Posts Tagged ‘healthcare’

Katherine
Maynard

Mass Migration Online Presents Powerful Opportunities to Influence Consumer Experience

Friday, February 12th, 2010

Manhattan Research released findings from a study that confirmed what many of  us in communications know to be true -  online channels have significantly more influence over consumer health decisions and actions than traditional channels like print, T.V. and radio . Even more interestingly, the study claimed that editorial content still has significantly more influence on consumer health actions than various forms of social media, reinforcing the need for a compelling story if you want your messages to resonate with your most influential audiences.

But the continuing mass migration online (more than half of adults under the age of 65 now search the Internet for health information) presents powerful opportunities to influence the consumer experience, one of the last areas where companies can truly differentiate themselves among increasingly discerning and information savvy audiences.

Increasingly, successful communications programs will keep the customer experience front and center by fostering meaningful engagement whether that means real time feedback, nimble customer service or relevant education and content that help patients navigate the many choices they need to make throughout the continuum of their treatment and disease management process. (more...)

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Erica
Anderson

Paging Dr. Google?

Monday, June 29th, 2009

Today I caught up with Susannah Fox, Associate Director at Pew Internet and American Life Project. Fox and I are both in New York City for Personal Democracy Forum, a two day event dedicated to how technology is changing politics.

I was fortunate enough to get a few minutes of Fox's time, who recently published a study with Pew called "The Social Life of Health Information." Hear what she has to say about years of public opinion polling  - what is has shown about patients, how they find health information, how the Internet has changed things...and how it has kept them just the same.

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