Posted on Thu, Feb 04, 2010 @ 03:34 PM
Nearly three months have now passed since the FDA's Division for Drug Marketing
Advertising and Communications (DDMAC) held its hearing entitled “Promotion of FDA-Regulated Medical Products Using the Internet and Social Media Tools.” So far the response from DDMAC and direction provided to industry can be measured by the almost deafening sound of crickets coming from the direction of Washington DC.
Hopefully, before we're too far along into 2010, DDMAC will provide constructive guidance to industry on the use of social media to communicate with patients. They certainly had plenty of feedback from interested parties during those hearings.
--David Avitabile
Posted on Fri, Oct 23, 2009 @ 11:18 AM
Do you want to lead? Remain teachable. This is especially true for healthcare
communications and marketing professionals who want to engage the digital health consumer (in other words, all of us).
Next week, we'll be participating in the e-Patient Connections Conference in Philadelphia, organized by my friend Kevin Kruse. If you want to see a Who's Who of leadership in digital healthcare communications and social media, check out the speaker line-up and the program for this event.
So here's a Healthcare PR Blog shout-out to Kevin Kruse and his team a Kru Research for putting this meeting together.
I'm sure we'll have a few things to blog about following this conference. We look forward to seeing our friends and colleagues at this event.
Stay tuned.
--David Avitabile
Posted on Thu, May 28, 2009 @ 01:02 PM
The following scene is no doubt taking place in the boardrooms of pharmaceutical, biotechnology and medical technology companies all over the world:
Members of your marketing team are hearing a pitch from (insert any large multinational PR agency name here). After a seemingly endless capabilities

presentation, the fresh faced 22 year-old Assistant Account Executive – who by the way will be running your account once the agency VPs win your business –then presents an all-singing, all-dancing social media blitz campaign for the national launch of your late-stage new product.
Some members of your team are mesmerized. They simply must have this thing that is being presented. Others are luke warm, and a few are just scratching their heads wondering how this is going to generate more sales.
I believe in the power of social media. If I didn’t, you wouldn’t be reading this blog right now. But the fact is that a number of healthcare PR firms are doing exactly what they’ve always done—flogging the latest edition of the “communications revolution” in order to maximize their revenues—often at the expense of the clients paying them for their “best strategic thinking.”
Social media technologies, including blogs, LinkedIn, Facebook, YouTube and Twitter are, in some ways, transformational. Are they going to change the media landscape to an extent? Absolutely. Are they going completely replace traditional media channels? I don’t think so.
I believe that social media is a tool that can, and in many cases should, be part of the marketing mix.
I also believe that if your healthcare communications agency is telling you that you need to employ social media as part of your overall strategy, you should ask them to demonstrate exactly how the use of these tools helps achieve your objectives for the product. And if this question isn’t answered to your satisfaction, my advice is to spend your money elsewhere.
The basics of strategic thinking still apply. What is the objective? What strategies are going to help you meet your objective? What are the most effective tactics to support your strategy and achieve your objective?
Remember the “dotcom boom?” In some cases, banks and venture capital firms where throwing money at business start-ups that, in retrospect, now seem utterly ridiculous. The dotcoms that had ideas that really made sense and sold things that people really wanted to buy are still with us today. The others are consigned to the scrapheap of history.
We live in a very exciting era from a communications perspective. In just the past 10 years, an explosion in new technologies has created massive changes in how we gather, access, consume and exchange information.
But the basic laws of healthcare marketing still apply. So does common sense, and DDMAC regs. Healthcare communications counselors have a responsibility to help their clients fully understand the strategic value of social media and how it can be used to benefit their business. Anything less is irresponsible.
--David Avitabile