How to make pharma brand messages reinforce one another with email fragments (2 practices)

The tactics then work like this: providing the type of content the HCP finds most valuable and diluting it with the messaging that the company needs to make them aware of. For example, an HCP mostly interested in a cost-efficient treatment option can be engaged with a calculator, accompanied with information on prescription. Without this information, they would require a second step to consider prescribing the product – namely, searching for that information online. Making that step easier helps stimulate the dialogue.

When one message boosts the other

What’s important here is that each interaction presents real value for the HCP. Instead of engaging the physician at one touchpoint to capture their attention and then hoping to “push the agenda” on the next one, the two are combined whenever possible within one interaction – e.g. one email.

While this was more or less what field reps were trying to achieve in F2F calls, in remote engagement this becomes more important. A rep’s own experience and empathic skills allow them to sense when to say this or that, but with things like remote calls, emails and the web, without “seeing the eyes”, maintaining attention is trickier. No matter how great your previous email performed, there is always the chance (however small in the best case) that the next one will go unopened because the subject line did not engage enough.

And this is where the “digital oversaturation” starts to matter. With many a marketer freaking out at the start of national lockdowns, customers experienced a storm of messaging – and pharma recognized the dangers. With email, this is especially easily trackable – after a tipping point, the open rate starts falling down and unsubscribes get more frequent.

The good thing is that the solution was found quite fast – being twofold:

  1. more value
  2. think intensive, not extensive engagement

This is, in many situations, perceived as a matter of common respect to the HCP audience. A characteristic quote from an expert (in an interview to pharmaphorum) goes:

It’s time for the pharma industry to treat physicians as professionals, not as marketing targets. HCPs don’t prescribe something because someone says it’s a nice product. They want the good of their patient and offer them the most appropriate treatment. We need to have real discussions and move toward ‘augmented representatives’, who can use authorised sources on the internet or elsewhere to inform physicians and deliver better customer experience.

Florent Edouard, SVP, Global Head of Commercial Excellence, Grünenthal group

How difficult is it to implement this, though? Practices vary, and in many cases, this boils down to content. One does not simply launch the production of hundreds of, say, email templates to engage anyone in any possible combination of circumstances along the omnichannel journey.

Enter the new approaches to content creation.

“Smart content development” approaches

According to statistics, as many as 58% of pharma spent over $50 million on content annually – and only 13% of marketers in pharma/biotech thought they were efficient in leveraging content. This was several years ago, and now the situation is starting to improve gradually for some players (although the measurable impact is now only noticeable individually for each enterprise or affiliate).

The tactics that help improve are somewhat alike. Instead of “feeding the beast” and struggling to get the budgeting for evermore, pharma is adopting smarter material development approaches based on content reuse.

This means that instead of having to create a lot of similar (but a bit different) content items – email templates, CLM presentations, etc. – marketers first work to single out the “recurrent”, reusable elements in them. For example, telling the doctor about the results of a recent clinical outcome in digital content typically means the lines of code (and designs, and layout, and concept) that should look the same in different emails. However, traditionally, they were developed separately by different agencies, creating duplicates and making the company essentially pay for the same thing twice.

In the new approaches, these fragments are developed once to be reused across as many content items as possible. This is especially easy to illustrate with email templates: a fragment represents an entire block that can be inserted into an email template anywhere between the header and footer whenever needed.

HCP Webmail

What are Email fragments and how they work

As of now, there are two practical implementations of this strategy when it comes to email, and we at Viseven are now experiencing a surge of interest from different customers to both of them. The difference boils down to when exactly the predeveloped fragments are added to the template:

  • In the office at the final production stage. This is also called Modular content, and the flow is like that: initially, email modules and templates are developed. The “dirty” work of coding and testing is done when there is time enough, and when the right moment comes to unleash the content to the market – the office (marketers, in-house teams) use a content authoring tool to simply combine these blocks into whatever final form they want. In a recent case, it took a company only 3 days to produce and approve fully functional emails for urgent communication.
  • By the end users in the CRM/CLM system. This is as ad hoc as it gets, and this is an option that Veeva CRM The templates are produced with “slots” for a fragment to be inserted, and the fragments are published in Veeva Vault by themselves (and approved each one by one). The field rep can then send an Approved Email, to with they “drop” the fragment with which they decide to engage the HCP, making a lightspeed decision on the spot.

