Article
Creating a new commercial model for the changing medtech market
Creating a new commercial model for the changing medtech market
How medtech firms can shift their market approach without losing market share.
Article
How medtech firms can shift their market approach without losing market share.
For three decades the medtech industry generated consistent success based on one formula: sell innovative, clinically beneficial products to surgeons and "pull" these products through hospitals and other providers that ultimately pay for them. Now, that world is changing:
The net result is that pricing and product margins face increasing pressure. In response to these market forces, we find many companies in the medtech sector wrestling to reconfigure their go-to-market approach. Their key issue: how to chart a successful course to a new commercial model? On the one hand, not responding to the new market dynamics can result in death by a thousand cuts, as margins and resources slowly get squeezed out. On the other hand, if a company moves too fast in certain segments, it could rapidly lose market share to competitors that continue to provide very high levels of bundled services.
Our experience shows that medtech companies can steer through turbulent waters by following three important steps: segment the market; tailor the go-to-market approach; and align the organization.
Segment the market
Many medtech executives recognize that the market is no longer homogenous and that the one-size-fits-all commercial model no longer works. However, few have invested in truly segmenting their markets. A "dynamic" segmentation is critical because hospitals have significantly different needs and those needs constantly evolve. We believe the most effective, actionable approach clusters customers on two very practical yet important dimensions:
Each dimension represents a relatively broad spectrum of customer behaviors, preferences and activities. In fact, while accounts vary significantly in their level of sophistication, we have not found any that would currently qualify as "highly sophisticated" on an absolute basis. Moreover, each product category will generate different segments. The world looks dramatically different to a spinal-device manufacturer than it does to a wound-care company. Segmentation also varies from country to country. In most markets, at least three broad segments exist.
Traditional physician preference accounts: Their influence may wane over time, but surgeons and physicians still wield purchasing power in most medtech categories. These accounts view themselves as the quality leaders in their therapeutic space. They place a premium on attracting and retaining surgeons and not constraining clinical choice. Several academic medical centers fall in this category. Health systems in the Netherlands, Switzerland and Belgium broadly fall in this segment.
Collaborative buyers: For many hospital systems-such as large integrated delivery networks (IDNs) like Kaiser Permanente Hospital or Hospital Corporation of America-the solution to reducing healthcare delivery costs lies not so much in hunting for bargains on each product they buy, but reducing the total cost of doing business. An important tool in this segment is the use of "value analysis committees," consisting of physicians and procurement managers, to narrow the selection of device choices in a given product category. Over time, these committees are becoming more sophisticated in their definition of "cost" to include inventory, order processing, operating room (OR) utilization and nursing utilization. European healthcare systems such as those in France and the UK, as well as private hospital chains in Germany, fit in this segment.
Price negotiators: Constrained in their budgets, many city and country hospitals have no choice but to hunt for bargains-especially in products like defibrillators, orthopedic implants and coronary stents. Such customers seek the lowest price by often inviting all bidders and setting an "all play" price point at the lowest bid received. Health systems in Scandinavia and Germany are rapidly moving toward this model.
Tailor the go-to-market approach
Once a medtech company understands the distinct segments and how they are evolving, it can begin to tailor its commercial approach to each segment. Our work with medtech companies of different sizes and specializations leads us to believe that the most important components of a robust commercial model are:
Channel investment: This is the overall amount of enterprise resources a medtech company commits to each channel. A high level of investment includes dedicated sales reps covering only a few accounts. These reps have the time to accompany a high percentage of surgeries in the OR and are supported by a robust infrastructure of product specialists, support personnel and technology. A moderate level of investment would represent broad geographic and account coverage for each direct sales rep, usually complemented by a network of non-exclusive distributors. Lower levels of investment include using distributors or agents and even some of the emerging direct e-commerce platforms.
Call-point focus: Companies need to make choices on the relative amount of resources they direct toward clinical decision makers (surgeons, physicians, nurses and clinicians) versus economic influencers (material managers, OR managers and finance personnel). It's also critical for the medtech company to identify the appropriate level of call points: should it be the surgeon or the department head? The procurement managers or the CFO? Different call-point priorities require very different capabilities, for both marketing and sales.
Value proposition: This component comprises several sub-elements: the product, services and pricing models.
Should every medtech company adjust its commercial model to address the needs of every segment? Not necessarily. Smaller companies may be best served targeting either the traditional physician preference segment or the price negotiators (as Eastern European and Asian companies are doing in many categories). Larger companies need to make a strategic decision on whether they want to participate in the price negotiator segment. Winning across all three segments requires highly sophisticated internal processes, data access, metrics, scale and organizational effectiveness.
Align the organization
The practical implications of a new commercial strategy-and the organizational change required to execute it-are not trivial and are, in fact, too often underestimated. Such transformation means that many priorities, capabilities and tools need to change. In our experience, companies that are ready to evolve their commercial approach must act across several dimensions:
A time for action
Today's industry leaders have the extensive data access and scale to respond to new market forces and position themselves to win across multiple dimensions. However, they also face great coordination and change management challenges. Business history is replete with stories of companies that failed because they stuck to a tried and tested formula, while the world moved on.
Over the next three to four years, the medtech industry can expect a significant shake-up in profitability and relative market share among participants in many categories. For medtech leaders, the challenge will be how to invest in significant change—and ensure that it is identifiable, measurable and manageable. Winning medtech companies will challenge their leadership teams to plot a course for effective, pragmatic transformation. Most important, leading medtech companies will identify their best capabilities and pick and choose the races they want to win.