Marketing and Sales Roles in The Pharmaceutical Industry
Marketing and Sales Roles in The Pharmaceutical Industry
Marketing and Sales Roles in The Pharmaceutical Industry
MARKETING
All the resources of the firm should be organized into a total system aimed at meeting the needs of the consumer
The role of marketing is to influence or direct activities from the manufacturer to the patient:
The right products
In the right quantity
At the right place
For the right price
At the right time
PRODUCERS
MARKET
SEPARATORS
EXCHANGE FLOWS
MARKETING ACTIVITIES
PRODUCT FLOW:
toward the consumer
INFORMATION FLOW:
both ways
PAYMENT FLOW:
toward the provider
USE RIGHT:
toward the consumer
TIME
SPACE
VALUE
OWNERSHIP
QUANTITY
ASSORTMENT
CONSUMERS
Source: McInnis; A Conceptual Approach to Marketing
IT can assist marketing in closing the gaps that separate parties interested in an exchange
IT can make some of the gaps irrelevant (e.g., space and time)
MARKET
SEPARATORS
Connectivity across geographically dispersed
regions
TIME
24 x 7 Availability
SPACE
VALUE
OWNERSHIP
IT
IT
QUANTITY
ASSORTMENT
Definitions
Market Research:
Determination and assessment of qualitative and quantitative
dimensions of a market
Marketing Research:
Analysis of the effects of various marketing activities of a
company or its competitors
Market Research
Environmental scanning:
Physicians
Pharmacists
Pharmacies
Hospitals
Strategic Level:
What diseases or product areas should be considered for long-term
investment?
Short-term?
Market size or potential?
Availability and utilization of therapies?
Next logical steps in therapy?
Potential market segments to be exploited:
Disease conditions (e.g., migraine sufferers)
Dosing preferences (inhalants vs. injections vs. patches)
Prevalence of disorder?
Shared conditions?
Potential development partners?
Potential acquisitions?
Premarketing Planning:
10
11
Warehouse
Warehouse
Withdrawals
Withdrawals
Periodic
Surveys
Promotional
Promotional
Media
Media
Retail
RetailPharmacy
Pharmacy
Sales
Sales
Retail
RetailPharmacy
Pharmacy
Prescriptions
Prescriptions
Physician
Physician
Panels
Panels
12
Retail
RetailPharmacy
Pharmacy
Purchases
Purchases
Periodic
Surveys
Measures the
inflow of products
from the
manufacturer to the
pharmacy
OTC
Prescription drugs
Indirect (through
wholesalers)
Direct purchases
from manufacturers
13
Periodic
Surveys
Measures the
inflow of products
from the
manufacturer to the
hospital
OTC
Prescription drugs
Indirect (through
wholesalers)
Direct purchases
from manufacturers
Warehouse
Warehouse
Withdrawals
Withdrawals
OTC
Prescription drugs)
Periodic
Surveys
15
Periodic
Surveys
Retail
RetailPharmacy
Pharmacy
Prescriptions
Prescriptions
16
Specialized research
services to identify patient
product usage along
specific variables:
Diagnosis
Patient characteristics
Location of visit
Drugs used
Action desired from
drugs used
Tracking of new
prescriptions over time and
monitors changes in doctor
prescribing habits
Periodic
Surveys
Physician
Physician
Panels
Panels
17
Periodic
Surveys
Retail
RetailPharmacy
Pharmacy
Sales
Sales
Promotional
Promotional
Media
Media
Periodic
Surveys
Monitoring of detailing
visits to physicians by
sales representatives
Monitoring of journal
advertising
Monitoring of direct mail
advertising
Physician sampling
19
IMS Health
Datamonitor Healthcare Consulting
Frost.com
Reuters
Also check out:
Eyeforpharma.com
FDA.gov
Journal of the American Hospital Association
AMA Drug Evaluations
21
22
SALES
23
Sales Roles
Detailing
Face-to-face visits to physicians or purchasing
managers (e.g., hospitals, HMOs) to present new
prescription drugs
Influence prescribing habit
Increase current prescription usage
Deliver samples
Build relationships with doctors
Get drug into a formulary; pull through
Sample Management
Track delivery of prescription drug samples to
physicians or other purchasers
24
Effective Detailing
Influences on Physician Prescribing Habits
Side
SideEffects
Effects
Efficacy
Efficacy
Potential
Potentialdrugdrugdrug
drug
interactions
interactions
Drug
Drugdelivery
delivery
method
method
Dosage
Dosage
Cost
Costof
ofdrug
drug
Payor
Payor
formulary
formulary
status
status
Personal
Personal
preference
preference
Patient
Patientrequest
request
Brand
Brand
25
26
78%
Biased information
47%
Inconvenient timing
44%
Too many from the same company
40%
Take too much time
28%
Not enough medical expertise
20%
Not enough samples
Physician Comments
I view them as the liaison but I
dont take them at their word all
the time
I hate negative marketing. The
lack of objectivity is a big turnoff
for me
If they keep coming back with the
same information, its a waste of
both parties time
I appreciate the information, but
the reps can be pushy
The thing I dislike the most is
when the rep doesnt appreciate
that I am busy and still tries to
pitch the drug to me
I dont believe that someone with
a bachelors degree knows more
about how a drug works than I do
Source: The Forrester Report: Pharmas Detailing Overhaul, February 2001 (IMS Health, Scott-Levin, Forrester Research, Inc); (Ziment/WebSurveyMD.com); IBM Analysis
27
Benefits to Physicians
Allows physicians to see sales reps,
gather information they deem important,
and to have the flexibility and control to
do it in their own schedule
Offers physicians a range of convenient
interactive channels
Provides timely updated drug
information
Provides simpler sample ordering and
delivery
Provides quality peer-to-peer
discussions on a topic that interests a
physician.
28
Sample Management
The pharmaceutical industry in America distributed
$6.7 billion worth of samples to physicians in 1999 *
During a typical month, the average pharmaceutical
sales representative will visit 150 physicians,
distribute thousands of packages of drug samples,
obtain FDA required signatures on 150 sample
distribution forms and receive scores of new sample
cartons to their home-based office, and expend as
much as 25% of their time tediously managing a
paper-based process
29
Source: FDA
30
OTHER MARKETING
& SALES TECHNIQUES
32
33
Scientific professionals
Pharmaceutical PhDs
Pharmacists
Physicians
Nurses
34