For a practical case with the former of these variants, look at this case study. Here below, we will focus on the practices with Veeva. What you will read is a summary of several cases into just two that generalize the trends.

Practice 1. Going beyond eDetailing to provide more value

As a reaction to coronavirus-related restrictions, many companies adopted remote eDetailing practices to keep HCPs and reps in touch with one another. Remote Detailing, as a channel, typically gets supplemented with email activity – namely invitation and confirmation emails, as well as follow up Approved Email from reps. This spelled opportunity for the users of fragments. A “standard” follow up email for a remote call typically thanks the doctor for taking the time to engage and provides a way to give feedback on the interaction. It is only natural, though, to include additional information that can interest the account. Some organizations practiced profiling their account database according to preferences and psychological types, some left this to individual reps. Suppose we have three types of HCPs:

  1. those who value RWE and clinical trial data, and are interested in the scientific part of information about any product
  2. the patient-centric thinkers who peruse profiles and want examples of how the product will actually solve particular issues and complaints
  3. the HCPs with a strong sense of community, relying on guidelines and key opinion leaders.

A generic email template is first created: This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is fragm04.png Then, the fragments are developed as soon as the general need for them is identified. In each individual case, then, it takes minutes to complete the Approved Email with additional valuable information: This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is fragm05-1024x1024.png In this way, the field engagement tactics get more flexible, the HCPs receive more value from each interaction, the marketers can instruct reps on prioritizing fragments to give more emphasis on particular key messages, all the while content production itself gets rid of repetitive load and becomes more cost-efficient.

Practice 2. Having key message transported by transactional emails

In the previous case, it was one template, several fragments with different information/key messages. In this one, it’s reversed: one and the same fragment dedicated to driving home a particular message, is used across a number of email templates. The particular key messages used in this case may vary; for the demonstration purposes, we can assume it is an upcoming virtual event. A fragment is developed to promote it, providing information and a link to register: This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is fragm06-1200x673-1-1024x574.png Then it can be inserted into the invisible vacant slot in different email templates: This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is fragm07.png In this way, the promotion of the event does not require an additional touchpoint with the HCP, instead relying on the engagement and interest sparked by the email that hosts the fragment. The overall touchpoints reduce, eliminating the oversaturation risk, but their intensity rises. In both cases, the content was created and managed using eWizard content authoring solution by Viseven team – integrated with Veeva Suite and covering a broad range of functionalities useful for pharma content creation and management.

Pharma promotion in the post-COVID-19 world

COVID-19 may go away some day. The large push towards innovation that came with the quarantines will yield results that likely won’t. If one could summarize what is happening with pharmaceutical companies’ communication to HCPs now in 1 point, that would be

  • fulfilling the promise.

While the industry has long promised – and to a considerable extent delivered – value-driven interaction, this was considered a long-term transformation that would take decades until the ideal would be reached. Under the present circumstances, though, this has become an imperative for here and now, ASAP. It is safe to assume that tomorrow’s HCP engagement will be exponentially increasing in personalization, infinitely attentive to the HCP’s needs and preferences – and much more efficient, flexible, with ROI expectations rising. Email fragment and modular content practices are just some practical steps on this way – but also among the first to take. Viseven is currently experiencing a rising interest for these practices and approaches. Our professionals engaged in such projects will be glad to share the insights and experience with you – as well as demonstrate the platform that enables them. Do not hesitate to request more information and a free demo here.

