Chapter 5
Marketing of Healthcare Services
5.0 Introduction
Health care organizations are amongst the last ones to adopt modern
marketing practices into their marketing systems. Prior to the late 1970,
marketing, as we know, it had no significant presence in any health care
provider. People who had no formal training or prior experience in
marketing outside the health care industry conducted those marketing
functions that were performed at all under the auspicious department with
titles like “development” and “Public relations”. The lack in the field of
marketing was soon to be replaced with the hunger of marketing talent.
Marketing is certainly not the only functional department that has
undergone sea changes in its role in health care management, but certainly
it is one of the most controversial departments as its role is concerned.
5.1 Concept of Marketing
What is Marketing?
Marketing deals with identifying and meeting human and social needs. One
of the shortest definitions of marketing is meeting needs profitably. 2”
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American Marketing Association offers the following formal definition:
Marketing is an organizational function and a set of processes for creating,
communicating and delivering value to the customers and for managing
customer relationships in ways that benefit the organization and its
stakeholders 3.
Marketing Management is the art and Science of choosing target markets
and getting, keeping, and growing customers through creating, offering,
and freely exchanging products and services of value with others.)
5.1.1 What can be Marketed?
Products / Goods which are physical in nature. In healthcare, medicines /
tablets, with or without brand names (paracetamol, which is a medicine
Crocin is the brand name)are common examples.
Services are invariably intangible in nature. Consultancy by doctors, their
advice, etc., is an example of service. As will be explained later, there could
be pure services and some services are combined with products and goods.
In today's economic scenario, services are the biggest growing businesses.
A conference, a medical check-up camp, the Olympics, cricket tournaments
are events that are being marketed for effective response.
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Places this is an entirely novel concept that is being done today. To take a
simple example, tourism spots like Goa and Kerala are being marketed to
attract tourists. In the field of healthcare, a city may market itself as a place
to come for the right treatment due to availability of the right type of
treatment.
Eminent surgeon who has gained expertise and reputation, winners like
Miss World / Miss Universe, a sporting megastar like Sachin Tendulkar,
Kiran Bedi who is known as the most powerful lady is now being marketed
who probably was never ever was thought will be marketed, Dhoni the
most successful Cricket Captain, Coaches of various teams example Hockey
cricket coach Mr. Negi being asked to promote reality shows, Amitabh
Bachchan , Sharukh Khan are being marketed on various lines. Perfumes
men accessories being names after the celebrities are examples of persons
being marketed.
Organizations in order to build a good image for the customers,
organizations toil to market themselves. Examples like Apollo Hospitals in
healthcare, Pfizer in pharmaceuticals, and Sony in consumer electronics,
New Medical Centre in UAE, Pune Based Pharmaceutical Company like
Emcure Pharmaceuticals, a number of IT healthcare solution based
companies like Seed healthcare, Religare, Metropolis, a number of
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insurance based organizations like mediassist, Paramount, TATA AIG, Raio
service Providers like the Radio Mirchi promoting on the reality shows,
Radio one associating with the Leading Symbiosis Institute to Promote
various radio related courses and many many more.
Information is one of the emerging industries in marketing. Information is
collected, packaged and sold to customers. This could be by way of market
research on various aspects to even as basic as a database. This may or may
not be ethical practice. Like for example the Operation Research Group
who collects the product sales data, new product launch data from across a
set of 2000 chemists and extrapolates to 2lacs chemists and does the
ranking of ach of the pharmaceutical company products as well as all the
competitors information on similar lines and provides to the companies in
the form of a book for a premium price. With the help of this the companies
can then take a call about their marketing strategies against a competitor,
to what extent market share needs to be increased viz a viz the
competitors, which new products are doing well and the acceptance by the
target audience. This helps in launching new products.
Marketing is essentially about parading the resources of an organization so
that they meet the changing needs of the customers on whom the
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organization depends. As a verb, marketing is all about how an
organization addresses its market.
5.2 Marketing as a Process
Till now we have seen marketing as a concept now we will see marketing
as a process. The process of marketing involves exchange transactions
between the buyers and the sellers, the exchange of products with
compensation. Exchange involves obtaining a desired product or service
from someone by offering something in return.
The compensation paid is generally in monetary terms. The essence of the
process is: There are at least 2 parties, there could be more Each has
something of value for the other Each is capable of communication and
delivery Each is free to accept or reject the exchange Each believes that it
is appropriate to deal with the other. Thus both the buyers and sellers and
if there are any other parties, give something to each other and are
benefited through the exchange process. It should result in long term
satisfying relationship between both of them, which will result in repeat
purchase of the product.
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5.3 Marketing as a Managerial Function
Marketing as managerial activity involves following activities:
Environment scanning and market opportunity analysis
Understanding the customer needs
Developing the right products and services with the right
quality and features, design, sizes, variety, etc
Targeting the right markets and customer segments
Development of competitive market plan and strategy
Developing the right price and value offering, promotions,
packaging, payment and credit terms, etc.
Public relations and advertising, managing the sales force
Employing the right marketing channels, inventory management,
transportation, logistics, ensuring the right supply chain
Development of control mechanism.
All other needs that may be required
Thus employing the right marketing mix, which means using all those
marketing tools, such that an organization is able to supply not only
consumer needs but also achieve its objectives. Thus marketing can be put
as an important organizational function.
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What is Marketing Orientation?
A look at successful marketing organizations in India and abroad reveals
that the marketing organization involves the following dimensions:
Consumer Orientation: Traditionally companies focused from their
viewpoint and assumed that they knew what the customer requires.
