Clubhouse for Healthcare

Why Healthcare Brands Need to Look at Clubhouse and Social Audio

Many clients I work with ask for innovation. Clubhouse, a new entrant into the emerging channel of social audio presents an opportunity for brands wanting to lead. Taking advantage of existing models of patient and physician engagement, social audio is a logical next step and one that easily cuts through the noise of video conferencing and webinars.

Clubhouse has captured the attention of technologist and social media influencers. An ephemeral, voice-only platform launched late in 2020 that allows members to create a “room” and have a monologue, share a discussion, or invite room attendees to raise their hand to participate. 

Clubhouse is leading a new genre of social network called Social Audio. This new variant of social media is a community-based social interaction that is based on audio-presentation or voice-based meet-ups, usually in real-time. 

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The platforms are timely allowing members to “come as you are” given it’s voice-only mechanics and a nuanced. But refreshing twist of the Zoom and Teams fatigue we all feel. Although Clubhouse is focused solely on social audio, large players like Twitter and LinkedIn are introducing their own variants on Clubhouse. 

Using Clubhouse, I am conflicted: cautious that the platform is a response to our video-based social experiences and gently bent variation of many other platforms. I am also wildly inspired by the opportunity that it can provide to healthcare and wellness brands. 

Interestingly, Clubhouse’s community and being voice-based makes it so intimate and allows such a unique kind of connection it is disarming. It is this part of the experience that I think makes it ideally suited for patient-support and peer-to-peer experience sharing. 

What I am draw to very specifically is that the moderation (requiring that audiences “raise their hands”) and the nature of speaking to the subject really establishes the speaker as the leader without deprecating the peer-like accessibility of social media. 

Clubhouse (and social audio) hit a sweet-spot for healthcare brands with a more mature audience. eMarketer1 reports that 41% of US adults 35-54 years of age1 have listened to live-streamed audio content. For 25-34 year olds the group decreases to 31%. These figures are growing and figures are more aggressive in smaller interest-based cohorts.

I can very-much imagine Clubhouse a platform for hosted exchanges between patients, caregivers, and patients sharing the same challenges. I can also see a huge opportunity to add clinical expertise to these dialogues where physicians influencers and patient influencers can come together to discuss the science, treatment challenges, and experiences of patients and caregivers. 

These are applications that are easy to imagine, but Clubhouse has inertia with over 10 million registered users as of February 20212. The moderation tools are ideal for a pilot program or patient education campaign. There is also ample need to activate patient influencers and challenge the typical approachability issues healthcare brands face. 

This is the moment to innovate and move into a new channel using many of the tactics already familiar to brands. Social audio can help connect patients with resources that they need and will have meaningful connection to. 

1eMarketer perspective on clubhouse
2BackLinko clubhouse user stats

Marketing Trends for Your Brand Plan 2019

 

Content is King and engagement is its throne

Although brand-centric messaging and having content about products easily discoverable is critical to patient, caregiver, and physician engagement, brands need to create content that can add value and be worth their time in consuming. Brands are competing on a playing field where their strength and trust from their audience is typically limited to product specifics and safety information.

Solution: Your brand should be identifying how to add value outside of typical brand safety, efficacy, and dosing information. Think about how to make that information more meaningful, more relevant, and more timely.

Strategy: Create messages and communication that can support product information. Develop content that supports a broader patient and physician journey. Consider behavior-based CRM programs, partner with influencers, and extend communication outside of owned platforms with advocacy and community based interactions.

Digital Disruptors are at the gates and gearing to disrupt

CVS and Amazon are taking action to change the healthcare market in the US. Healthcare is capturing the attention of not just headline-worthy giants, but from every category of investor and entrepreneur. There are many market-factors influencing this growth in interest, but what needs to be clear for brand leadership is that having share of voice is getting tougher and tougher. Issues ranging from patients and caregivers paying out of pocket—and shopping around—to innovation coming from a new breed of fast-moving competitor. The market disruption is here and the disruptors are not playing by the traditional playbook.

Solution: Think differently about your audience and the value your brand is brining to the table: Where can you become a brand that has an bound with your audience? How can you solve problems for them? Think faster and take more risks in communication and channels. Social media was once the “big disruption”, but those taboos are all gone-where can your brand participate that is both true to the character of your product and is also taking advantage of existing audience behavior?

Strategy: Use data and insights to help drive decision making and make calculated changes to your approach. Identify how you will measure success and how you can use these metrics to make your product “disruption-proof”. Be prepared to make more changes: Competitors are not looking for a single-solution move, competition as well as your audience is always moving and evolving, so leverage your analytics and success metrics to help define your roadmap in innovation.

Data is everywhere, but how do we use it?

