For medical device (MD) comapnies, we offer a multichannel, holistic model to bolster their bottom lines when marketing to healthcare professionals (HCPs) - including Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) - and contending with healthcare reform such PPACA, new sales channels, advanced analytics and oher factors.
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New Commercial Models in Medical Devices
1. • Cognizant 20-20 Insights
New Commercial Models in Medical Devices
Healthcare reform, new sales models, emerging social channels and
draconian cost-cutting imperatives are forcing medical device
companies to transform how they operate. By embracing a holistic
model, these companies can remake their commercial operations.
Executive Summary Impending change will impact product perception,
salesperson relationships and ultimately the
Enormous change is on the horizon for medical
successful revenue model that has been in place
device (MD) companies. For years, MD companies
for years within the MD marketplace. Successful
built their commercial models around a combi-
MD companies must embrace the changes to
nation of innovative products and strong rela-
established commercial models to effectively
tionships with healthcare professionals (HCPs).
compete in the marketplace of the future.
These products and relationships have resulted
in preferred product designations, comfort with
Market Challenges
single companies as suppliers of choice and an
interdependency that rewarded the salespeople, The dramatic transformation in the MD com-
companies and the HCPs. mercial model is being driven by four factors:
healthcare reform, complex sales and contracting
models, new promotional channels and demands
to reduce and reallocate costs (see Figure 1).
Commercial Model Transformation
Healthcare Reform Complex Sales & Contracting Models
• Pervasive reforms across all major markets • Demand for outcomes-based models.
to address cost and quality of care. • Physician influence diminished in hospital
• In U.S., includes 2.3% tax on medical purchase decisions.
devices; Medicare targets $500B savings • Emergence of vertically integrated ACOs.
from hospitals. • Consider “bundled” product sales.
New Commercial
Models
New Promotional Channels Cost Reduction/Reallocation
• Increased use of digital and social media. • Price pressure strains profitability and drives
• Move towards intimate, bidirectional cost reduction initiatives.
communications. • Need to shift investment from major markets
• Demand for integrated 360° view of customers. to higher-growth markets.
Figure 1
cognizant 20-20 insights | september 2012
2. • Healthcare reform: Healthcare costs continue reporting on costs for IMDs to use in setting
to grow worldwide, as new expensive therapies payment rates and linking payment to quality
and innovative devices are introduced to and efficiency of care.1
address the needs of an aging population.
Government and private payers are struggling
• Complex sales and contracting models:
Clinical effectiveness has been the foundation
to ensure clinical effectiveness while controlling of the MD sales model. MD sales reps provide
costs of a healthcare model that is considered details on the clinical value of their products to
“unsustainable.” become the preferred solutions for physicians,
who had considerable autonomy in product
Governments around the world are introduc-
decisions. While physicians continue to have
ing policies designed to control the cost of
substantial input to MD purchases, hospitals
healthcare. In the U.S., the Patient Protection
and payers are exerting greater influence and
and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), recently
increasingly focusing on clinical and economic
upheld by the Supreme Court, will have a
value.
direct impact on the financial results for MD
companies. For example, starting in 2013 Hospitals are increasingly hiring physicians
there will be a 2.3% excise tax levied on all directly and buying group practices. The
device sales. In addition, there are a variety New England Journal of Medicine reported
of programs embodied in the legislation in May 2011 that more than half of practicing
targeting cost reduction at hospitals, including physicians were employed by hospitals
value-based purchasing programs, compara- or integrated delivery networks.2 Direct
tive effectiveness research and innovative employment offers hospitals the opportunity
care programs for Medicare. The Centers to establish standard care approaches and
for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) is hold physicians accountable for the cost of
targeting a $500 billion reduction in hospital care. Physicians working within hospitals have
expenses over the next 10 years. diminished influence over purchase decisions.
Many hospitals have procurement functions
MD companies can expect continued pricing
or value analysis committees to review and
pressure from the federal government in
approve MD purchases (see Figure 2). These
response to escalating costs. For example, in
new economic stakeholders require different
January 2012 the Government Accountabil-
sales approaches, including comparative effec-
ity Office (GAO) reported concern regarding
tiveness studies, outcomes-based contracts or
pricing for implantable MDs (IMDs) used in
bundled purchasing models.
hospitals to the Senate Finance Committee.
