Aug 24, 2017

Creating Customer Loyalty Through Digital Health

Healthcare is a growing sector that is taking on the digital market with new technologies.  And with the evolution of digital health, earning consumer loyalty is now more important than ever.

One of the sectors that are seeing this increasing growth is aged care. Consumers of aged care – older people and their families – have a high passion for the healthcare providers and are very vocal with the rise of digital health disruptors.

Providers with lagging loyalty metrics increase their chance of losing current and potential customers. Or worse yet, have them switch to a competitor.

The best way to ensure this doesn’t happen is to adopt consumer engagement practices so that they can respond to market disruption and grow their customer base along with their loyalty.

Healthcare consumers have a great deal of passion, but that doesn’t always translate to loyalty.

According to Accenture’s 2014 Global Consumer Pulse Research – 18 per cent of healthcare consumers say they are passionate about the industry. This is followed by consumer electronics and hotels/lodging.

Having this passion means that they are highly concerned by the quality of the service they receive, setting high standards for providers to live up to, which in turn makes the market for these services highly competitive.  

It takes a lot of work to gain these consumers trust and loyalty, but only one mis-step to lose them.

Switching Made Easier with Digital Health

What “digital health” includes is services such as electronic health records, consumer portals and online appointment scheduling –  increasing health data sharing, healthcare price transparency and information access.

With such high standards set for services and information, when a consumer’s expectations are not met, their willingness to switch to get what they want increases.

Some industries make it challenging for people to switch services, an example of this is  seen with some aged care services who have high “exit fees”.

However many healthcare consumers stay with their providers because they think it would be hard to leave, not because they are loyal.

What Accenture’s 2014 Global Consumer Pulse Research found was that 40 per cent of healthcare consumers say that switching is a hassle – second only to switching gas and electric utility companies.

The growth of digital health means that they will see switching services as less of a task and be more open to moving. People who are not satisfied with the aged care provider will simply find a new one.

What aged care providers need to do is to prepare now to combat this disruption and start implementing cross-industry loyalty strategies to earn their patients’ loyalty.

How to Get Digital Patient Engagement

Give Consumers a Reason to Stay

Give your consumers the experience that they want. This may mean easing appointment access through online scheduling, appointment delivery via in-person or virtual visits and personalised follow up. Make the process easier for them and they will be less likely to leave.

Earn and Enable Consumer Recommendations

Listen to your customers. If they give you feedback about things they would like to see improved, show them that you have heard their request and take action to move forward with the feedback.

Make it easy to post reviews and ratings to reach others through digital channels and social media. And never shut down or ignores any feedback you receive.

Make it the Consumer’s Choice Easy

You want to make it easy for consumers to choose you. And the best way to do this is, firstly, offering a great service, and secondly, creating channels for people to endorse, refer and recommend.

Enlist others to advocate, share and post about you aged care service – older people, their friends and families, referring providers, staff and allied professionals.

It’s important to earn your customer’s loyalty with new methods through transformed experiences, not by trapping consumers.

What do you have to say? Comment, share and like below.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

92 Organisations from 17 Countries Recognised for Innovative, Outstanding Contributions to Improving Quality of Life for Older People in Asia Pacific

Singapore, 16 May 2019 – 92 organisations from 17 countries were recognised for their innovative and outstanding contributions towards improving the quality of living for the older people in Asia Pacific at the 7th Asia Pacific Eldercare Innovation Awards Ceremony & Dinner on 15 May at the Marina Bay Sands Convention Centre, Singapore that gathered over 320 industry... Read More

Doll therapy: Is there a place for it in our nursing homes?

A controversial therapy option is gaining increasing popularity among nursing homes and even home care.  For elderly patients who have cognitive disorders such as dementia and Alzheimer’s, caregivers and medical professionals have found some potential benefits in a therapy technique known as Doll Therapy. Although some controversy lies in this therapy method, government studies are showing growing... Read More

Final passing words: the importance of sound for dying loved ones

It is a medical fact that the last of our senses to fade away when dying is hearing; that is why it is so important to talk to our loved ones in the final stages of their life, sending them off with love and joyful sounds. Read More
Advertisement