It seems as though 2017 was the year of big data. As marketers we are awash in data from our sales, market, rep-teams, marketing campaigns, and a myriad of other sources. In what’s feels to many to be choice paralyses, 2018 is going to be the year for brand leadership to refine there data strategies and focus on key sets of data.

Solution: Focus on how data can work for you by focusing on insights. What brand leadership is searching for is not more data, but relevant insights to drive their business—the more proprietary, the better.

Strategy: Work on honing a solution that can address your business questions. Modern data solutions should work in your service carrying the burden of segmentation, market growth, identifying influencers, and specific needs of the modern brand communicator.

Voice interfaces

Amazon Echo, Apple Siri, and Google Assistant are becoming “at the ready” solutions to do everything from managing check-up reminders to answering key healthcare questions. Where does your brand fit into a world where a single search result if read back to a patient asking about their dosing regimen or how physicians are interacting with patient records via voice commands? 2018 is going to see broadening popularity for voice as a platform. Both responsive experiences and intervention support are going to see advances as patients and physicians alike interact with a new generation of popular devices.

Solution: Identify who your audience is and what their likely utility voice interfaces will be. For many consumers, their first engagement has already happened whether oN their phone or via exposure to a connected home device. Providing utility that is valuable and low-friction will yield success. Look for opportunities in your existing patient journey to add whimsy and surprise.

Strategy: Leverage assistant technologies in the home to augment experiences without being intrusive. How can you alert a patient, help with communication with a caregiver, or align physician instructions with at-home behaviors. The ideal space to make use of an assistant is being “just in time” and helpful.

Health video content

Video still represents a huge opportunity for healthcare brands. There are few creating content, and fewer that are true authorities for many brand subject matter. YouTube is still the true leader in this space, but there are many more platforms and solutions in paid, earned, and owned media.

Solution: Create meaningful content that addresses key audience needs. For patients and caregivers, video will be a strong platform to explain clinical information or telegraph empathetic dialogue for patients. For physicians, clearly presented and engaging videos will galvanize relationships with the brand.

Strategy: Create budgets for video programs that address audience needs. Make them accessible and that can help with health literacy for target populations. Don’t over produce videos if the audience needs stackable content “in the moment”. Update videos more frequently and produce them appropriately for specific channels (ie: add subtitles for social video content). By developing a steady cadence of video content, you will have a steady stream of material to amortize and promote in multiple channels. Well titled and tagged do content is still hard-to-come-by online, so these efforts will help boost search strategies and be the foundation for social CRM programs.

Apps are going to have a renaissance

The solve-all “there’s an App for that” heyday is over and what was the reprise of every marketing firm addressing the popularity of the iPhone. Apps are going to make a come-back. Not the promoted single app from the Apple AppStore or Google Play, but via progressive web apps. A new category of application meets mobile (and some desktop) users with extended utility such as alerts, notifications, App-like interfaces, increased speed, and “deep-linking” to create less friction in the user experience.

Solution: Look for opportunities to enhance experiences for mobile users in specific areas of focus: Does your brand have a calculator, frequently accessed listings, a forum module, or telemedicine approach? These solutions, among many others can evolve a user searching for information into a valued engagement by a frequent user.

Strategy: Begin building progressive app solutions for high-value content that can play a frequent role or can be updated remotely on the fly. A platform investment combined with strong content, search strategies, or a CRM program can greatly change physician, caregiver, and patient engagement around key content areas and points of differentiation. Audit your digital content and assess the strategic role of content for your audiences.

The Rise of the CRM Bot

Bots continue to be broadly misunderstood by marketers worldwide. Artificial Intelligence, in its many, many forms is on the tips of everyone’s lips. I believe we are passing into the early days of leveraging bots (and the intelligence that drives them) to address communication needs. The early adopters can quickly take a seat of authority. As healthcare communicators, we will be reflecting on these days the same as we had in optimizing for mobile when smart phones came to maturity.

Solution: Identify where bots can address customer needs and trial a solution: call-centers, customer service interactions, channel monitoring, and even addressing access and clinical issues for patients is an ideal juncture in an audience journey to deploy a bot effectively.

Strategy:  Minimize risk by testing in environments already deficient and without a strong solution. Lengthening customer service windows by immediately addressing a portion of audience questions via text-support or a call center is a great test bed for a program. Identify specific success metrics such as “speed to resolution”, “reduced cost per call” or “higher satisfaction in support” are excellent metrics aligned with the examples here.

Your Healthcare Brand Needs A Chat Strategy

In the past year, Facebook has made significant changes to their messenger mobile app. The Facebook Messenger App, “Messenger” to many users, is an mobile application for real-time texting, voice communication, photos, animated, GIFs, audio files. Facebook also provides money transfer for person-to-person funds and also commercial transactions. The app is an impressive effort that consolidates many critical communication vehicles as well as the underpinnings of online shopping.