Successful marketing companies take efforts to continuously monitor
consumer needs, wants and preferences, both stated and unstated, again
fulfilled and unfulfilled. Unfulfilled customer needs drive their new product
development efforts.
An integral approach to exploiting the market opportunities: successful
marketing companies integrate all the elements of the marketing mix, and
not just merely advertising and selling into a sound business plan that
could successfully help them to fight the competition. That the entire
company would integrate the other functions like research and
development, finance, production, operations, materials, etc. This integral
approach is important for the success of the company.
Futuristic approach: These companies strategize and compete not only for
today's market, but also proactively create markets for tomorrow. So these
companies look at money spent on marketing not as expenditure, but as an
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investment. For example, they would look at the market from a future
perspective; say a three to ten year perspective when they look at
maximizing their returns from an advertising campaign or tactical price
reduction over these years just than in 1 year.
Highly developed marketing systems: Strong marketing information
systems which will act as Barometer in the market.
Market culture pervades the organization: an important characteristic of
organizations is everybody, from the CEO to the sales executive, everybody
is market-oriented.
Thus Marketing orientation is different from selling orientation, which tries
to dominate many India.
5.4 Customer Satisfaction and Marketing Mix:
A person's feeling of pleasure or disappointment resulting from comparing
a product's perceived performance in relation to the expectation from the
product. Important here to note is perceived performance and
expectations. For example you hear from a neighbor about a good doctor,
the cleanliness about his hospital, courteous staff, reasonable rates and
above all good treatment. You go to this doctor and let's assume that all this
turns out to be true. Then since there was an expectation the satisfaction
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would be just about met. But if there is even something that does not get
fulfilled, say a mistake in the billing, there will be low satisfaction in spite of
the fact that you had good treatment. On the other extreme, you go to a
hospital in an emergency. The hospital is not sophisticated at all, but just
the fact that you may have been given a lot of importance and attention
may make you ignore everything else, even the high bill, and make you a
very satisfied customer. Customers form their expectations from
advertisements, information from other companies, own past experiences,
even from names of companies. Companies need to target high levels of
satisfaction because customers will switch to other offerings if they are not
just satisfied or just about satisfied. Highly satisfied customers will not
switch easily and their bond is more than just rational, it is often emotional.
Thus you gain loyalty. The key to generating high customer loyalty is to
deliver high customer value.
5.5 Attracting and Retaining Customers
Companies need to get customers to seek profits, and attracting new
customers requires considerable amount of time, effort and money. Next is
converting this attraction into business, which leads to acquisition of new
customers. In the above process, the first step is to generate leads for all
possible customers, by various methods. Popularly, this is known as
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suspecting. The next step would be screening this list, based on various
parameters and come down to the list of prospects that need to be
concentrated upon.
But it is not enough to acquire new customers only to lose them. So a
company must measure its retention rate say for a hospital how many
patients would come back when there is a need or say in the case of a
travel agency, how customers may keep on booking through you. Next is to
see the reasons for losing customer. There are many cases, where nothing
can be done; the company in spite of its best efforts would have lost these
customers. There may be some customers, where it would be better not to
have them at all, because there may be a loss, trying to retain and serve
these customers. In other cases, quite often the reasons are manageable
and the company should correct their mistakes. The reasons are obvious if
the company calculates the profits lost from existing customers and also
looks at the cost of acquiring new customers, it would be very large. The
cost of retaining customers is far significantly lower than acquiring new
customers. The unfortunate part is most companies focus on attracting and
acquiring new customers than retaining old customers. Customer loyalty
comes from customer satisfaction, which in turn leads to customer
retention. This leads to higher profits, more consumption from same
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customers, talks and advertises about our company at no extra cost and is
then willing to try new products and services offered in the future by your
company.
5.6 Marketing Mix
Marketers use numerous tools to elicit desired response from their target
markets; these tools constitute a marketing mix. Marketing mix can be
defined as a set of tools that the firm uses to pursue its marketing
objectives in the target market. McCarthy classifies these tools into four
broad groups that he called as the 4 Ps of marketing; product, price, place,
and promotion.
Marketing mix decisions are made for influencing the trade channels as
well as the final customers. Typically a firm can change its price, sales force
size and advertising expenditures in short run. It can develop new products
and modify its distribution channels only in long run. Thus the firm
typically makes fewer period-to-period marketing mix changes in the short
run than the number of marketing mix variables might suggest.
The term "marketing mix" was coined in 1953 by Neil Borden in his
American Marketing Association presidential address. However, this was
actually a reformulation of an earlier idea by his associate, James Culliton,
who in 1948 described the role of the marketing manager as a "mixer of
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ingredients", who sometimes follows recipes prepared by others,
sometimes prepares his own recipe as he goes along, sometimes adapts a
recipe from immediately available ingredients, and at other times invents
new ingredients no one else has tried. The marketing mix (price, product,
distribution, promotion) forms the entire promotional campaign. As stated
in “Management of a Sales Force” by Rosann L. Spiro, Gregory A. Rich,
William J. Stanton, “when these are effectively blended, they form a
marketing program that provides want-satisfying goods and services for
the company’s market." The term became popular in the article written by
Niel Borden called, “The Concept of the Marketing Mix,” as explained on the
site netmba.com. He started teaching the term to many after he himself
learned about it with an associate of his. The marketing mix is a broad
concept which includes several aspects of marketing which all inquire to
obtain a similar goal of creating awareness and Patient loyalty. The
marketing mix is not only an important concept, but a guideline to
reference back to when implementing the price, promotion, product, and
distribution. Those are the four main ingredients of the marketing mix, but
there are other components not already mentioned includes planning,
branding, packaging, display, distribution channels, personal selling,
advertising, servicing, and physical handling. All in all the current
description of the marketing mix is accurate, but missing some vital pieces
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of information which will allow individuals to gain a better understanding
and implement a more effective marketing mix.[1] A prominent marketer, E.
