Consumer Directed Healthcare - A New trend PDF Print E-mail
Written by Webmaster   
Saturday, 05 July 2008
By Danish

  Gone are the days when the maxim that ruled the healthcare industry was "Build it and they will come", under the impression that that if people knew where services were located they would find their way to the clinics.

In post liberalisation India the healthcare industry is waking up to the fact that the consumer has to be pursued and enticed into visiting healthcare facilities of a particular brand and to buy healthcare products of a particular brand. With the government permitting 100 per cent foreign direct investment (FDI) in the health care industry, there is a deluge of private players in the Indian Healthcare market today. And this has dramatically changed the facade of healthcare marketing and communications in India.
Taking the case of hospitals, there is a wide variety of services (that are not just medical) on offer for the patient. From in-house multi cuisine restaurants, swimming pools, walking tracks, indoor games facilities, libraries and play areas to travel desks that arrange sightseeing tours and shopping for patients, you name it and they have it, all in a bid to woo more and more patients. Hospital promotions take on the form of Public Relations, VIP and visitor hospital tours and walk in exhibitions, loyalty and outreach programmes, support groups etc.
Similarly the pharmaceutical industry is going overboard in its attempts to appease the two routes that they have to reach out to the end consumers- doctors and pharmacists. For retailers it is boom time as they get free supplies of medicines, expensive gifts, holiday trips and also huge margins for promoting and selling particular brands at their outlets. With doctors the gifts, incentives and schemes are getting wilder by the day. The trend is to customise the gift to the doctor so that the pharmaceutical company actually meets a relevant need of the doctor rather than flooding him with things that he throws away or hands over to others. Taking examples of customised gifts it could be admission of a doctors child to a reputed school or even the reimbursement of shopping bills. All in an attempt to get a better hold on this indirect consumer. For over the counter drugs there are advertisements in all shapes and sizes visible just anywhere. With sponsoring TV programmes to conducting mass consumer contact programmes to free sampling, pharmaceutical companies are trying innovative marketing ideas to get a share of the consumers wallet.
One look at the statistics and the reason behind this intense competition gets clear. According to a Confederation of Indian Industry McKinsey study on Indias health industry, the countrys spending on health care is expected to increase from Rs 86,000 crore at present to Rs 200,000 crore in the next decade. Health cares contribution to Indias GDP will increase from the current 5.2 per cent to 8.5 per cent by 2012. The players in the healthcare industry fully realise that these predictions will come true with harnessing the burgeoning purchasing power of the Indian consumer.

At MedRite, find a convergence of all processes involved in the delivery of health products and services like Health care marketing, Health Communications and Hospital Consultancy.We have all the skills and expertise necessary to transform nascent ideas into a tangible health product/service.

Share Your Opinion. (0 posts)

Tag it:
Blinkbits
BlinkList
blogmarks
co.mments
connotea
Delicious
De.lirio.us
Digg
feedmelinks
Furl it!
Hugg
Ma.gnolia
Mister.Wong
Netvouz
NewsVine
Reddit
Stumble
Technorati
Last Updated ( Saturday, 05 July 2008 )
 
< Prev   Next >


Google Search

Webbeauty-online-journal.com

We want to give you free stuff !

Simply fill out the short form below to get our free E-Book along with hundreds of dollars in free products! Complete the fields below for more details! And enjoy our exclusive club at no cost.

Name  
Email  


Close