Essays on Evaluation of Sales and Marketing Strategy: A Perspective from Pharmaceutical Industry in Thailand, a Survey
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18034/ra.v7i1.250Keywords:
Marketing Strategy, Pharmaceutical Industry, Evaluation of Sales, Marketing methods, Selling techniquesAbstract
This thesis was conducted during the author's final year of a three-year PhD program at the IICSE University, USA. The research has its focus on the constant need for new, innovative ways for marketers in pharmaceutical industry in Thailand to reach target physicians (customers) and also adapt to marketing changes. To be able to detect what changes need to occur in the industry, we need to understand the impact that medical representatives (or pharmaceutical representatives) have on the prescription-writing habits of doctors, and competitive landscape in terms of sales and marketing performance of different players in the domain. Physicians are solely responsible in the prescription of pharmaceuticals elsewhere in this world, including in Thailand. The medical representatives are responsible for detailing physicians and other healthcare professionals the information on medical products, so that patients can get the best medicine for their disease treatment. Both physicians and medical representatives can have a large effect on the perception of a certain pharmaceutical from a certain company. Physicians also need to be educated by medical representative, and medical representatives must find the best approach to selling their medical products based on the needs of the physician’s patients.
Different companies have drugs that have very different molecular compositions or classification that treat same diseases. Usually one expensive original drug can be prescribed for a single disease, so it is important for medical representatives to point out how their medicine will best treat a certain disease in a certain type of person. This in turn requires asking some questions on how the medical representative can achieve their selling goals. What selling method makes one drug more desirable over the other? Do physicians respond better to a friendlier, more relational and educated sales representative? What kind of marketing methods are the most effective or preferable by physicians? How do physicians perceive the different ways of selling? This research was conducted by looking into the selling techniques and marketing strategies used by pharmaceutical companies and medical representatives in Thailand. This should help to distinguish the best sales and marketing methods for pharmaceutical companies and medical representatives, especially in today’s industry.
Downloads
References
Bala, R., & Bhardwaj, P. (2010). Detailing vs. Direct-to-Consumer Advertising in the Prescription Pharmaceutical Industry. Management Science, 148-160.
Berndt, E. R., Pindyck, R. S., & Azoulay, P. (2003). Consumption Externalities and Diffusion in Pharmaceutical Markets: Antiulcer Drugs. Journal of Industrial Economics,
-270.
Chetley, A. (1995). Problem drugs. Amsterdam: Health Action International.
De Laat, E. (2002). How does pharmaceutical marketing influence doctors' prescribing behaviour? Den Haag: Centraal Planbureau.
Gonül, F. F., Carter, F., Petrova, E., & Srinivasan, K. (2001). Promotion of Prescription Drugs and its Impact on Physicians’ Choice Behavior. Journal of Marketing, 79-90.
Hahn, M., Park, S., Krishnamurthi, L., & Zoltners, A. (1994). Analysis of new product diffusion using a four-segment trial-repeat model. Marketing Science, 224-247.
Issets, B. J., Schondelmeyer, S. W., Heaton, A. H., Wadd, W. B., Hardie, N. A., & Artz, M. B. (2006). Effects of collaborative drug therapy management on patients' perceptions
of care and health-related quality of life. The American Journal of Medicine, 129-142.
Kremer, S. T., Bijmolt, T. H., Leeflang, P. S., & Wieringa, J. E. (2008). Generalizations on the effectiveness of pharmaceutical promotional expenditures. International Journal of Research in Marketing, p. 234.
Manchanda, P., Phil, M., & Honka, E. (2005). The Effects and Role of Direct-to Physician Marketing in the Pharmaceutical Industry: An Integrative Review. Yale Journal of Health Policy, Law, and Ethics, 785-822. 70
Nair, H. S., Manchanda, P., & Bhatia, T. (2009). Asymmetric social interactions in physician prescription behavior: The role of opinion leaders. Journal of Marketing Research, 2-38.
Narayanan, S., Manchanda, P., & Chintagunta, P. K. (2005). Temporal differences in the role of marketing communication in new product categories. Journal of Marketing Research, 278-290.
Osinga, E. C., Leeflang, P. S., & Wieringa, J. E. (2010). Early Marketing Matters: A Time-Varying Parameter Approach to Persistence. Journal of Marketing Research, 173185.
Rosenthal, M., Berndt, E., Donohue, J., Frank, R., & Epstein, A. (2002). Promotion of prescription drugs to consumers. . New England Journal of Medicine, 498-505.
Rubin, P. H. (2003). Medical research on pharmaceutical marketing: Is a bias ever just a bias? Atlanta.
Rubin, P. H. (2004). Pharmaceutical marketing: medical and industry biases. Journal of Pharmaceutical Finance, Economics & Policy, 1-16.
Sheehan, K. B. (2007). Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) Branded Drug Web Sites Risk Presentation and Implications for Public Policy. Journal of Advertising, 123-135.
Smith, M. (1991). Pharmaceutical Marketing: Strategy and Cases. Sydney: Pharmaceutical Product Press.
Van den Bulte, C., & Lilien, G. L. (2001). Medical Innovation Revisited: Social Contagion versus Marketing Effort. American Journal of Sociology, 1-27.
Windmeijer, F., de Laat, E., Douven, R., & Mot, E. (2005). Pharmaceutical promotion and GP prescription behaviour. 5-18.
--0--
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2019 Kitcha Ing-udomnoogoon
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
ABC Research Alert is an Open Access journal. Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:
- Authors retain copyright and grant the journal the right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a CC BY-NC 4.0 International License that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgment of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of their work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgment of its initial publication in this journal. We require authors to inform us of any instances of re-publication.