Jerome McCarthy, proposed a Four P classification in 1960, which has seen
wide use.
5.6.1 Four 'P's
Elements of the marketing mix are often referred to as the "Four 'P's", a
phrase used since the 1960's
The basic major marketing management decisions can be classified in one
of the following four categories, namely Product, Price, Place
(distribution) and Promotion.
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Product - It is a tangible good or an intangible service that is mass
produced or manufactured on a large scale with a specific volume of
units. Intangible products are service based like the tourism industry &
the hotel industry or codes-based products like cellphone load and
credits. Typical examples of a mass produced tangible object are the
motor car and the disposable razor. A less obvious but ubiquitous mass
produced service is a computer operating system. Packaging also needs
to be taken into consideration. Every product is subject to a life-cycle
including a growth phase followed by an eventual period of decline as
the product approaches market saturation. To retain its
competitiveness in the market, product differentiation is required and
is one of the strategies to differentiate a product from its competitors.
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Price – The price is the amount a Patient pays for the product. The
business may increase or decrease the price of product if other stores
have the same product.
Place – Place represents the location where a product can be
purchased. It is often referred to as the distribution channel. It can
include any physical store as well as virtual stores on the Internet.
Promotion represents all of the communications that a marketeer
may use in the marketplace. Promotion has four distinct elements:
advertising, public relations, personal selling and sales promotion. A
certain amount of crossover occurs when promotion uses the four
principal elements together, which is common in film promotion.
Advertising covers any communication that is paid for, from cinema
commercials, radio and Internet adverts through print media and
billboards. Public relations are where the communication is not directly
paid for and includes press releases, sponsorship deals, exhibitions,
conferences, seminars or trade fairs and events. Word of mouth is any
apparently informal communication about the product by ordinary
individuals, satisfied Patients or people specifically engaged to create
word of mouth momentum. Sales staff often plays an important role in
word of mouth and Public Relations (see Product above).
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Any organization, before introducing its products or services into the
market; conducts a market survey. The sequence of all 'P's as above is very
much important in every stage of product life cycle Introduction, Growth,
Maturity and Decline.
In recent years the addition of a 5th P has become common place. The 5th P
being people, this is to represent the people who you are targeting but also
the people who will physically conduct each part of the campaign. Some
people even go up to as many as 10 P's.
5.6.2 Extended Marketing Mix (4 P's)
More recently, three more Ps have been added to the marketing mix
namely People, Process and Physical Evidence. This marketing mix is
known as Extended Marketing Mix.
People: All people involved with consumption of a service are
important. For example workers, management, consumers etc. It also
defines the market segmentation, mainly demographic segmentation. It
addresses particular class of people for whom the product or service is
made available.
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Process: Procedure, mechanism and flow of activities by which
services are used. Also the 'Procedure' how the product will reach the
end user.
Physical Evidence: The marketing strategy should include effectively
communicating their satisfaction to potential Patients.
"Posture" it represents a friendly behavior with people and make a
relation.
5.6.3 Four Cs
(CONSUMER, COST, CONVENIENCE and COMMUNICATION , CULTURE )
Robert F. Lauterborn proposed a four Cs classification in 1993.[2] The Four
Cs model is more consumer-oriented and attempts to better fit the
movement from mass marketing to niche marketing.
Product part of the Four Ps model is replaced by 'Consumer' or
Consumer Models, shifting the focus to satisfying the consumer needs.
Another C replacement for Product is Capable. By defining offerings as
individual capabilities that when combined and focused to a specific
industry, creates a custom solution rather than pigeon-holing a Patient
into a product.
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Pricing is replaced by 'Cost' reflecting the total cost of ownership.
Many factors affect Cost, including but not limited to the Patient's cost
to change or implement the new product or service and the Patient's
cost for not selecting a competitor's product or service.
Placement is replaced by 'Convenience'. With the rise of internet and
hybrid models of purchasing, Place is becoming less relevant.
Convenience takes into account the ease of buying the product, finding
the product, finding information about the product, and several other
factors.
Promotions feature is replaced by 'Communication' which
represents a broader focus than simply Promotions. Communications
can include advertising, public relations, personal selling, viral
advertising, and any form of communication between the firm and the
consumer.
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5.7 How does a marketer strategize to attain success in a marketing
program, using these 4 P’s?
The 4 Ps represent the seller's view of marketing tools available for
influencing the buyer. From the buyer’s point of view, each tool is designed
to give the customer benefit. Some authors have suggested that the 4 P's of
a seller correspond to the 4 Cs of a Customer Viz: Customer Solution,
Customer Cost, Convenience and Communication
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5.8 Marketing Mix for Services
One who buys a service offering probably takes a decision based on the
following factors:
How easy would it be to buy it?
Willingness to pay for the service
Assessment of the service offered
Influence of the promotion campaign
The marketers carefully plan these factors and make an attempt to
convince the customers to buy their products. The traditional marketing
mix has mentioned above contains: Product, Price, Promotion and Physical
Distribution, i.e. Place In case of services.
5.8.1 Marketing of Healthcare Services
Marketing in Healthcare 1
Healthcare adopted marketing approaches well after most other industries,
and the marketing era was not considered to begin in healthcare until the
1980s. This does not mean that certain healthcare organizations in the
retail and supplier sectors had not been involved in marketing activities.
