Health Care Marketing Course Calendar ~ Fall 2009 Revised: November 5, 2009 – Changes in Bold Red PLEASE NOTE: 1. This calendar is subject to change for two reasons: a. Given the volatile health care industry, we need to stay on top of what’s happening in real time in the marketplace, so we may adjust a bit as certain events occur; and b. Guest speakers play a key role in the course and sometimes their schedules change at the last minute. 2. Any calendar changes and PowerPoint lecture slides will be retrievable on bSpace. All reader cases and articles are on study.net, unless otherwise noted. Day/Date Assignments PART 1: COURSE INTRODUCTION Suggested Reading: Chapter 2 of Kotler text
Course preview and organization
Marketing overview Required Reading: Chapters 3 and 5 of Kotler
The state of the healthcare market
text and Porter & Teisberg, “Redefining
HC competitive analysis
Competition in Health Care,” HBR, June 2004.
The role of marketing in today’s health care industries
Mon LABOR DAY HOLIDAY: NO CLASS Required Reading: Chapter 4 of Kotler. In
addition, begin reading the Prozac case in preparation for our Sept. 21 discussion.
PART 2: STRATEGIC PLANNING Required Reading: Chapter 6 of Kotler and COMPONENTS
“Managing the Total Customer Experience”
Who are our customers and best prospects?
How and why do they make their Assignment: Please form your 2-person health care choices?
(Exercise) and 4-person (Marketing Plan)
How do we manage their total
teams, appoint team reps and submit online by
customer experience? Health Care Product/Service Development Required Reading: Chapter 9 of Kotler and
Mon Developing health care products/services
Analyzing their effectiveness Due: Team rosters and reps
Discussion of issues in Mid- submitted online course Case Analysis The Health Care Brand Required Reading: Chapter 8 of Kotler and
Brand platform strategies
Keller, “The Brand Report Card” article.
Mon Strategic triangulation
Positioning the HC brand
Brand persona and storytelling Guest Speaker: Doug Biehn, Assignment: Thoroughly research guest VP- Corporate Marketing, Blue
speaker’s business and be prepared to ask
Shield of California
The Blue Shield marketing methodology Terms & Concepts Take Home Quiz
What we can learn from Blue Shield’s strategies and tactics Health Care Value Propositions and Required Reading: Case: Berry and Seltman,
“Building a Strong Services Brand: Lessons
Determining compelling value
from the Mayo Clinic,” Business Horizons, May
propositions
Pricing strategies and methodologies Due: Terms & Concepts Take Home
Case discussion Mid-course evaluations Course Final Marketing Plan Exercise posted Health Care Channels & Suppliers
Discuss key issues in final Marketing Plan assignment with Required Reading: Chapter 12 of Kotler
representative from Blue Shield
Discuss Prozac case questions
Sales and distribution issues and challenges 4-person Marketing Plan Teams
Health Care Suppliers Submitted
o Who they are and what they do o How they market Guest Speaker: Cynthia Chiarappa, Assignment: Thoroughly research guest Sr. Director of Communications and
speaker’s business and be prepared to ask
Marketing, California Pacific Medical Center, San Francisco.
Marketing a major hospital(s) to key constituencies
What we can learn from CPMC strategies and tactics Guest Speaker: Lisa Hammann, Assignment: Thoroughly research guest Director, Managed Care Marketing
speaker’s business and be prepared to ask
Genentech, Inc.
Marketing a family of products from a major pharmaceuticals supplier. Due on November 6: 2-person Team
What we can learn from Case Analysis Genentech’s strategies & tactics PART 3: INTEGRATED MARKETING Required Reading: Chapter 13 of Kotler, plus
Health Care marketing tactics
Guidelines and cautionary tales
“Hatching a New Identity,” MHS, Spring 2009
Best practices in different sectors Metrics, Measurements, & Organizing Teleconference Q&A with Blue Required Reading: Chapter 15 of Kotler text Shield team regarding Final Marketing Plan exercise. Metrics and Measurements Hard and soft metrics Measurement resources The real bottom line: ROMI Marketing in Public Health
Review and discuss Prozac mid- Required Reading: Disney Consumer course team exercise reports
Products case, pages 1-14, and Exhibits 6, 7a-
Best practices in public health
b, and 9a-b. and article and blog entries at:
strategies and tactics
http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/weightlo
Targeting influencers and users
Debate: Is commercial marketing responsible for child obesity?
• Discussions and team workshop Required Reading: None on Challenger marketing plan PART 4: COURSE WRAP-UP Marketing Integrity and the Ethics of Healthcare Required Reading: Lynn Upshaw, “Integrating
The legal and ethical boundaries
Integrity into IMC,” Journal of Integrated of health care Marketing Communications, January 2009.
How personal integrity dictates institutional integrity Course Summary
Organizing for marketing
Preparing yourself for a HC Due: 4-person Team Marketing Plan marketing career
Recap and General Q&A Course evaluation Recap of Key Deadlines Assignment Submittal Method
Fill out on Google doc: Link to be announced
Post on “Assignments” section of class bSpace site Post on “Assignments” section of class bSpace site Post on “Assignments” section of class bSpace site
Alzheimer’s Imaging Consortium IC-P: Poster PresentationsBackground: Rosiglitazone, a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptorcopy. Because of their high iron content, plaques typically appear as hypo-[gamma] (PPAR[gamma]) agonist, has an anti-inflammatory effect in theintense spots on T2-weighted scans. One of the challenges in imagingbrain, decreasing interleukin-1[beta] concentration
It is a paradox of the work of Artificial Intelligence that in order to grant con-sciousness to machines, the engineers first labour to subtract it from humans, asthey work to foist upon philosophers a caricature of consciousness in the digitalswitches of weights and gates in neural nets. As the caricature goes into publiccirculation with the help of the media, it becomes an acceptable counter