What's Happening?
Pharmaceutical companies are grappling with the challenge of effectively engaging healthcare professionals (HCPs) despite having advanced technological infrastructure in place. Many commercial organizations in the pharma sector have developed platforms,
data pipelines, and automation tools intended to enhance interactions with HCPs. However, the experience for HCPs has not significantly improved, as the gap between technological capability and actual user experience remains wide. The issue is not a lack of ambition or technology, but rather the failure to design experiences that are coherent and valuable to HCPs. The current engagement model often results in fragmented and overwhelming interactions, which do not meet the expectations set by other digital experiences in HCPs' lives.
Why It's Important?
This situation is critical for the pharmaceutical industry as it seeks to demonstrate impact, reduce costs, and increase efficiency. The inability to effectively engage HCPs can lead to missed opportunities in influencing prescribing behaviors and ultimately affect the bottom line. As HCPs compare their interactions with pharma companies to other digital experiences, the pressure is on for pharma to deliver more relevant and coherent engagement. The industry's reliance on AI and automation to solve these issues may not be sufficient if the underlying experience remains unclear. This challenge highlights the need for a strategic shift in how pharma companies organize their customer engagement efforts, focusing on the quality of interactions rather than the quantity.
What's Next?
Pharmaceutical companies are likely to reassess their engagement strategies, focusing on defining clear and valuable experiences for HCPs. This may involve aligning teams around customer experience rather than channels or functions and making deliberate choices to focus on fewer, well-defined customer journeys. The industry will need to address structural issues that hinder effective engagement, such as the lack of clear ownership of the customer journey and the need for better governance and planning. As companies navigate this transition, those that prioritize relevance and coherence in their engagement strategies are likely to succeed in closing the gap between technological capability and user experience.