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Pharmaceutical companies, consumer-product vendors, and health plans
have a long history of marketing activities; indeed, some of these
organizations devote an inordinate proportion of their budgets to
marketing. These types of organizations are addressed throughout this
book, although the emphasis is on marketing on the part of healthcare
providers. While marketing was noticeably absent from the functions of
most healthcare providers until the 1980s, precursors to marketing had
long been established. Every hospital and many other healthcare
organizations had well-established public relations (PR) functions. PR
involved disseminating information concerning the organization and
announcing new developments (e.g., additions to staff, purchase of
equipment). The main interface for PR staff was with the media. They
disseminated press releases, responded to requests for information, and
served as the interface with the press should some negative event occur.
Large provider organizations also typically had communication functions,
although they were often carried out under the auspices of the PR
department. Communications staff would develop materials for
dissemination to the public and the employees of the organization. Internal
(and, later, patient-oriented) newsletters and patient-education materials
were frequently developed by communications staff.
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Some of the larger organizations (and certainly the major retail firms and
professional associations) established government-relations offices. These
staff members were responsible for tracking regulatory and legislative
activities that might affect the organization. They served as the interface
with government officials and provided lobbying efforts as appropriate.
The government-relations office frequently became involved in certificate
of- need activities. This function has historically been critical for many
healthcare organizations because of the constant pressure on not-for-profit
healthcare organizations to justify their tax-exempt status. In addition to
these formal precursors of marketing, healthcare organizations of all types
were involved in informal marketing activities to a certain extent. This
occurred when hospitals sponsored health education seminars, held an
open house for a new facility, or supported a community event.
Hospitals marketed by making their facilities available to the community
for public meetings and by otherwise attempting to be good corporate
citizens. Physicians marketed themselves through networking with their
colleagues at the country club or medical-society–sponsored events. They
sent letters of appreciation to referring physicians and provided services to
high school athletic teams.
Ultimately, low-budget PR departments were transformed into
multimillion- dollar marketing programs. This did not happen overnight,
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and a number of developments had to occur before healthcare came to
appreciate the relevance of marketing.
5.8.2 Hospitals are offering the following services under healthcare
services to the common man:
1. Emergency Medical services – Emergency Medical services and care at
most of the hospitals is unique and advanced. The hospitals have state-of-
the-art ambulances. The Cardiac Care Unit's on wheels under supervision
by medical and para-medical staff. There is hi-tech telecommunication
available to a patient in an emergency at any given time. These emergency
Medical services personnel are certificate to give first aid in case of
emergency. Support from these experts could be in the form of medication
or simply resuscitation by providing mouth to mouth breathing exercise.
2. Ambulance services – Hi-tech ambulances linked by state-of-the-art
telecommunications are fully equipped with doctors that are available to
render medical attention and assistance in case of emergencies at the
patient's doorstep. Example if ECG is taken in the ambulance the same can
be read by the consultant sitting in his consulting room provided the
relevant connections are installed at his place / the computer or simply on
his mobile.
3. Diagnostic services – Modern Hospitals are multi-specialty and multi-
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disciplinary, that can handle any kind of ailment, they offer a wide range of
facilities for instance, Dermatology, Infertility, Oncology, Orthopedics such
as Hip replacement or the joint replacement, Neurology, Organ
Transplantation, Plastic surgery and so on.
4. Pharmacy services – Most of the hospitals also have a pharmacy which is
open 24 hours. It caters to the needs not only of the inpatients and
outpatients, but also patients from other hospitals who require emergency
drugs.
5. Casualty services – Casualty service are meant for a 24 hrs X 7days
service. Casualty department which attends to the accident or emergency
cases consists of a set of people which includes a resident doctor,
emergency medical service expert, nurse and a ward boy.
Sooner Emergency and Casualty case occurs if it is of a very serious nature
CODE BLUE is announced.
Hospital Emergency Codes are used in hospitals worldwide to alert staff to
various emergency situations. The use of codes is intended to convey
essential information quickly and with a minimum of misunderstanding to
staff, while preventing stress or panic among visitors to the hospital. These
codes may be posted on placards throughout the hospital, or printed on
employee/staff identification badges for ready reference. Back of a hospital
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ID badge shows disaster codes. Hospital emergency codes are frequently
coded by color, and the color codes denote different events at different
hospitals and are not universal 6.
The fact that different hospitals, even those in close proximity to one
another, do not utilize a consistent coding system leaves room for
confusion in the event of an emergency or disaster. Many physicians have
privileges at more than one facility, and the expectation is that he or she
would be well versed in the emergency doctrines of each. However, it
seems that without due diligence in regular review of the codes for each
hospital, it would be very possible for confusion to ensue in the event of a
code announcement. The standardization of codes, however, would
diminish the secretive "code" aspect of these announcements, thereby
defeating the purpose of using the codes.
Apart from the above mentioned services, hospital also offers "Health
Diagnosis Programme" which is a complete, comprehensive, periodic
health check up offered for busy executives, professionals, business
persons and so on. The health diagnosis programme comprises of the
following:
1. Master health check up
2. Executive Health check up
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3. Diabetics health checkups etc
Generally, the service offering in a hospital comprises of the following
levels:
1. Core level – it comprises of the basic treatment facilities and services
offered by the hospital like diagnostic services, emergency services,
casuality services etc.
2. Expected level – it comprises of cleanliness and hygiene levels
maintained in the hospital.
3. Augmented level – it comprises of dress code for staff, air conditioning of
the hospital, use of state of art technology, services of renowned
consultants.
