Posts Tagged ‘Social Media’

Is the Social Media World Passing You By?

Sunday, October 24th, 2010

By Evan Falchuk

Marketing pros say their top priority is social media.  But in industries like health care benefits it’s not really happening.  Benefits thought leaders have been on the sidelines, just when their voices are needed to be heard the most.

Now, for those who think social media is for kids, or for people in super-edgy industries, it just isn’t so.  Watch this short summary video of a round-table on social media I participated in recently (disclosure: my company, Best Doctors, works with the company that sponsored it, PAN Communications).

The forum was moderated by the on-line Editor of the Harvard Business Review, and included key marketing leaders from HP Hood, Novell and Forrester Research.  The video gives an interesting insight into just how much is really going on in social media in corporate America – and how much you’re missing if you’re not taking part.

So, if you’re on the sidelines:  Get in the game.

One good place to start is to listen to my (completely free!) social media 101 webinar.  Remember, to participate in social media, you don’t need to say anything.

All you need to do is listen.

Questions Are the Answer

Monday, October 12th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

Last night, I saw a commercial produced by the federal government.  Called “Questions are the Answer,” it’s a call for patients to be engaged in their medical care, to ask questions of their doctors in order to be sure of their medical condition.

The commercial was excellent – it showed a man asking dozens of increasingly arcane questions about a cell phone he was thinking of buying.  Then, it showed him in his doctor’s office, apparently after getting a diagnosis.  “Do you have any questions?” the doctor asks.  “Nope,” says the man.

The government agency that produced the commercial is the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.  There are a series of other videos and tools that can help you be a better, more informed consumer if you get sick.

The only catch:  it’s almost impossible to find any of this great material.  The front page of their web site – if you should somehow manage to find it – is an enormous list of bullets and subcategories.  There’s a good consumer-oriented video on the right side (featuring Fran Drescher), but the screen is quite literally smaller than a postage stamp.

Those excellent TV ads?  Hidden several clicks away from the front page.  And what’s worse, you can’t embed or share them, they seem to only be available to watch locally.  In other words, all this good work is going to waste.  From a social media perspective, this most effective part of AHRQ’s web site pretty much doesn’t exist.  I noted this back in May, and it’s unchanged since then.

But the AHRQ should know: it’s never too late to get involved in social media.  Please, re-think your web site and get a social media strategy.  It’s never to late to get this important message out there.

In the News

Monday, September 14th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

I’m on the Voice of America today talking about how people use social media. The transcript is here.

I previously talked to Wired magazine about how social media can help you find balance between work and family.   That interview was on the magazine’s Geek Dad blog.  You can read it here.

UPDATE: I also am honored today to have won a health care “Innovator Award” from CDHC Solutions Magazine – I’m one of their “Solutions Superstars.”

But truly, Best Doctors is the superstar and I’m honored to accept the award on behalf of the company and our terrific team.

No One Should Die or Go Broke

Friday, September 4th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

It’s been all over Facebook and Twitter the last couple of days. People updating their status with this message:

No one should die because they cannot afford health care, and no one should go broke because they get sick. If you agree, please post this as your status for the rest of the day.

It strikes me as odd. I mean, who can disagree with these statements? And for what policy proposal are they meant to encourage support?

How about just changing it to “no one should die, and no one should go broke”? I’d be in favor of that, too.

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  • "Medicine is learned by the bedside and not in the class room. Let not your conception of manifestations of disease come from work heard in the lecture room or read from the book: see and then research, compare and control. But see first."
    - Sir William Osler, MD
    The Father of Modern Medicine
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