Pharma’s communication with HCPs can be an odd phenomenon. Strategically, it is a mission of bringing value to physicians; on a tactical level, it’s a complicated game of smart, creative approaches. The pandemic situation worldwide pushed ever more life sciences marketers and brand managers to emphasize engagement via digital channels. However, the fear of “digital oversaturation” (i.e. HCPs getting spammed and fed up) stimulated smarter takes on making communication more intensive at each touchpoint. In this article, we discuss 2 variants of an interesting approach to reinforcing brand messages – based on Veeva Approved Email fragments.

Turning up the volume on remote communication in pharma

The spring of 2020 may become material for a chapter in marketing books for future generations. Because of COVID-19, pharma marketing experienced a more violent disruption than ever before, as F2F rep calls suddenly stopped being an option. In a survey by PM360, 63% of respondents confirmed rep access was “near zero at this time”. The rapid, hectic rethinking of entire marketing cycles, with the obligatory shift towards every other channel except in-person calls is starting to bear fruit right now.

Until recently, many an organization, especially regional affiliates, used to consider digital channels of communication as supplementary to the “true” F2F eDetailing. Now these are no longer the experiments for the digitally advanced – the “alternative” channels have gained their moment in the spotlight in everyone’s strategy.

These include, among others:

  • remote eDetailing sessions
  • rep-triggered email
  • mass mailing campaigns
  • social
  • messengers
  • web (sites, portals, landing pages)

Of these, of course, email has become the general favorite – understandably so: name an HCP who does not have a mailbox. However, exactly this channel was where anxieties and questions have started to arise. As early as April 2020, experts already warned that inconsiderate and abundant use of email would desensitize HCPs – with more and more emails even from famous and trusted brands landing in spam, and doctors unsubscribing en masse.

This is where the already digitally savvy managers saved the day for many a campaign – instead of playing the old game of who shouts louder, they started experimenting with approaches more empathic to the physician – emphasizing value and providing fewer but more intensive touchpoints.

By May, about 60-70% HCPs still wanted to continue the dialogue with pharma even in times of the coronavirus – so it’s definitely worth it to study how exactly life sciences managed to maintain attention.

Personalization: a horizon, an asymptote… a necessity

In mathematics, an asymptote is that imaginary straight line on the graph denoting a value to which the main trend is getting closer and closer without ever reaching it completely. Even if it seems the graph has crossed that line, you only zoom in to find there’s still some way towards it. In a way, this is what personalization is to marketing; the more of it brands provide, the higher and more refined the audiences’ expectations and standards. It’s a horizon to follow indefinitely, chasing the sunshine of customers’ attention.

Putting aside the philosophical question of whether 100% personalization will ever be achieved, “chasing the sun” is definitely a necessity. Marketers in numerous pharma companies are now adopting omnichannel customer journeys and rigorous database analytics, raising the plank for everyone. Approaches to personalizing the engagement for physicians vary and multiply.

Just one of these involves studying the psychology of the target HCPs and establishing a segmentation based on their preferences and “archetypes”. An example of this approach has been provided by McKinsey and Across Health even before the pandemic.

Veeva Commercial & Medical Summit 2019 – key takeaways

With over 600+ customers from across pharma and biotech that Veeva Systems provide with cutting-edge tech solutions, it’s small wonder that an event like the Veeva Commercial & Medical Summit draws attention. It’s what one could call a whole universe of tech-savvy organizations – the Veeva universe, and in early December, over >1200 of life sciences professionals were exchanging insights in Barcelona. Viseven Group, as a Full Service Veeva Partner, could not stay aside – so here are just some of the key points we feel were the essence of the event. Stakeholder and customer engagement, data and CRM excellence, as well as sophisticated approached to content management – here are the highlights that still resonate with us several weeks after.

Across Veeva, in brief

One of the major strengths of Veeva is that it constantly expands the range of products and services it provides, so as to cover the entire spectrum of organizational needs. The opening keynote by Arno Sosna, General Manager, CRM, demonstrated this fact quite neatly, even though CRM is just one direction of work:

The various parts of Veeva Systems provide practical answers to the questions of marketing, sales, medical and service, engaging various stakeholders with a set of tools. The summit included a number of “deep dives” and “mini theaters” dedicated to the various solutions and services, such as Open Data, Vault PromoMats and Vault MedComms, as well as Veeva CRM Engage Meeting.