Understanding the role of the additional 3 Ps for healthcare services:
People unlike in products, in services it is the people who deliver the
services. The success of delivering services depends on the quality of the
people, the staff and their skills along with their attitude. In a hospital, the
receptionist, the doctors, the nurses, the administrative staff all put
together deliver the service. Their skills and attitude along with what they
deliver becomes important.
Physical Evidence: Services delivered are at the moment of delivery. If the
receptionist forgets to greet a customer or does not satisfy queries of a
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customer, the moment is lost. Thus the evidence of such acts determines
the quality and delivery of service. Process as detailed earlier, there are
many aspects to a service that have to be done in the proper sequence, at
the right time and in the proper way, and thus the process is important.
Hence the seven Ps of services are Product, Price, Promotion, Place, People,
Physical evidence, Process. An integrated approach to all the seven P's
determines the marketing of the service.
Six P's add value to the services. Out of the 7 P's of marketing mix for
services 6 P's of the mix calculate for the 7 P, that is value for money, price
paid by the customer.
5.9 Considerations for Promoting Marketing of Healthcare Services
Analysis of the environment
Factors to be considered for Environmental Study:
Events are important and specific occurrences taking place in
different sectors
Trends are the general tendencies / courses of action along which
events take take place
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Issues are the current concerns that arise in response to events and
trends
Expectations are the demands made by interested groups in the light
of their concern for issues
In studying the environment, the following actions would be there:
In scrutinizing, one would try and identify early signs of environmental
changes and trends. Thus, scanning the environment, means finding
information, data, trends which will affect your company, directly and
indirectly, in the present and also possibly in the future. Screening the
environment, keeping track of the changes and interrelationships between
various factors. In monitoring, one detects meaning through observations.
Predicting what possible events and changes may be occurring in the
future that will have an impact on the company. In forecasting, one would
develop projections based on anticipation of outcomes through scanning
and monitoring. Evaluating the impact, you would determine the action,
importance and timing for the company's strategies.
The external environment encompasses the following:
a) Marketing environment
b) Finance environment
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c) Economic environment
d) Demographic environment
e) Political and Legal environment
g) Supplier and Technological environment
h) Social and Cultural environment.
All of them are interrelated and cannot operate in isolation.
Marketing Environment
It is concerned with the markets in which the company operates and the
linkage between the company, customers and competition. Typical study
would be growth rate, demand v/s supply, competitors, customers, needs
of customers, price performance ratio of various products available,
customer choices and preferences etc.
Financial Environment
It is concerned with the demand / supply of money, capital markets,
intermediaries, interest rates, tenure of loans, securities asked for loans,
various financial instruments, and other factors in the financial sector.
Demographic Environment
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It is concerned with the population's size and growth rate, age and sex wise
distribution and classification, structure and size of families, geographic
distribution, and ethnic mix and income distribution, etc.
Economic Environment
It is concerned with inflation rates, GDP, savings rate, trade deficits,
balance of payments, trade gap, trade cycles, infrastructure like electricity /
communication/ roads / rail / air / etc., and other such factors that affect
the entire industry.
Political/Legal Environment
It is concerned with govt. policies, stability, philosophy of govt., various
laws, infrastructure for implementation of various laws and policies,
attitude towards labor, bilateral relations and overall factors that may
affect industry climate.
Social/Cultural Environment
It is concerned with attitudes about work / quality, concerns, ethics, values,
religion, corruption and other such factors.
It is concerned with the quality and number of suppliers, labor and people
as suppliers, the logistics, raw material, trends and rate of change of
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technology, appropriate technology, cost/benefit of technology and other
such factors.
Internal Environment
Here the analysis is of:
a) Resources
b) Capabilities
c) Competencies
a) Resources: there are tangible and intangible resources.
b) Tangible resources can be quantified and are identifiable / visible
basically 4 types -financial resources - organizational resources - physical
resources – technological resources.
c) Intangible resources are less visible - like human resources - innovation
resources - reputation. The resources of the functional departments like
finance, administration, operations, etc.
d) Capabilities are the company's capacity to deploy resources that have
been purposely integrated to achieve a desired end state. Capabilities
enable the company to create and exploit external opportunities.
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An Opportunity is a favorable conditioning the organization's
environment which enables it to consolidate and strengthen its position.
An example of an opportunity is growing demand for the products or
services that a company provides
A Threat is an unfavorable condition in the organization's environment,
which creates a risk for, or causes damage to, the organization. An example
of a threat is the emergence of strong new competitors who are likely to
offer stiff competitions to the existing companies in an industry.
The Strength is an inherent capacity, which an organization can use to gain
strategic advantage. An example of strength is superior research and
development so that the company can gain a strategic advantage is an
inherent capacity, which an organization can use to gain a strategic
advantage.
A Weakness is an inherent limitation or constraint, which creates strategic
isadvantages. An example of a weakness is over dependence on a single
product line, which is potentially risky for a company in times of crisis.
Based on the above a company would evaluate the SWOT analysis. There
would be threats and opportunities in the environment. To take advantage
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of the opportunities and minimize the threats, a company would require a
few critical success factors.
The Critical Success Factors or CSFs are the requirements to be
successful in that business area. For example, a super specialty hospital
requires experienced and qualified doctors and surgeons; a pharmacy
company needs a good sales team and excellent distribution systems, etc.
If these CSFs are available with the company in a measure larger than
others have it then only it is strength. So if a super specialty hospital has
the best doctors and if these types of doctors are not available with the
competition, then it is strength. If all the other hospitals also have similar
panel of doctors that you have, it is a neutral factor. So strength has two
characteristics one, it is required for success and second, you have it more
than the others. If something is needed for success, but is absent in your
organization it is a weakness, because you will not be able to capitalize on
the opportunities and the competition will erode your position. Thus,
strengths and weaknesses are relative to the environment.