Facebook was also very savvy with its app strategy and has separated their core social media application from their messaging application. This has afforded them a leaning of their core product application, but also a vehicle that can competently compete with communication incumbents Skype, WeChat, and Line. 

Facebook Messenger follows immediately behind Facebook in device penetration according to a recent pew study. This is fueled by a somewhat controversial decision by Facebook to require mobile users to use the app for messaging. Desktop users can chat through an integrated interface within the browser. Mobile users can initiate chat from a prompt in the Facebook Timeline app or by managing chats in an integrated chat interface.

Messaging Apps Are The New Internet

For healthcare and pharmaceutical brands, the messenger app may seem like a superfluous approach to communication. Facebook’s success with their Messenger service is their bid in what has become a critical and highly competitive market in Messaging Platforms. The messaging market, the most notable success being WeChat, is becoming a subcategory of the Internet. WeChat users, as an example of the category, can communicate with one another, have voice calls, video calls, transfer images, files, create groups and small private and public communities all through mobile and desktop interfaces. WeChat, and the category is evolving beyond the phone number and creating a whole new kind of identifier–for users and marketers.

WeChat has also begun to offer brands with a new platform to engage consumers. IN the case of WeChat, which dominates Asian markets, retailers are providing customer service almost completely through WeChat, many airlines have begun to offer bookings-including transactions-through the secure commerce solutions offered by WeChat, and many private physicians and hospitals are offering booking and consultations via the video conference features.

While the US shows a very mild interest in WeChat, Line, and other services that are incredibly popular worldwide, Facebook sees the massive opportunity that messaging platforms can offer both the consumer and marketer. Modeling their service on best-in-class apps like WeChat Facebook can provide a competitive “me-too” solution to a largely untouched market in the US.

What is your “Messaging Strategy”?

For healthcare brands Facebook has proven to be a turbulent partner. There are many success stories for healthcare and pharmaceutical brands on Facebook. I continue to be a proponent for these apps to provide value and authentic engagement with patients. For brands that are as enthusiastic as I am towards Facebook, it offers a secure channel for dialogue and an new channel for CRM that is platform agnostic and not reliant on phone numbers for verification.

WeChat Will-Can-Might Replace Your Website

WeChat is huge. You may have never heard of it and if you have you may not understand just how huge it really is. 11 Billion registered accounts650 million active users. 44 minutes a day on average is spent in this single app.

What is WeChat? WeChat is a text and voice based messaging system that can support “touch to talk” technology, conference calls, local networking, photos. It is a bit of Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram rolled into one app and a massive, multi-country social network.

Successful from its introduction to the market in 2010 as a way to provide low cost messaging for mobile phone users in asian countries, WeChat and its parent company Tencent have been making improvements and evolving it every since. It natively supports every major platform and continues to add features to support both personal and business to business communications.

Why is WeChat so important? WeChat is a category leader for a new type of communication paradigm. WeChat is acting as a walled-garden ecosystem. Users can talk, chat, search, engage with brands, conduct business transactions, even play games without leaving the app itself. This is a huge change. WeChat’s massive success in China, a focal market for America’s tech brands, has every player considering counter strategies.

Google is rumored to be working on a new chat application that provides plain-language search responses through artificial intelligence (a chatbot for it’s own services, like Android), Facebook has been experimenting with “M”, Apple continues to push Siri to serve a broader role on iOS devices with more capabilities and access to more apps. The value of these eco-systems is going to be the platform war for the next 5-10 years.

For brands, this is going to be a massive strategy shift. Digital Strategist today are moving their clients towards social media and channel where customers are already active and consuming content. To participate in an ecosystem like WeChat, brands have to completely rethink marketing strategies. Not only will each “service” bring its own protocols, cultures, and formats, but managing acquisition and retention programs will require a reboot.

For many American companies, WeChat sounds like an unlikely departure from current marketing and platform strategies. And with the relatively few number of Americans using WeChat, I understand any apprehension. I think if we take that same position and consider that more than 64% of Americans are on Facebook and are spending upwards of 40 minutes per day on the social network, Facebook’s own “walled garden” approach to user management lends itself to a native business strategy for anyone trying to engage customers on social media.

Chat applications, such as Facebook’s are becoming an overriding value proposition to end users of social networks. Facebook’s own messenger application is beginning to cannibalize the brand’s core application for younger Americans. Considering that none of these eco-systems co-operate with one another and are based on competing standards, additional utilities such as support for commerce, voice-support, and additional features will put them on a road to mirror WeChat very quickly. Brands: take notice.