Medicare expenditures for hospital IMD
procedures increased by 4.3% per annum from
2004 to 2009, to $19.8 billion. New MD Sales Stakeholders
The GAO noted that substantial price variations
exist for the same devices across 31 hospitals
sampled in their analysis — implantable heart
defibrillator prices varied by as much as 50% Payers
and drug eluting stents prices varied by as
much as 48%. The GAO noted that current ACOs,
Physician
purchasing practices lead to higher costs GPOs, IDNs
for hospitals and ultimately higher Medicare
expenses. Factors contributing to the variance
include:
Sales
>> Physician influence/preferences impacting Other HCPs Value
purchase decisions. (Nurses, Analysis
Techs.) Committees
>> Lackof transparency in pricing inhibiting
Hospital
competition. Admin./
>> Limited bargaining power of some hospi- Procurement
tals.
The GAO recommended adjustments to CMS’s
approach to IMDs, including more granular Figure 2
cognizant 20-20 insights 2
3. Health outcomes are a key tenet of the PPACA almost 80% of the market, growth in those
and are embodied in the Accountable Care geographies has decelerated to 3%. However,
Organization (ACO) provisions of the law. growth in the rest of the world is expected to
ACOs are groups of providers and HCPs that exceed 10%, to over $88 billion by 2015. Asia
take responsibility for cost and quality of care Pacific represents the largest segment, growing
and receive a share of savings they achieve from $34 billion in 2011 to
for Medicare. As hospitals and HCPs position $55 billion in 2015.3 Given Given pricing
themselves to become ACOs with outcomes- pricing pressure in the major
pressure in the major
based rewards, MD companies must rethink geographies and accelerated
their sales and contracting approach in terms growth in emerging markets, geographies and
of clinical and economic outcomes. They need MD companies need to find accelerated growth
to consider how their products fit within the and execute on opportuni-
in emerging markets,
medical procedures they support and the ties to optimize their cost
hospital ecosystem to provide more holistic base and shift investment to MD companies need
solutions with more compelling value proposi- higher growth markets. to find and execute
In the new dynamic market on opportunities
tions.
• New promotional channels: MD companies are environment, MD companies to optimize their
faced with an increasing variety of channels
by which to promote their products, from
must also consider their
cost base and shift
technical and analytical
direct sales and customer support to e-mail foundations. From a product investment to higher
campaigns and wellness communities. HCPs design perspective, new growth markets.
and patients are increasingly using digital mobile and digital tech-
channels for medical information, offering nologies offer opportunities to provide more
MD companies an opportunity to establish effective linkage into the emerging hospital
intimate, bidirectional connections with stake- ecosystem. The adoption of cloud-based tech-
holders, often at a lower price. nologies, social listening solutions to more
The combination of personal and nonper- effectively understand customers, predictive
sonal promotion provides opportunities and analytics and wellness portals can provide
challenges for MD companies. The new channels new market insights and accelerate response
must be leveraged in a coordinated fashion, to market changes. Again, none of these new
ensuring delivery of consistent messages and solutions are free, so leading MD companies will
interactions. Done correctly, the new channels cut expenses in noncore functions to support
will provide a rich source of information accelerated investment in these growth oppor-
regarding customers and their perception of tunities.
specific products. New information sources and Commercial Model Transformation
the need to determine the optimal approach by
Leading MD companies must transform their
channel and target segment will drive adoption
commercial models to respond to new market
of new technologies and analytic approaches,
realities. Leveraging a comprehensive transfor-
from social customer relationship management
mation approach, MD companies are assessing
and marketing to multichannel promotion opti-
and adapting critical commercial processes (see
mization models.
Figure 3).