The outcomes of these solutions have been quite spectacular, as well, notably 88% increase in sales productivity with Veeva CRM, 75% reduction in content approval time with Vault and 95% saving in admin time with Veeva Align.

It’s about data, really…

In an intriguing case study, Philippe Houben, Global Head of Data Excellence, Boehringer Ingelheim and Rebecca Silver, General Manager of Veeva Open Data, discussed the model of what Veeva calls “intelligent engagement” based on a data-driven culture. The Veeva solutions at play here are Open Data, Nitro, CRM MyInsights, and Veeva Network.

In the “intelligent engagement” approach, three stages of the process were identified, going from data through insights to actions. For each, specific concerns exist: at the data level, it’s digital and F2F interactions and consent management, as well as reference data. When the data become meaningful insights, such as channel preferences and product usage, it’s time to present value. Actions are then taken at an individual level to improve customer experience.

This is where data quality becomes crucial:

If the data isn’t right, nothing else matters.

– read one of the slides in huge letters.

Another successful example of the “intelligent engagement” approach was presented by Parker Richardson, Director, Content Strategy & Standards at GSK. The essence of the “customer experience activation” is making real time decisions with the help of insight-powered intelligence, which in the end allows to provide more personalized customer experience.

…and customer engagement is what you need that data for…

It’s hard to disentangle data and customer / medical stakeholder engagement from one another – but the event organizers did it just to provide more structure to the summit, with Digital Engagement Track and Medical Stakeholder Track in the schedule. The topics in these largely formed a sort of dialog, providing answers to questions raised in each other.

This connection was demonstrated by Gerard Arnhofer, Vice President, Head of Integrated Multichannel Marketing at Bayer, in his presentation on delivering value to customers:

Although in the Data track, the insights had to do much with customer engagement, involving both questions of customer centricity and the use of Veeva Open Data.

The topic was also developed in a case study from Novartis, dedicated to transforming the customer approach:

In the modern, “Uber-connected” world, life sciences can learn something from other industries in terms of engaging customers, with interesting points being 2-way communication, consistency and quicker content creation. Which bring us to the next point…

…which you will attain with content…

Content is the fuel of any strategy, and making sure it is produced relevant and consistent with the insights received is vital. The amount of content (eDetailing presentations, emails, websites and landing pages, etc.) is growing in an almost perfect geometric progression. This can be seen, among other things, in Veeva Vault PromoMats statistics:

With that multiplication, the need arises to take up smarter, more integrated approaches to content. Attempts to unify content-related processes and establish working global-to-local management workflows are being made very actively. For example, Christian Scheuer, VP Commercial Excellence & Affairs, LEO Pharma, presented a characteristically integrated approach. At the data/insights end, the system is powered by a BI platform (One Way) absorbing data from sales and Veeva CRM activities. CRM has one global configuration to facilitate this. At the same time, content is created based on the insights received as Global Master versions pushed to Veeva Vault Brand Portal.

Visual aids are the “basic setup”, while email and other channels (e.g. Veeva CoBrowse) are add-ons.The cherry on top is the integration with Salesforce Marketing Cloud that allows, among other things, SFMC activity from mailing campaigns to appear on the Veeva CRM activity timeline, while managers also use SFMC Journey Builder for personalization.

These integration efforts are being made for a reason, and it’s a good thing Veeva supports them. In the long run, there is already a vision of a new model of content management – one that several companies have adopted as blueprints, and we at Viseven have recently endorsed, as well.

…managed in a completely innovative way.

There has been talk of modular content. This strategy has been developed as an answer to long-standing content management hurdles, including approval, reuse, personalization and time-to-market. In short, the essence of the approach is thinking about (and creating) content in the form of flexible multichannel modules that can then be combined to create content assemblies (presentations, emails, web content) adjusted for local markets – with a hefty amount of automation thrown in. (Here is a more extensive perspective.)

