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      Authority on regulatory aspects of communications and medical products, with particular emphasis on pre-approval communications; strategist to help pharma and biotech companies prepare best case for advisory committee approval; issues and crisis management. Frequent speaker on various aspects of same - drug development, promotion, reimbursement and new media in a highly regulated environment. Author of books, newspaper and magazine pieces related to drug marketing and promotion as well as HIV specialty pieces. And of course... blogger!

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    • Eye on FDA is published by Mark Senak of Fleishman-Hillard's Washington, D.C. office. The thoughts and ideas in this blog and postings are strictly my own and are not screened by my employer. Everything posted on this blog is my personal opinion and does not necessarily represent the views of Fleishman-Hillard or its clients.

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    « Facilitating Communications in Social Media - Pfizer, Epocrates, FDA and NIH | Main | Is the FDA Sustainable? »

    June 14, 2010

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    Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Checking in on Pharma and YouTube:

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    nalts

    It's true that the minimal views on pharma content makes it difficult to get an ROI. It's also true that doctors use Google, and videos on YouTube are exponentially more likely to index on Google. So 3 "take aways": 1) Most of these channels are boring... people want to be educated or entertaineed, and that requires a different approach than DTC to date, 2) Either minimize costs on branded/unbranded YouTube channels (using already produced content), or promote the sites like you would a website, 3) At LEAST move approved branded and unbranded educational videos to YouTube, and search-engine optimize them. Why? Production costs are sunk, and a doctor or patient is more likely to find them on Google/YouTube than stumble onto a brand website (or magically discover the engaging videos that are sitting on a CD-ROM in a product manager's dusty file cabinet). Google can't index dusty file cabinets (yet).

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