Clinical trials are a high-stakes endeavor for all parties. For pharmaceutical and biotech companies, they represent a huge investment geared toward bringing treatments to market that can alter the course of a disease. For people enrolling in clinical trials, they represent a new – and sometimes last – hope for meaningful change in disease progression. Although people have a need for trials, and trials have a need for participants, all too often they fail to connect: nearly half of all clinical trial sites fail to fully enroll.1
Increasingly, search and social marketing have taken on an important role in clinical trial patient recruitment. With 75 percent of Americans looking up medical-related information online at least monthly, it makes sense to provide clinical trial information online.2 From a sponsor’s perspective, search and social marketing offer more granular targeting capabilities, efficient pricing for ad delivery, and variability in creative execution than traditional forms of marketing. But with just 11 percent of clinical trials currently using social media to recruit participants,3 there is huge room for growth.
At Syneos Health Communications, we set out to better understand what potential research participants think of receiving clinical trial advertising online, how much they trust different online delivery channels, and what messaging and design elements help motivate potential research participants to notice and click on social media advertisements that lead them toward enrollment in a clinical trial. According to the Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative’s Recommendations on Efficient and Effective Clinical Trial Recruitment,“ by developing more engaging messages deployed through the right channels, it is possible to gain the attention of the right target audiences4 .” In our research, we sought to deepen this insight by searching within the word of social marketing for what those channels are and what those messages should be.
1. Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development Impact Report January/ February 2013 https://static1.squarespace.com/ static/5a9eb0c8e2ccd1158288d8dc/t/5aa2c29e4192023932fec8 9d/1520616094463/02+-+Jan+15%2C+2013+-+Recruitment-Retention.pdf
2. Consumer Health Online: 2017 Research Report https://get.health/blog/ research17/
3. Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development Impact Report March/ April 2014 https://static1.squarespace.com/ static/5a9eb0c8e2ccd1158288d8dc/t/5aa2c0b953450a076cf df621/1520615609748/PR-MARAPR14.pdf
4. CTTI Recommendations on Efficient and Effective Clinical Trial Recruitment https://www.ctti-clinicaltrials.org/projects/recruitment