Skip to main content

I Suck, Therefore I Advertise.

Hospital marketers (and the CEOs who demand so little of them) try to advertise services they believe are distinctive.  They have no trouble finding an agency to spend their money, though they're frequently wrong about the 'distinctive' part.

Here's an article making the reverse case: bloated advertising budgets are a symptom of undistinguished, undifferentiated services.  Call it a tax on mediocrity. 

Says the article, "You will, in effect, be taxed in media dollars for what you failed to spend in research and development." 

And "Advertising is the tax you pay for a bad idea." (a quote attributed to Robert Stephens, founder, Geek Squad)
"Here's a startling fact: For what equals a rounding error in most big-brand ad budgets, companies could create meaningful new product(s) that would eliminate much of the required ad budget, thus saving themselves—while also earning—millions and millions of dollars."
Great products and services don't need much advertising.  Their fans do the work, raving, gushing, endorsing, spreading the word.
"...(g)reat ideas are increasingly turning viral. We say increasingly because with the advent of techno-charged social media, people can tell each other about their favorite innovation in the blink of an eye, with a click of a mouse. If something qualifies as truly great, you likely will hear about it from your network, not from advertisements."
So next time your agency tells you your media budget is too small, respond by saying you're thinking it may very well be too large.  Then go build something worth talking about.

And find a new agency while you're at it.

UPDATE:  A friend asked me if I was tacitly endorsing a return to "Build it and they will come" - a common hospital marketing approach from days of yore.  Or should I call it a "non-marketing" approach?  Regardless, the answer is NO!   Perhaps it's "Build it RIGHT and they'll be your evangelists!"  And that's better than any marketing budget.

Comments

Michael said…
Great post Steve and so true. Think the healthcare industry will ever learn? Oh wait, the Board see it, so therefore I am marketing!

Popular posts from this blog

Michael Porter On Health Care Reform

Michael Porter, writing in the New England Journal of Medicine, proposes "A Strategy For Health Care Reform - Toward A Value-Based System." His proposals are fundamental, lucid and right-on, meaning they're sure to be opposed by some parties to the debate, the so-called "Yes, but..." crowd. Most important, in my opinion, is this: "... electronic medical records will enable value improvement, but only if they support integrated care and outcome measurement. Simply automating current delivery practices will be a hugely expensive exercise in futility. Among our highest near-term priorities is to finalize and then continuously update health information technology (HIT) standards that include precise data definitions (for diagnoses and treatments, for example), an architecture for aggregating data for each patient over time and across providers, and protocols for seamless communication among systems. "Finally, consumers must become much mor...

gapingvoid cartoon #378

Buy your own, here.

"An Affordable Fix For Modernizing Medical Records"

...from the Veterans Health Administration and Midland (TX) Memorial Hospital. I know enough about my own strengths and weaknesses to know that I'm no IT expert. But I am acutely interested in examples of people and teams thinking differently to solve long-standing, intractable problems and, for better or worse, there are lots of those to be found in the IT realm. Yesterday, it was a story about a team adding iPhone portability to MEDITECH functionality, delivering to harried physicians better access to clinical data and more productive hours in every work day. (Wow. Apple in the boardroom AND the physician lounge. Has to be an IT traditionalist's worst nightmare. But I digress...) Today, the Wall Street Journal features a story about Midland (TX) Memorial Hospital finding an affordable, open-source alternative to proprietary EMR systems : "In the push to digitize America's hospitals, Midland Memorial faced an all-too-common dilemma: a crying need for information ...