• Cost reduction and reallocation: MD compa-
nies have a substantial need to optimize their Commercial success must be driven by a holistic
cost base to address price pressures, shift transformation model that addresses key
resources to higher growth markets, invest in operating paradigms:
innovative solutions, promote products to a
larger stakeholder base and address continued • New sales model: Enhance the sales model
to incorporate new skills; augment the model
performance demands from Wall Street.
with new roles to ensure effective customer
Among the top opportunities is geographic engagement and reduce cost.
expansion. The MD market is projected to
grow to over $346B in 2015 with a 5% CAGR, • Promotion optimization: Revise the pro-
motional approach to address a broader
according to a study by Espicom Business Intel-
stakeholder base using both traditional and
ligence in June 2011. While the major markets
emerging channels.
(U.S., Western Europe and Japan) represent
cognizant 20-20 insights 3
4. Commercial Process Transformation
PLAN
Account segmentation Pricing strategy
BUs
Account level profitability Multichannel promotion optimization
Brands
Regions
Brand Strategy, Forecasting
Accounts & Segmentation Promo Strategy
& Resource
HCPs
Allocation
Payers
Patients MONITOR IMPLEMENT
Promotion ROI DATA Account-based selling
Digital analytics Report FOUNDATION Size & structure
Managed care & Strategy Role realignment
analytics Analyze Management Tactical Call planning
Pricing analysis Provisioning Planning Cross-channel coordination
Smart alerts
Report rationalization
Execution
Support
Performance
Management
CRM solutions Goal setting
Mobility Incentive compensation
Training Customer satisfaction
eDetailing Pay-for-performance analysis
ENABLE
Figure 3
• Digital marketing: Embrace digital and social are available at a different price point, enabling
media channels to influence consumers, HCPs leading MD companies to optimize costs while
and other stakeholders. effectively engaging with an evolving client base.
• Advanced analytics: Leverage advanced Promotion Optimization
analytics to continually refine commercial
MD companies are faced with a variety of channels
approaches in response to rapid market
to promote their products, from e-mail campaigns
changes.
to symposia to patient wellness communities.
• Comparative effectiveness: Define outcomes- These channels offers marketers new options
based solutions and contracting approaches to for reaching healthcare providers, payers and
enhance clinical and economic value. patients in more intimate and often more cost-
effective ways. While marketers welcome this
The New Sales Model
plethora of choices, management and integra-
The MD sales organization of the future is a lean, tion of promotional campaigns across channels
agile organization that aligns itself to provide remains a challenge:
effective clinical and economic information to
a growing stakeholder community. They are • How do these various channels overlap with my
focused on solutions and outcomes, not products. target audience?
The new sales team considers the needs of
individual decision makers and their preferences
• What mix of channels will maximize my reach?
for interaction, and then aligns the organization • What is the right frequency of touch points for
accordingly. They are ready and willing to adapt each channel?
their model to changes in the hospital ecosystem • How can I best integrate the execution across
and the overall market. channels?
To that end, new sales roles are being created Multichannel promotional approaches can be
beyond the typical geographic model and include used for a wide variety of purposes — from
key account managers, inside sales, clinical spe- creating awareness to education to increasing
cialists, administrative sales and contract special- brand preference — but success will be limited if
ists. These new roles provide different skills and each channel operates in isolation of the others.
cognizant 20-20 insights 4
5. The complex mix of promotional channels must customers. Using emerging social listening capa-
be integrated to effectively support the device bilities, companies can gain new real-time insights
buying process. Leveraging advanced multichan- concerning market perceptions of their products.
nel analytics, MD marketers can optimize their
spend and improve performance by effectively Advanced Analytics
integrating these new channels in their promo- Emerging promotional channels are highly
tional mix. measurable and provide opportunities to better
assess performance and react to the market.