So should brands retire their websites and create WeChat channels and Facebook pages? No. What brands should do is begin to experiment with native engagement with their audience. Even for the healthcare brands that I regularly work with: begin to build customer service support for Facebook, Twitter, and other channels where your audiences are active. If you are a global brand, you should definitely be working on developing a solution to support customers on WeChat, Line, and WhatsApp. Begin to develop intelligence on where your audience is active and what the culture of these channels are.

Professional Social Networks For Healthcare

The ecosystem of social networks for healthcare professionals is incredibly diverse. For the massive number of physicians in the United States, there is no epicenter for online dialogue like Facebook, nor anything with the meteoric promise of SnapChat or Instagram. The industry is quickly maturing and a highly specialized web of social media destinations, groups, aggregators, and content providers are readying new channels to serve physicians, nurses, pharmacists, residents, and students.

For savvy agencies and brands that plan to engage with physicians and healthcare professionals this presents an opportunity to hone channel mixes create programs specifically targeted for their specialists and audiences.

Although it is easy to fall into a trap asking “why do we believe there are any differences in the way that healthcare professionals use social media for their work as does anyone else”, it is important to remember that in the US, HIPAA and privacy issues remain a challenge for healthcare professionals. A study from the US National Library of Medicine1 shows that although 90% of surveyed physicians use social media for personal use, 65% are engaged in social media for “professional reasons”. This survey also points to steady growth in both personal and professional adoption of social media in their responders. It is this gap that leaves a chance for both dedicated physician, healthcare professional, and specialist communities to provide a venue for exchanges and peer-to-peer engagement.

The highly fragmented environment is what agencies and brand leadership need to be cognizant of to build relationships. Before engaging with a single physician, there needs to be a consideration: What do I have permission from this group or community to discuss? What do I have the authority to discuss?  With the answer to both of these questions, you can have a meaningful relationship with any community.

The first: What do I have the permission to discuss is relating to boundaries. Whether this is a massive primary care community or a niche group, knowing the dialogue, tone, and role that you have is critical to knowing if you will be welcomed. Many brands, professional communication or otherwise, make the mistake of applying a foreign culture to an already active community and become shunned. It is also critical to understand if you will be an outsider welcomed in as a guest or a bonafide member of the community.

The second: authority. This is a close second to permission and related. For many drug manufacturers, brand leadership, or agencies, this is simple: The product. Be sure that you are not introducing a powder keg topic or opinion that will polarize the community or have members question your purpose in being present. It is also critical to tie your authority to your intended outcome (this last point is a lynch-pin concept for Content Strategist).

Consider the healthcare professional, specialist, or nurse that you are trying to reach—do you know where they are online, the sources they visit and trust? How can you augment their search for information and provide value to their day? Answering that question and doing so aware of the tapestry of media and personalities they are going to come across can help find new and committed pundits for your brand.

The Twitter API Compromise

Twitter announced last week that they would be making several changes to their API that allows developer to creat applications like TweetBot, Instapaper, and Timehop. These changes are controversial because Twitter’s growth is largely attributable to the geekier-developers that created clients and applications that gave the social network the user experience that made it palatable. Wider adoption happened not through the SMS (texting) interface that Twitter launched with, but through apps and tools for smartphones and other social networks.

Twitter is a community. It’s a living, thriving, and changing group of people that began as a very niche geek clique and grew into the second largest social network in the world. The Twitter icon is everywhere. #hashtags ride beneath every television commercial, cereal box, and even on plumber’s trucks. Tweeting is a ‘thing’. Most importantly, it’s an active community that anyone can use as a soapbox or publishing platform.

The ease of use and built-in community makes Twitter a natural choice for a publishing platform. I simply cannot reach as many people or interact with such a wide group using my own channel. Because of this, I’m comfortable sacrificing access and ownership of what I am creating in exchange for amplification.

I am cognizant of the changes Twitter is making and how those influencers who helped build the social network are questioning the motivations behind the API change. This same audience is beginning to fragment and move to new channels.

As an early adopter and someone who was attracted to Twitter because of a the niche community, I have to ask myself if I’m willing to begin with a new community and abandon Twitter, which is still very active.

APP.NET is a new social network and an example of a new community that has taken advantage of those unhappy with Twitter. It’s captured favor with an open API and a paid service model that should absolve any reliance on advertising for revenue moving forward. The user base is a very tech-savvy influencer group similar to what populated the original Twitter timeline. The appeal is there, but a $50 funding to APP.NET’s kickstarter is the minimum cost to begin playing in this new network.

I’m not going to abandon Twitter anytime soon, but I am intrigued by the model APP.NET offers. It promises a stable environment with a consistent API for developers and a model that is sustainable. Success will depend on how the APP.NET community will grow and how many engaged users will pay for access to this new model of a social network.