Title: Pharmaceutical representatives
1Pharmaceutical representatives
2Pharmaceutical Industry Marketing
- A key to industry profitability
- Highly effective
- Very sophisticated
- Multi-pronged campaigns targeting clinicians and
patients
3Pharmaceutical Industry Marketing
- In 2004, pharmaceutical companies spent almost
12 billion on marketing activities - This amount does not include the retail value of
samples (gt15 billion) - Despite (or perhaps because of) these high
marketing expenses, pharma profit margins are
among the highest of any industry - The trend of increasing promotional spending and
profit margins has substantially increased over
time
Sources IMS Health, Top-Line Industry Data
Fortune 500, 2006 (http//money.cnn.com/magazines/
fortune/fortune500/performers)
4 Pharmaceutical Industry Promotion Marketing
Source N Engl J Med 2007357673-81. 2005
Dollars
5Annual Increase in US Prescription Drug Total
Health Expenditures
Annual Change
Rx Drugs
Health
6Expenditures by Type of Marketing 2004 (
Billions)
IMS CAM Total Percent
Samples 15.9 6.3 15.9 28
Detailing 7.3 20.4 20.4 36
DTCA 4 4 4 7
Meetings No data 2 2 3
E-promo. No data 0.3 0.3 0
Journals 0.5 0.5 0.5 1
Unmonitored No data 14.4 14.4 25
Total 27.7 47.9 57.5
7Effect of Advertising on Drug Sales
- Drugs that are heavily advertised contribute
disproportionately to the increase in pharma
spending
Increase in Retail Prescription Drug Sales,
1999-2000
Source Prescription Drugs and Mass Media
Advertising, 2000, NIHCM Foundation, November 21,
2001.
8Drug Promotion the Pharmaceutical
Representative.
9Drug Promotion by Pharmaceutical Companies.
- Journal advertisements
- Mailings
- Samples
- Sponsored meetings
- Gifts
- Direct-to-consumer advertising
- Company representative visits
10Recent Changes in Pharma
- Recently, some large companies have announced
plans to cut their sales forces - Late 2006 and early 2007, Pfizer announced it
would cut - 20 of its 11,000-person US sales force
- 20 of its European sales force
- In 2005, Wyeth cut
- 15 of its sales force
- Other companies (e.g., Novartis) have announced
plans to increase sales forces
11Pharmaceutical Representatives
- Still the major focus of pharmaceutical marketing
- Approximately 100,000 reps in 2005 vs 38,000 in
1995 - 1 rep per 6 MDs in US and 1 rep per 2.5 targeted
MDs - 6 million detail visits annually
- Cost estimate 12 - 13 thousand per MD on
detailing (IMS data) - PhRMAserves an essential function in the health
care delivery system
12Characteristics of Representatives
- Presentability/appearance
- Outgoing personality
- Excellent interpersonnal skills
- Assertive
13Representative Training
- How to be observant and assess clinician
personalities - How to adjust approach based on reactions and
profile information - How to gather and use personal information to
establish a connection - How to monitor impact of various marketing
strategies on prescribing
14How Representative Can Tailor Approach
- Frame interactions as gesture of friendship
- Use literature, humility, appeal to their high
intellect - Make best effort to establish personal
connection, best gifts
- Friendly clinician
- Skeptical clinician
- High prescribers
15How Representaive Can Tailor Approach
- Clinician prefers competing
- product
- Refuses to see reps
- Thought leaders
- Find out why, try to capture a niche
- Try to work through office staff, can get useful
information - Friendly thought leaders groomed for speaking
circuit. Monitor impact of local talks and their
allegience
16Targeted Clinicians
- High volume prescribers
- Specialists scripts they initiate can continue
for years by PCPs - Opinion leaders
- Low volume, non-influential clinicians receive
much less attention
17Physician Rating of Rep Information Usefulness
18Physician Rating of Accuracy of Representative
Information
19Representatives Objectives.
- Sell company products
- Inform and educate professionals
- Gather information
20The meeting.
- Whats in it for me?
- Be selective
- By appointment with time limits
- Be in control
- Prepare standard questions
- Beware of bold statements glossies (check
evidence)
21Stages of Rep/Provider Interactions
- Acknowledgement of relative status
- Valuable time, opinion leader
- Find out what is known
- Outline benefits of product
- Expert name drop
- Provider resistance
- Reinforcement of role
- Compliments, sympathy
- Closure ensure opportunity for return, gifts,
obligation
22Benefits to Provider
- Pleasant respite from workday demands
- Someone who is impressed with their superior
knowledge - Can be object of flattery and sympathy
- Psychological benefits
- Receipt of gifts
- Can present themselves as skeptic
- Questions information, doesnt agree to prescribe
- Can feel like they were in control
23Representative Goals
- Develop positive relationship
- Opportunity for future contact
- Create a sense of obligation
- Control agenda
- Promoting product appears secondary in many
interactions
24Influence on Prescribing
- Studies show that prescribing is influenced by
industry representatives - Higher cost, less rational prescribing is
associated with - Frequency of use of representatives as an
information source - Perceived credibility of representative
- Even a few minutes of contact can impact
prescribing
25Perceived Influence of Pharmaceutical Reps
26Physician/Drug Representative Meetings
- Specialty Meetings/Month
- Family Physicians 16
- Internal Medicine 10
- Cardiology 9
- Pediatrics 8
- Surgeons 4
- Anesthesiology 2
27Physician Industry Relationships
- Benefits Reporting
- Samples 78
- Gifts 83
- Travel/CME funding 35
- Payments 28
- Any Relationship 95
28Physician Factors Associated With Receipt of
Payments
- Practice with lt 25 Medicaid/uninsured
- Private practice
- Less likely in hospital/HMO setting
- University/Medical School
- Role as a preceptor
- Developer of clinical guidelines
- Cardiology specialty (of the six specialties
studied)
29Methods to Deal With Potential Conflict of
Interest
- Eliminate the conflict
- Can be difficult and painful
- Rationalization
- Its educational
- Patients need samples
- Denial
- It doesnt influence me
- I take it with a grain of salt
30Conclusions on Representative Marketing
- Industry invests billions on detailing
- Most prescribers meet with representatives
- Representatives are skilled at developing
relationships with and influencing clinicians - Meetings with representatives are associated with
less rational prescribing and increased costs - Most physicians feel they are not influenced
31Thank you for attention!