Choosing the right messages to maximize brand
potential: a brand message is key in shaping a product's place in
the market and determining its ability to reach its full sales
potential. However, for these messages to pave the way to success, brand
teams must perform thorough market research to fully understand and
utilize the effectiveness of the messages on hand.
by McKinnon, Ian
Preparing a brand for launch comprises myriad tasks. Clinical
trials must be performed to determine clinical endpoints. Segmentation
and targeting strategies must be set, and forecasts finalized to
estimate brand potential. The brand's positioning and value
proposition must be established. However, even with that work done, many
questions must still be answered before taking the next step--creating
the messages that will take a brand successfully to market.
What should customers be told about a product? Is it efficacious,
safe, cost effective, or all of the above? How should this information
be conveyed? If efficacy is one of the brand's key features, should
the messaging discuss the clinical trial, disease metric endpoints, or
quality-of-life measures? What messages will allow a brand to reach its
full potential?
After the prelaunch market research, the succeeding steps,
including communication research, are often shortchanged. Yet it is a
mistake to treat communication research as an afterthought. Choosing the
right messages to maximize a brand's use is critical to its
success. Before customers acquire clinical experience, the only way they
know a brand is through its messaging.
What Is the Desired Outcome of a Product's Messages?
Message research starts with a fundamental question: What is the
desired outcome of a product's messages? Although the question
seems simple, its application is not.
Which messages will lead to the desired outcome? Dozens of messages
may require testing. Several possible outcomes should be considered,
such as the effect messages have on first- versus second-line use,
monotherapy versus polytherapy, or one indication versus another. One
must consider a message's uniqueness and credibility, as well as
address more strategic questions, including:
* How strongly does the message align with the brand's
positioning?
* Does the message work well with other products in a
company's portfolio?
* How effectively does the message blunt competitors'
messages?
Message research demands a platform that is both adaptable and
robust. It must be able to assess the effect of numerous messages on
several outcomes.
Qualitative methods typically cannot test large numbers of messages
successfully. It is essential to include a quantitative phase in message
studies, which can filter as many as 200 choices. Once the most
effective messages are identified, qualitative research can then give
insight into the reasons, and determine the optimal story flow.
The quantitative phase of this two-step approach allows for testing
all possibilities, ensuring no good ideas get left "on the cutting
room floor." The qualitative phase then allows marketers to polish
the final messages--ensuring the right things are said to achieve the
brand's objectives.
Testing in a Natural Environment
For a true read on effectiveness, messages must be tested in their
natural environment. In the real world, messages are delivered in
bundles, not one at a time. People view this information as a group,
whether it is presented in a visual aid, on a webpage, or by sales
representatives.
Messages thus must be tested in groups to incorporate the
implications of trade-offs and duplication. For example, testing them in
isolation may indicate that the ten efficacy messages describing onset
are the most effective. However, including several onset efficacy
messages in a single message bundle may not be optimal. It may be more
compelling to include safety and efficacy messages about duration along
with the efficacy message about onset.
Testing messages in bundles ensures that the decisions are based on
real-world examples, and is also critical for identifying the correct
message order and the difference between the messages. In addition, it
is essential for finding the strongest message combinations.
Understanding the difference between messages will help guide brand
teams and their agencies in developing creative strategies that ensure a
product reaches its full potential.
Addressing Specific Questions
Given the constellation of items messages may affect, the system
for testing them must be flexible. Testing a message's effect on
switching current patients versus prescribing to new patients speaks to
short- and long-term strategies. Asking how new product messages, versus
existing-product messages, affect share speaks initially to product
coexistence, and later to phasing out an existing product. The platform
for testing messages must be sufficiently flexible to accommodate many
objectives. It must address each brand team's specific questions,
and not be rigidly locked into a fixed set of questions.
Testing to Support the Brands
Message research is appropriate at several points during a
product's lifecycle (Figure). It is critical to the launch of a new
product. Its use is also important during a product's growth phase
to help brand teams understand what to say about an additional
indication or how to respond to a competitive entry. In addition, this
research is valuable during a brand's mature phase, identifying the
best messages to address generic entries, transition to OTC, or
integration into a larger franchise.
[FIGURE OMITTED]
Whatever the reason for testing messages, it is important that the
respondents see all the messages being evaluated. Guessing what someone
might think about a message can never replace knowing what he or she
actually thinks. Message research must be scaleable and designed for all
audiences in the target regions. Finally, it must also accommodate the
various multimedia forms in which messages are presented, including
text, graphics, and sounds.
Conclusion
Message research is fundamental to brand success. A message can
shape a product's place in the market and affect its ability to
reach its potential. Effective message research must allow for testing
numerous messages, and identify those that will drive success. It must
adapt to each brand's needs, determine the utility of messages on
desired outcomes, and ultimately empower marketers to create the
concepts that optimize a brand's performance throughout its
lifecycle.
Ian McKinnon, PhD
Senior Vice President,
Advanced Methods
TNS Healthcare
New York City
COPYRIGHT 2006 Medicom International,
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Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.