, and the increasing regulatory
attitudes or general market affairs workload, typically determine which social
research, since there is less risk of capturing media initiatives are prioritized.
product complaints or adverse events that the
Stakeholder Needs
analyst would need to report.
As patients, caregivers, healthcare companies
Therapeutic Category and physicians increase their use of social media,
Data velocity and social media user engagement life sciences companies are looking for ways to
can vary by disease state. For example, breast participate. The quality of the information and
cancer patients are 12 times more engaged than the amount of customer interaction is a driver of
diabetes patients.4 The likelihood to engage and when and how life sciences companies engage.
the amount of data available for collection and
analysis has implications for how social media Execution
can be used (too much will be difficult to process, As social media usage matures (see Figure 1), its
too little will be inconclusive). functions are becoming more clearly defined. For
instance, companies now have a better under-
cognizant 20-20 insights 2
3. standing of the planning and resources required the “behavioral exhaust” to creating “stimuli”
to execute the following functions. for increased social interactions. Iterations on
this type of analysis are limited only by customer
• Listening/monitoring. engagement and the “virality” of the content.
• Publish/share/discuss/review. Social customer service is emerging as a new
standard, as customers expect faster response
• Gaming.
times and organizations strive to reduce their
Opportunities exist to iterate within each function costs.
while improving the organization’s ability to
The next step after “social customer service” is
execute other social media functions.
social CRM, where interactions are in the service
Applied Examples of Adaptive of identified healthcare
providers and patients. With Life sciences
Social Media
social CRM, social media companies’ core
Listening to social media in the pipeline drugs activities are integrated
arena offers many opportunities to collect infor- in customer management
competencies in
mation on patient needs, physician treatment systems and supported by data collection,
habits, product positioning and competitive intelli- dedicated resources, providing applied analytics and
gence without having to implement full regulatory a truly complete view of the
rigor. This approach casts a wide net for analysis customer. Solutions providers
insight generation
and then focuses on one specific clinical, attitudi- are only now curating lists of are well suited to
nal, geographic or set of financial topics based on physicians, affiliations and social media.
information processed. online relationships to inform
their analysis.
On the other hand, social listening for mature
brands requires more planning and resources to Social CRM allows customers to interact with
ensure that adverse events and off-label infor- brands in the moment of engagement without
mation is appropriately handled. These projects the burden of e-mail or customer service calls.
typically have narrower datasets and analytical In turn, organizations can better understand
objectives. This approach provides baseline senti- customer preferences and who influences those
ment and analysis for brands that are already on preferences online.
the market.
Conclusion
After having executed social media listening
and monitoring projects, many companies have Life sciences companies’ core competencies in
regulatory precedents to contend with. They also data collection, applied analytics and insight
have attained some level of customer intelligence, generation are well suited to social media.
which allows them to create bi-directional links Furthermore, new, flexible processes such as
with customer segments (corporate or brand- adaptive design provide frameworks that can be
level). Physician and patient communities, applied to other business areas, as well as enable
corporate information centers and patient help more dynamic, cost-efficient and decision-orient-
lines are typical social media implementations. ed ways of operating. Understanding the resource
requirements and planning for the business con-
At this stage, projects are more focused on straints for the right social media functions can
content creation to engage customers. Social help create an accelerated path to social media
media activities can then move from analyzing maturity.
cognizant 20-20 insights 3