The strategy would be then to capitalize on the opportunities through your
strengths and minimize the threats that arise due to your weakness.
Identifying Target Customers
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Target customers can be divided into two types:
1) External to the organization:
They are not directly associated with the organization
2) Internal customers:
Who work for the organization and need to be given considerable
attention
Differentiation and Positioning
Differentiation is the act of designing a set of meaningful differences to
distinguish the organization's offering from that of the competitor. In
products one can use form, e.g. a medicine by different doses, size, coating,
action time, sustained release, etc one can differentiate by features one can
use performance quality, durability, reliability, style, etc to differentiate.
In services one can differentiate by ordering ease or accessibility, delivery
of the service, giving customer's information, training and consultancy, and
a whole lot of such services. One can create a difference by giving an image,
by using symbols and personality.
The difference created must be important to a customer, distinctive,
superior to competition, cannot be easily copied, affordable to the
customer, and profitable to the company providing the differentiation.
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Once this is done, you then need to position your offering for the target
market identified.
The organizations must carve out a “POSITION” for itself and its services /
products in the mind of the customer.
Advantages of Positioning
Create a distinctive place in the minds of the potential customers e.g.
Apollo superior quality of health care, Johnson & Johnson safe
products
Provides a competitive edge
Intangibility gets tangibility
Gives the target market a reason for buying your services
There is question of how many differences to promote. Each company must
create some “Unique Selling Propositions” promoting key central benefits
and try to be the best on those attributes and benefits. There should be
balance of trying to promote only one benefit, which might be too narrow
and on the other hand promoting too many benefits that do not seem
credible. There are typically the following errors in positioning:
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Under positioning : giving only a vague idea, customer cannot
decipher the benefit; e.g. a hospital saying it is reliable, but not
beyond that.
Over positioning : having too narrow an image e.g. hospital giving
different services promotes may be perceived by customers as only a
prevention centre.
Confused positioning : too many claims, change in position may
lead to confusion in the minds of the customer
Doubtful positioning : lack of credibility due to untenable claims
In positioning a service, there is an image that is created. Image is the sum
of beliefs, attitudes and impressions that a person or group has of an object.
Image is created through an identity that a company tries to presents itself
to customers. There are different types of images current image, the way
as seen now mirror image way the company thinks it is seen wish image
the way a company would like to be seen. The aim is to make the current
image and wish image to match. For effectively positioning services the
following have significant influence employee attitude customer and
contact employee interaction policies and procedures of the company
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responsiveness to solving problems and complaints the experience of the
customer.
The process of positioning is twofold:
Market positioning where you identify and select markets based on
knowledge of the needs and benefits of the service offered e.g. Escorts
heart hospital. The next step is to use psychological positioning to create a
image using either objective or subjective parameters. Finally you look at
positioning approaches which can be by attributes, price, quality, etc.
Pricing
Setting the right price is crucial for services and the most challenging. If the
prices are too high, you may not get customers, if they are too low, you may
not make profits.
Factors Affecting Pricing:
Fixed costs the cost you have to incur irrespective of the volumes /
business, like rent, salaries, etc
Variable costs: the costs of your inputs that are directly proportional
to your business, e.g medicines given, bandages, etc.
Positioning
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Promotions
Taxes
Customer's perception about price and quality
Image
Elasticity of demand
One could use cost as a base for pricing typically
Cost plus method
Target return on investment pricing
Or one could use a demand as a base for pricing typically
Discriminatory pricing:
Charge affluent patients more and poorer patients less, or different
prices for different times / seasons, more for an emergency, less
with appointments, etc
Backward pricing
Assess what customers are willing to pay and then price accordingly
to their willingness
Market penetration pricing
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Set the initial price low w.r.t. expectation of customers, so as to
attract customers to try out your services, create volumes and
awareness and then slowly increase afterwards, typically used for
new hospitals new equipments and diagnostic methods, etc
Discount pricing for large quantity, e.g. offering corporate
discounts as this may lead to high number of patients coming in, or
for repeat visits, lower your charges for subsequent visits, or offering
seasonal discounts.
Use perceived value quality / price pricing. Here you price on
perception. One could have the following options premium pricing,
offering high quality with high price super value pricing, offering high
quality at low price good value strategy, offering good / medium
quality at a low price economy pricing, offering low quality with low
prices. There could be even negative methods like overcharging,
offering low quality at a high price just because of shortage, will not
last long.
Promotion and Communication
In communicating the services to the customers, promotion element
of the services plays a vital role. This also helps in communicating
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services to other key relationship markets. Promotion is a descriptive
term for the mix of communication activities, which service
organizations carry out in order to reach to their customers.
Generally a mix of following elements is used for promotion of
services. The methods used could be Advertising, Personal selling,
Sales promotion, Publicity, Public relations, Word of mouth, Direct
mail, Tele-marketing, E- marketing, etc
Why Promotion?
It creates image of the service organization such as:
1. Prestige, technologically advanced, innovative.
2. It creates reputation and reduces perceived risks. Customers
are confident while dealing with the service providers.