Steps are being taken to ensure this already. Morten Kruse Sorensen, Global Director, Multichannel Excellence & Operations, Novo Nordisk, has presented a practical case study illustrating the process of establishing modular content processes. Instead of struggling to “feed the beast”, the organization establishes an ecosystem (“content hub”) based on three nodes:

  • PromoMats used for content formal approval;
  • Brand Portal acting as a single source of truth for global and local content;
  • Production stage, where modular content is crafted based on templates.

This enables affiliates to pull global content for adoption and efficient reuse, with faster time to market and reduced development cost. Together with new Veeva features like Auto Claims Linking, the amount of manual work is reduced to the bare minimum.of searching for assets to link with the claim (references, etc.)

Another organization working with modular content is Shionogi. Tiago Caria, Senior Manager, Digital Innovation Europe, presented the universal, not-channel-bound nature of modules as “naked content”, reflecting the idea of ultimate connectivity.

Viseven team is proud to be among the pioneers of connected modular content, which we are currently implementing for several leading enterprises based on Veeva capacities and our own eWizard content authoring solution integrated with Salesforce Marketing Cloud and Adobe Experience Manager. Our approach is based on the concept of Channel-Agnostic Modules (CAM) that can fit any content type and is used to assemble content in approved Master Templates.

Seeing the evolution of the way content is managed makes us quite enthusiastic, since today, at last, we have the technology that helps solve the familiar content-related issues and attain true customer centricity.

Adobe Experience Manager integration with eWizard Platform for new-gen pharma content management

In another move to create a world of truly interconnected digital ecosystems for life sciences, Viseven Group is happy to introduce the integration of eWizard Platform with Adobe Experience Manager! This powerful solution, already claimed to be in use by 7643 companies, presents new opportunities to cater to pharma marketing’s long standing needs.

Here, we will dive into the whats and hows of these changes. We will look at how you can connect your existing systems, including Veeva, with AEM using eWizard, craft and reuse websites that fit AEM, while tracking their performance in Veeva/Salesforce, as well as how content approval processes and data integrity can be improved.

Data Integrity and the need for integrated pharma content solutions

The current business landscape is infused and intersected with data… Wait, it consists of data. With the most recent concerns about its quality, no wonder that the entire pharma industry is searching for ways to get things as neat as possible. Over the course of the last several years, FDA has had to issue quite a number of 483 warning letters concerning data integrity deficits in life sciences industry. For the most part, these have to do with regulations, electronic signatures, etc.

Now, pharma marketing is, in turn, affected. After all, brand reputation is part of the goal in the movement for data integrity, not just the regulatory confidence.

If we look close enough at the so-called ALCOA principles of data quality, we can see why:

Attributable – If you see materials in your DAM that you could and would possible reuse, it will surely help to see who uploaded them, when and why – and maybe how they performed.

Legible – it goes without saying that no marketer will ever reuse content that fails to interest them; unintelligibility is a putoff.

Contemporaneous – “just a file” is not an asset, but simply an object. How long since it was last used? Besides that, documenting the performance of content in real-time is something that begged for automation – and now has been automated.

Original – no one would like to get globally approved templates for, say, an ad, website or email in a version that has already been localized several times, with Gujarati text over a picture clearly destined for Russian market.

Accurate – all about context and metadata, which implies proper tagging and linking of all digital assets per key message, market, campaign, etc.

Digital Asset Management and Content Approval Software – life sciences perspective

Of all industries, pharma arguably has the most complicated and branching content lifecycle. The layers of responsibility imposed on various stages, starting from agency and up to MLR, make the workflows mudded at times, especially so if different systems and transfer formats (PDF, documents, PPT, etc.) are used.

In general, we can usually distinguish between three such layers. Asset Management per se, done by agencies, can be put to order as a short-term objective. Typically what’s needed here is a single workspace with sufficient integrations, a pack of content authoring functionalities and a way to report on the outcomes.

