Bob Yurkovic

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5 Pandemic Cluster Event

November 30, 2020 by bobyurkovic

I started looking at COVID-19 as part of a big picture event and now I suggest that we are in the midst of a cluster pandemic event. We all see there are many things going on around us today. It is almost too much for us to understand and manage. It is rocking our world and lifestyle in a nasty way. This is more than COVID-19; it is a cluster of battles in a war for our livelihood.

If we are to win the battle of COVID-19, we need to fight 5 connected pandemics, a cluster pandemic, to survive. We are being crushed by adversity in amounts not witnessed before by our generation. If we beat all 5, we will be better for it individually, as a nation, and as a world.

cluster pandemic
  1. Biological pandemic (SARS-COV-2 virus)
  2. Info pandemic
  3. Cyber pandemic
  4. Science/Technology pandemic
  5. Culture pandemic

COVID-19 is a Biological pandemic running rampant in the US as data shows. We need to beat this and there are many initiatives underway to manage it. However, we need to understand all of the connected influences to this Biological pandemic and how they are impacting COVID-19. For one, the Biological pandemic is getting fueled by the Info pandemic and Culture pandemic.

The Info-pandemic is about wide spread misuse of information used to mislead and cause harm to people. This pandemic is also out of control with growing amounts of misinformation and unregulated communications channels in TV news and social media. Anyone can say anything with minimal repercussions and cause harm to people. The average person is not sure who to trust regarding COVID-19 information resulting in unsafe practices that cause an increase in the spread of the virus. The Info pandemic also distracts us from focusing on resolving the biological pandemic through its divisive manner of attack.

The Cyber pandemic is about how hidden, focused attacks are disrupting our way of life. Secure living enables comfort and trust in how we work and play. The Cyber pandemic distracts our focus and impedes our progress on resolving COVID-19 by causing distrust, business disruption, and data integrity issues. Hackers and foreign entities are increasing their battles while becoming more sophisticated and successful in their attacks. Being hidden, it is another pandemic, like the Biological pandemic, that makes it difficult for the average person to understand since most of us can’t see it. We need to depend on, as well as trust, that science will help us find solutions.

The Science pandemic, or Technology pandemic, is about our lack of trust in science.

On the R&D front, the US lags on R&D spending compared to the EU and China. The US has many dependencies on external sources to fuel its innovation. Innovation is the key in finding new ways to defeat biologic threats and to advance our capabilities, An exception to this is Amazon, who reinvests its profits into innovation, new business models, and business growth. Another aspect is our inability to embrace what science tells us as we continue to vandalize the Earth, commit to unimaginable amounts of waste, and refute our impact to the environment while not acknowledging the consequences. R&D is essential to identify solutions to protect our existence,

As far as digital, I have seen many businesses, particularly in the healthcare sector, show their reluctance to fully embrace digital methods with speed, investment, and sponsorship. The Culture pandemic is partly due to a lack of digital adoption as well since a digital mindset is imperative for digital initiatives to flourish.

The Culture pandemic is about our mindset as individuals and as a people. It is about how we think and behave while guided by strong leadership and focused direction. For example, in the US, we live in a ME culture that focuses on personal desires while celebrating our individual successes while other countries live as a WE culture that work as one to the benefit of many. Our way of thinking limits our ability to act in unity to combat COVID-19 and all the other pandemics. The Culture pandemic impacts the Biological pandemic in many of us by our wanting not to be told what to do and not conforming to precautions recommended by medical experts. This is exacerbated with some leaders providing conflicting information on what to do – the Info pandemic.

What a formidable task that lies before us. No wonder we have been having so much trouble in the COVID-19 battle – it is a war and not just one battle. If we want to manage COVID-19, we need to manage all 5 pandemics together since they are connected and impact one another. We have the ability to win this and our humanity depends on it. History will see this time as us battling the granddaddy of all pandemics – a 5 pandemic cluster event – so it is a time to rethink this and attack with vigilance.