3. It adds direct promotional value.
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Promotion for Healthcare Organization
Advertising:
Kotler and Armstrong defines Advertising, ‘as any paid form of non-
personal presentation and promotion of ideas, goods or services by an
identified sponsor’. Advertisers not include only business firms but
also museums, charitable organizations and government agencies
that direct messages to target public. Advertisements are the cost
effective way to communicate whether it is building of a brand, or to
educate people to avoid hard drugs. Because of the differences in the
nature of Health Care Services with other industries, there is huge
difference in advertising of these two streams. The codes of ethics for
advertising Health Care Services Organization restrict the type of
advertising.
Media available for Advertising
An overview of all the media available for marketing, and then their
relevance in the marketing of health care services.
Press and newspapers: Daily newspapers, local metro and
national. Advantages include short lead-time, high readership,
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broad acceptance, high believability, where the disadvantages
include heavy 'ad' competition and short life.
Periodical newspapers: weekly, fortnightly or monthly. The
advantages include broad acceptance, provides target audience and
graphics and text can be represented in better way.
Television: national, regional or local. The advantages include a
broader class; combines high motion and sound thus effective as
compared to print media. The disadvantages include very high
network charges and very poor target audience selectivity. The
examples are, national- DD1, regional DD Marathi, local- Cable TV
News lines.
Out door media: they can be divided into single location and multi
location. The advantages include color options, size to suit, and
permanent, repeat exposure and target local market. The
disadvantages include low impact as compared to other audiovisual
media.
Direct mail: the advertiser here selects the market. Advantages
include capacity to go to target audience directly, personal contact
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approach where the disadvantages include low credibility and high
through away rates.
Telemarketing: the advertiser here selects the market. Advantages
include capacity to go to target audience directly, personal contact
approach and conversation with the likely customer where the
disadvantages include consumer feeling offended if not conducted in
the proper mannerism and leads to negative impression.
Directories: can be Trade directories or yellow pages or telephone
directory Marketers cover the area covered by the directory. The
advantages include permanent, action oriented message and low
cost where the disadvantage is low appeal and clutter effect of “ad”.
Internet: includes the national and international market. The
advantages include adaptation of services to individual
requirements and global proximity. The disadvantages include lower
percolation in the Indian society, not much people are computer
literate.
The widely used media in Health care services are outdoor media, where
the national programs include media like television where many
advertisements are produced in the public interest.
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There are five main stages in a well-managed advertising campaign:
Stage 1: Set Advertising Objectives
An advertising objective is a specific communication task to be achieved
with a specific target audience during a specified period of time.
Advertising objectives fall into three main categories:
(a) To inform - e.g. tell customers about a new product
(b) To persuade - e.g. encourage customers to switch to a different brand
(c) To remind - e.g. remind buyers where to find a product
Stage 2: Set the Advertising Budget
Marketers should remember that the role of advertising is to create
demand for a product. The amount spent on advertising should be relevant
to the potential sales impact of the campaign. This, in turn will reflect the
characteristics of the product being advertised.
For example, new products tend to need a larger advertising budget to help
build awareness and to encourage consumers to trial the product. A
product that is highly differentiated may also need more advertising to
help set it apart from the competition - emphasising the points of
difference.
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Setting the advertising budget is not easy - how can a business predict the
right amount to spend. Which parts of the advertising campaign will work
best and which will have relatively little effect? Often businesses use "rules-
of-thumb" (e.g. advertising/sales ratio) as a guide to set the budget.
Stage 3: Determine the key Advertising Messages
Spending a lot on advertising does not guarantee success (witness the
infamous John Cleese campaign for Sainsbury). Research suggests that the
clarity of the advertising message is often more important than the amount
spent. The advertising message must be carefully targeted to impact the
target customer audience. A successful advertising message should have
the following characteristics:
(a) Meaningful - customers should find the message relevant
(b) Distinctive - capture the customer's attention
(c) Believable - a difficult task, since research suggests most consumers
doubt the truth of advertising in general
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Stage 4: Decide which Advertising Media to Use
There are a variety of advertising media from which to chose. A campaign
may use one or more of the media alternatives. The key factors in choosing
the right media include:
(a) Reach - what proportion of the target customers will be exposed to the
advertising?
(b) Frequency - how many times will the target customer be exposed to
the advertising message?
(c) Media Impact - where, if the target customer sees the message - will it
have most impact? For example does an advert promoting holidays for
elderly people have more impact on Television (if so, when and which
channels) or in a national newspaper or perhaps a magazine focused on
this segment of the population?
Another key decision in relation to advertising media relates to the timing
of the campaign. Some products are particularly suited to seasonal
campaigns on television (e.g. Christmas hampers) whereas for other
products, a regular advertising campaign throughout the year in media
such as newspapers and specialist magazines (e.g. cottage holidays in the
Lake District) is more appropriate.
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Stage 5: Evaluate the results of the Advertising Campaign
The evaluation of an advertising campaign should focus on two key areas:
(1) The Communication Effects - is the intended message being
communicated effectively and to the intended audience?
(2) The Sales Effects - has the campaign generated the intended sales
growth. This second area is much more difficult to measure 4.
Communication is an important element of promotion and also plays a very
vital role in Marketing of health Care Services.
Criteria for selecting employees in a health service organization:
Competence
Courtesy
Credibility
Responsiveness
Communications
Communications:
Gronos (1990) identifies six guidelines for effective communication in a
Health service Organization.
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a) Direct communication efforts to employees : target employees are
internal customers in marketing communications. Targeting both internal
and external customers helps ensure a consistent position in
communicating to both parties participating in service encounters.
b) Capitalize on word-of mouth endorsement: health services are driven
largely by word-of mouth communications in terms of reach and impact.