Next is the marketing review and approval workflow, which requires not only a unified platform to work on the content (e.g. comment on the assets), but also some formal mechanism of approval endorsed by tech.

Finally, the compliance layer – medical, legal, regulatory – also requires a single “source of truth”, but with even more meta tagging, taxonomy and context, as well as more formal approval chain.

The needs that are more or less in common across all these levels are as follows:

  • clear approval nomenclature (think Zinc, which is already in use by many an entrerprise)
  • possibility to share content across affiliates and agencies to ensure compliance and cost-efficiency (content reuse is the best way to achieve this)
  • metadata and tagging for the available assets
  • permission control and customizable user roles
  • possibility to somehow plug all of this together with CRM to track the approved key message performance
  • bonus point – ability to think in terms of key messages and not content items separately. This is the new approach to multichannel that Viseven has been especially pioneering recently with the modular Connected Content.

Sewing together Veeva Vault PromoMats and AEM integration with eWizard

At the moment, these different needs are solved by means of multiple systems in place, each serving its own stretch of the content lifecycle. For example, Veeva Vault PromoMats serves for storage, meta connectivity, and review. Content authoring and distribution is done via channel-specific solutions: email platforms, development environments, CRM/CLM, and so forth.

The first step in achieving digital excellence is, of course, instilling digital culture and getting proficient in each of these systems. The logical next stage is creating clear workflows that transcend the systems and unify the processes. With the advent of Adobe Experience Manager, be it primarily as a powerful means of managing websites, we see this tendency in its mature stage, with attention to workflows built into the very concept.

In turn, eWizard Platform, too, transcends its original role of multichannel content authoring solution and can now connect Veeva systems and AEM into a single whole, building bridges wherever necessary for the corporate needs.

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The platform allows to take approved/validated digital assets from Veeva Vault (seamless integration, nothing except credentials at one point is needed), arrange them in a channel-specific template (eDetailer, email template, in case with AEM, as website), and then publish it to the target system. Everything that can be automated is automated, leaving no manual work to the user.

At the same time, the performance of the website published in Adobe can be tracked further, with the data available in Veeva via CDN.

Alongside this improvement, eWizard offers to use the new Modular Content approach, where content exists beyond channels in the form of flexible modules that can fit different types of channel-specific templates. A single module with key message can be inserted into a template for website or email, or eDetailer presentation, with further adaptation if necessary – all inside eWizard.

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As a result, the workflow that embraces Veeva systems and AEM via eWizard, “straightens” the multiple lines into a single, all-encompassing picture:
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Adobe Experience Manager examples in practice

Suppose you have an environment in Adobe Experience Manager where you want to place your company’s new website.

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At the same time, you want to be able to use assets from Veeva Vault to create a channel-specific content item (website) to be published in AEM. As a user of eWizard, you know where to look for the templates:

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You can edit your microsite as necessary, using the modules available. Since eWIzard has an extensibe capacity for metatagging, only the modules approved for use with the content under construction appear, as per business rules.

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Maybe you are required to update the patient profile on the website, and you already have the recommended assets in Vault. eWizard allows to use these assets without leaving the system, loading them from Veeva directly:

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After that, you can export the modified version of the website back into Vault as a PDF for validation and review, if your company’s workflows require it.

After validation, you can use the same built-in automated publishing functionality to get your brand new website across to AEM.

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In this way, you combine the benefits of both systems and enhance them further with the innovative possibilities offered by eWizard, making content workflows easier, faster and more efficient.

You can then track the performance of your content in Veeva:

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It is time to integrate all the efforts and chances of your marketing campaign to create focused interactions and build funnels and customer experiences that win the day! Try and see how it feels to have complete control over your digital assets – and you will be surprised at how, one day in 2019, so many things were resolved at once, leading to smart pharma marketing at the service of your brand.

Our dedicated experts are several clicks away, ready to help you learn more about the new possibilities you have.