Filed Under: Culture, Digital, Health, Insights - Analytics, Security

Disruptive Waves and COVID-19 Part 2 – 2020

July 30, 2020 by bobyurkovic

In Disruptive Waves Part 1, I discussed the concept of disruptive waves and the damage they cause to our environment, mental wellbeing, and disease recovery. Now, let us look at how to solve this dilemma.

Why is it getting worse? What can we do? We need to understand why we are in this situation and look at accountability and culture as possible causes.

So why are we here with new cases rising in some states? It is true that the disruptive waves have overwhelmed us. We see symptoms and aberrant behavior normally associated with PTSD. While PTSD usually comes from experiencing a severe traumatic event, COVID-19’s produces an ongoing barrage of smaller disruptive waves over a longer period of time. It is like a series of medium waves tearing away the beach over time. A few waves do not seem to cause much damage however, over time they can cause significant damage.

It is interesting how the US government is managing this slow, steady drip of disruptive waves from COVID-19. People get into arguments over insignificant issues in the streets as tempers flare showing their inability to cope with the situation. Some people call it COVID-19 fatigue. I believe it is more insidious and can have a lasting effect on society and our ability to manage the disease. We have not been able to adapt to our new abnormal in the US.

We see fragmented plans as states try to stop disease spread. The US is not working as one. What is interesting is there are different cultures in states that drive different behaviors and result in different approaches to manage the disease. We also see fragmented cultures in cities as they work separately on their own to combat the disease. The culture in the US is fragmented into many pieces and that results in difficulty in trying to manage programs to stop its spread. It is almost as though we are working against one another. Some states are closing their borders to people coming from high risk countries and states. This leads to more fragmentation.

It appears that the US has a culture of individuality and “ME” instead of a culture of “WE” that works together in unison. In the US, no one is accountable for the whole and we see state and local governments struggle to manage the disease in different ways. What if you were a patient in a hospital with a heart problem and every doctor and nurse wanted to treat you differently? You would not live long even though each medical provider thought they were right. Managing health issues and emergencies needs to be managed together as a team. Emergency departments have a very unique culture enabling them to work as one.

Is culture that important to in our recovery? Let us compare the US to another country with another culture.

New Zealand has done a good job in managing the disease compared to the US. NZ manages COVID-19 across its entire country while the US is fragmented in its approach. NZ works as one while the US focuses on individuality. NZ has a hive mentality for the benefit of the whole as the US exhibits a lone wolf mentality for the benefit of the one. New Zealand leadership is direct in telling people what to do and the people follow. Disturbances are there but minimal as compared to the US.

In the US, many people express individuality as their freedom which works in many cases, but not during a pandemic assault on our country. The US culture is so different and direct approaches do not work. I have heard, “The government is not going to tell me what to do” and with an attitude. Why is this?

NZ is a culture of “WE”, acceptance, and forgiveness. Even the Maori are integrated into NZ culture.

US is a culture of “ME”, stubbornness, and blame. Factions of race, age, gender, etc. Native Americans are not integrated into the US culture further demonstrating a fragmented culture.

NZ and US are almost cultural opposites. 

NZ’ers “embrace” cultural differences and absorb them living happily as one. 

US’ers “celebrate” differences thinking one is better than the other and live in a constant fight trying to prove it or be better than the other. The US has taught us competitive behaviors since we were children further emphasizing it is about ME as being better and not WE living in harmony.

Our culture of “ME” and individuality is hindering our ability to recover from COVID-19. Many blame government leadership for this and it is true that culture starts and is supported by leadership in government and business. However, we are all accountable for the culture we create in the US. Each one of us is responsible. So, in reality, the government AND the people are really accountable for the current situation in the US. No pointing fingers since the culture we created belongs to each one of us.

A cultural shift is needed to combat this disease. When we learn to work together as individuals and leaders, we may be able to weave a culture of “WE”. As “WE”, we can fight this disease quicker.

A culture of learning and sharing is needed. We need to learn from those that have contained the disease better. If we knew how and why a state or city is containing the spread better, we should capture that knowledge and share it throughout the US. Centralized control is needed from federal government to manage knowledge instead of state managed control. We need a unified US program that reaches out locally and manages/guides centrally. Governors fighting with Mayors on what to do is ludicrous as is a President threatening Governors.  