Health services managers should be aware that in service industry, in
health care industry word of mouth plays a better role than best of the
sales promotion methods.
c) Provide tangible clues: health services are one of the most intangible of
products. However they can be made concrete through managerial and
advertising actions. For example comparing hospital room with patients
home and the comfort the patient gets at home will be provided in hospital
while making sure that employees are neat and clean, can increase
customer's perception towards quality
d) Ensure communication continuity
e) Promise what is possible: as noticed earlier, customer satisfaction is
achieved when perceptions of service firm performance exceed the
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satisfaction thus, if marketing communications establish customer
expectations that cannot be met, it will result in unsatisfied customers.
f) Observe the long-term effects of communication: communication mix
Promotions: The promotion of the hospitals has to be extremely limited
because of the professional ethics of the doctors. The promotional goals of
hospital marketing can be listed as under.
Organizing personal and formal meetings to discuss the services. The
formal meetings can be with other doctors or for a group of patients
or customers. E.g. discussion about the facilities the patients will
require in radiation therapy, with the cancer patients.
Informing and educating public about the various services, say about
the preventive health.
Informing the consumers how to obtain services easily and
conveniently, as mentioned above in the session of communications,
the front office staff must be customer friendly and should deliver
the required information.
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5.10 Problems in Marketing of Healthcare Services in Indian Context
The factors, which affect the Health Care services:
1. Indian market is still a sellers market and not a buyers market:
but this is slowly changing with increasing competition and
customer awareness. For the size of the market, in many basic areas of
healthcare, there are not enough suppliers in comparison to the potential
demand, whether it is doctors, hospitals, preventive healthcare, etc.
2. Disparities in the population / potential customers are high: in
rural area the reach of health services is very poor. Where as in urban
areas, there is intense competition and they do experience the
advancements in medicine and entrance of newer technologies. Thus the
levels of healthcare services vary dramatically across the country.
3. No effort in marketing in the health sector: marketing either was
considered unnecessary or even unethical. Often people who had no formal
training or prior experience in marketing outside the health care industry
conducted those marketing functions that were performed at all under the
auspicious department with titles like “development” and “Public
relations”. There was no concerted effort carried out towards Marketing.
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4. Illiteracy: our problem of illiteracy is linked with high population
growth, lack of awareness about health services. The female population
needs special attention, as percentage of illiteracy is more in this segment.
5. Poverty: India's per capita income is one of the lowest in the world.
More than 30% of the population is below poverty line, which affects the
affordability as health services are concerned. Similarly it leads to
malnutrition and poor health.
6. Strong dominance of quacks: the rural area shows the dominance of
unauthorized or illegal medical practitioners. They can be broadly divided
into two types, those who try to cure with some divine power or those who
are not qualified i.e. through medical registration, but do play with
allopathic medicines.
7. Ignorance: people in India are not aware about the developments in
medicine and newer technologies available, so they cannot go through the
proper channel to consume the health care services.
8. Unaffordable prices of the specialty consultants: the treatment
fees are unaffordable by most classes of people in India, as they are
available in only metro cities, and with very few institutions
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9. Enforcement of the consumer protection act: the awareness and
transparency is rising after the enforcement of consumer protection act.
5.11 Developing Suitable marketing Strategy for Healthcare Industry
Suitable Model for Developing a User Friendly Quality Enhanced
Healthcare Service Model for Hospitals in Pune City:
The hospital services can be divided into two parts Medical & Non Medical
A) Medical Services: Include hardcore treatment by the Doctors.
Doctors can be either Full Time or Part time. It is suggested that only
Emergency and Interventional Cardiologist be full time. Rest all can
be Honorary Doctors and no stress on Management either related to
salary or retainer ship. But all RMOs should be MBBS to handle any
case of emergency.
A part of Medical Services includes pathology which should be
completely outsourced to avoid any complaints of the patient related
to the report or carrying out accreditation. In fact more time can be
devoted in training the Customer relation officers, Nurses and
Marketing to ensure maximum footfalls in the hospital thereby
increasing the revenue.
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B) Non Medical: This service includes Marketing, Ambulance service,
Housekeeping, Security, Food & Beverage, Gift Shop, ATM etc.
It is suggested that the following services such as Ambulance service,
Housekeeping, Security, Food & Beverage, Gift Shop, ATM etc. be
outsourced so that day to day administrative issues are nullified and
Hospital can then concentrate on increasing Patient Flow to the
Hospital and ensure Quality Service to the Patients. This will help
enhance Customer Relationship Management.
References:
1. Marketing Health Services: Richard K Thomas pg 6-7 Health
Administration Press, Chicago AUPHA Press, Arlington, VA
2. Marketing Management by Philip Kotler, Kevin Keller, 12th Edn,
(Pearson Prentice Hall)Chapter 1: pg 5-6 : 2006
3. Marketing definition approved in October 2007 by the American
Marketing Association:
4. http://tutor2u.net/business/marketing/promotion_advertising.asp
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5. Larry Steven Londre Marketing, IMC, Advertising, Promotion, Media
and More. 2009
6. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hospital_emergency_codes
Reading
1. Don E. Schullz, Stanley I. Tannenbaum, Robert F.
Lauterborn(1993)“Integrated Marketing Communications,”NTC
Business Books, a division of NTC Publishing Group.
2. http://www.expresshealthcaremgmt.com/20041215/marketing01.
shtml
3. Chaffery, Dave. 2008, Patient centric marketing definition, from;
http://www.davechaffey.com/E-marketing-Glossary/Patient-centric-
marketing.htm
4. Source: Defining an Enterprise wide Patient Contact Strategy,
Forrester, Research, Inc., October 22, 2008.
5. www.crminfoline.com
6. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marketing_mix
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