Digital Marketing Collecting and mining the “big data” proliferat-
Nonpersonal promotion opportunities are ing across channels for
growing for MD companies. Leveraging digital insight about decision
Leveraging advanced
and social media, MD companies can increase makers, product per-
awareness, support diagnosis and treatment ceptions and the com- multichannel analytics,
choices and improve compliance with best-prac- petition can inform and MD marketers can
tice clinical approaches. guide brand strategies.
optimize their
Combining this new data
Many companies have embraced product portals with traditional data and spend and improve
for providers and patients, but this is only the analytics can offer a com- performance by
proverbial tip of the iceberg. These solutions
provide a mechanism for these stakeholders to
prehensive view of the
effectively integrating
market and enable rapid
pull information about a product, but lack the response to changing these new channels in
rich, bidirectional communications of emerging market dynamics (see their promotional mix.
social networks. Leading MD companies are Figure 4).
embracing wellness portals and other social
communities to engage in the decision dialog Leading MD companies are taking steps to
and ensure that patients, providers and payers improve their data management and analytics to
understand the value of their products through leverage these data. Over time, these companies
effective engagement with current and future will set up customer innovation labs that allow
Integrated Commercial Analytics
Analyze the
Conduct state, competition
hospital and Managed
HCP level Care
Augment
analysis Analytics HCP base with
Maximize competitive data
Framework
for strategic HCP value
contracting by segment
Pricing Digital
Analytics Analytics
Integrated
Commercial Analyze the
online/offline
Build the Analytics Penetrate path to
Combine value
pricing and new markets conversion
proposition
outcomes
analytic Identify new
efforts Optimize segmentation
promotional
Offline strategies
Outcomes Channel
Analytics activities
Analytics
Analyze the
cost of care
Figure 4
cognizant 20-20 insights 5
6. them to effectively analyze the data in near real more effective patient intervention that reduces
time and adjust their promotional approaches readmission may be more valuable to the hospital
accordingly. than the device itself. Leading MD companies will
use comparative effectiveness and patient flow
Comparative Effectiveness analyses to better understand their customer’s
With payer influence on the rise and concern customer, the patient, and provide services that
over quality and efficacy, MD companies must optimize the clinical and economic effectiveness
better understand how their products fit within of their solutions.
the procedures in which they are used and in
the hospital ecosystems overall. Leveraging new Leveraging these new commercial approaches,
health economics teams that are closely aligned leading MD companies are positioning themselves
with marketing, they craft effective messaging to effectively respond to substantial changes in
and consider alternative business models to the healthcare marketplace. Ongoing commercial
ensure market success. transformation allows MD companies to become
more intimate with patients, providers and payers,
In some cases, a stronger integration with the and to enhance their important role in healthcare
hospital ecosystem through remote monitoring or innovation.
Footnotes
1
“Lack of Transparency May Hamper Hospitals’ Ability to Be Prudent Purchasers of Implantable Medical
Devices,” U.S. Government Accountability Office, January 2012.
2
Robert Kocher, M.D., and Nikhil R. Sahni, B.S., “Hospitals’ Race to Employ Physicians — the Logic Behind a
Money-losing Proposition,” New England Journal of Medicine, May 2011.
3
“Medistat Worldwide Medical Market Forecasts to 2016,” Espicom Business Intelligence, June 2011,
http://www.espicom.com/world-medical-market-forecasts.
About the Authors
Bruce Carlson is a Principal Director who manages Cognizant’s analytics work with Midwest-based life
sciences companies. He has over 20 years of experience in the pharmaceuticals and medical device
industry and has led consulting engagements with clients in over 40 countries around the world. These
engagements have focused on both strategic and operational aspects of sales and marketing effec-
tiveness. Previously, he worked in the diagnostics division of Abbott Laboratories in strategic planning
and worldwide marketing. Bruce received his B.A. in chemistry and business administration from
Wittenberg University and an M.B.A. with distinction from Northwestern University. He can be reached at
Bruce.Carlson@cognizant.com.
Richard Lincoff is the Medical Devices Practice Leader within Cognizant’s Life Sciences Business Unit.
In this role, he works closely with MD companies across North America to define and execute innovative
manufacturing and commercial strategies. He has over 20 years of senior leadership experience working
in the life sciences industry and serves on the editorial advisory board of Medical Device and Diag-
nostics magazine. Richard holds a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in business. He can be reached at
Richard.Lincoff@cognizant.com.
cognizant 20-20 insights 6