There is an old adage that necessity is the mother of invention. Recently amidst the endless stream of Tweets I see, I saw a different take on this saying: “Crisis is the mother of invention.”
(I wish I could remember who Tweeted that so I could give proper recognition, but alas, I can’t. So to my stranger-Tweeting friend, thank you!)
It struck me as a particularly relevant comment for the world of pharmaceutical social media. I’ve touched on the fact that pharmaceutical stumbles in social media are a good thing and that it is indeed possible to use social media for pharma crisis communications. My contention has always been that each challenge along the way illuminates the fact that social media is not some fly-by-night marketing technique. There are always stumbles in a marketing program, and there will always be challenges, the belief that social media would somehow circumvent that has always hurts its credibility.
As pharmaceutical companies have encountered struggles in social media it has sharpened all of our thinking on the best approach to engagement. In the early phases of pharma social media—a company was praised simply for showing up. As well they should have been at the time. A pharmaceutical company showing its face online was a novel idea three years ago. During this period, our thinking was never stretched and our approach was never challenged. It was kind of like elementary school—everyone got a gold star just for trying their best.
The recent string of pharmaceutical mishaps has been the crisis that will spur invention. It will force social media pundits to take a closer look at the thought process behind an engagement and reevaluate the best approach. More importantly, it will force pharmaceutical companies to ask the right questions before embarking on a social media journey, pinpoint the right goals and insist on outlining a strategy and crisis communications plan.
I recently watched a video on the kitchen-gadget company
According to research from Hubspot
Back in December, I wrote a
Brief Programming Note: Apologies for the slow going on posting here as of late. Between a work, real life and a vacation, it’s been difficult to carve out the time to write. But alas, things look to be freeing up so I’ll be back at it more regularly. I know; music to your ears.
Much of the pharmaceutical social media conversation has focused on the need for change from the market tactics of yesteryear. The argument goes something like this: “agree or disagree, the pharmaceutical industry is one of the most distrusted and its public perception is overwhelmingly negative. Why? Fair or unfair, many point the finger at the barrage of DTC ads as a sore point.” Using that logic, the strategy tends to be something to the effect of “change everything.”
I’ve said this a few times before; but I think it’s worth repeating based on a number of conversations I’ve recently had with pharmaceutical marketers. Here it goes: Facebook, Twitter and blogs are not social media. I repeat, just because you throw up a Facebook page does not mean you have a social media presence.
I’ve long subscribed to the notion that the most important role for pharmaceutical companies in social media was as an information depot. With access to an abundance of data, research and emerging trends, healthcare companies are in a unique position to broadly distribute medical information.