A culture of “WE” that works together is needed for the US to manage this disease and the next disease or catastrophe that hits us. All of us need to embrace that … government leaders and each one of us in the US. Cultural transformation is a difficult thing to do and requires our top leaders to recognize it and help us shift our thinking and behaviors during this troubling time. WE own it and WE can fix it if WE want to.

Culture is at the core of everything and WE create our culture.

Filed Under: Digital, Health, Insights - Analytics

How we react to disruptive waves and COVID-19 Part 1

May 4, 2020 by bobyurkovic

We are living in a world that is changing due to multiple, complex issues occurring at the same time. It can seem overwhelming to manage through this so I wanted to break it down. I began observing how people react to COVID-19 back in early March. I noticed aberrant behaviors as panic set. People began to hoard paper products. After toilet paper, cleaning products were in high demand. Every week or two, another product fell victim to this phenomenon and shelves were emptied in stores. I also noticed that news about COVID-19 hit us in waves. Each wave disrupted our lifestyles and our ability to function in a changing world. The disruptive waves are not just one wave but a series of waves constantly pounding us. COVID-19 gave us the primary wave.

SECONDARY WAVES

Every time a new story came out or social media offered its opinion, secondary disruptive waves pelted us along with the disease news and its set of disrupted waves. These secondary waves first hit us in our economy as fears drove stock prices down. Stay at home guidelines affected many of our jobs – another disruptive wave. Social relationships had new barriers with social distancing – another disruptive wave. A new type of secondary wave kept emerging over the months. Since we live in a connected world, one disruptive wave can trigger another disruptive wave. We see this now as supply chains get disrupted on different levels. We started with paper products and now we moved into food products. The recent exposure to COVID-19 at pork processing plants is causing a meat buying panic.

Secondary waves have these signatures:

Economic: personal

  • Investments, cash flow, expenses

Economic: company

  • Sales, production, delivery, channels, employees, business models

Job related

  • Do I have a job, can I perform my job, job models

Education related

  • Learning models

Social related

  • Relationships, entertainment, vacations, and activities

Supply chains

  • Food, goods, services, medical

Services

  • Grooming, cleaning, medical

Medical

  • Precautions, identification, treatment and care
    • Assets: facilities, specialists, equipment

Disruptive waves are challenging our lifestyle and this alters our day-to-day reality. When our reality changes, it affects our behaviors as we try to cope and adapt with the changes. Our ability to adapt is based on how we react to the new norm and what behaviors drive our new thinking. Our inability to adjust and cope to the new norm can add stress and further impact our ability to function in the new environment.  

TERTIARY WAVES

While we are being exposing to all of this chaos with secondary disrupted waves, we get pummeled by tertiary disruptive waves. These are due to the behavioral actions we take as our mental and emotional health is impacted from the continuing set of disruptive waves hitting us. We create these waves based on our actions. You see this in protests and some strange decision-making (hoarding and domestic violence). The tertiary waves can also amplify the secondary waves from the actions we take and transform them into a more destructive force.

Secondary waves can expose new behaviors in our being.

On the negative side, new behaviors can emerge out of frustration in coping and adjusting to disruption. These behaviors may look like:

  • Pessimistic
  • Defiance
  • Deceit
  • Anger
  • Withdrawn
  • Conflict
  • Passive
  • Societal breakdown
  • Hoard mentality (me)
  • Distrust
  • Grateful

On the positive side, new behaviors can emerge out of hope and the internal belief that change from disruption can open new paths.  These behaviors may look like:

  • Optimistic
  • Responsive
  • Pro-social
  • Confidence
  • Investigative
  • Active
  • Creative
  • Cooperative mentality (we)
  • Trust
  • Ungrateful

Mental health support is vital to minimize the creation of tertiary waves and stabilize the fabric of society.

PRE_EXISTING WAVES

Yet, there are another set of disruptive waves that have been with us all along for the journey. These are pre-existing waves and include natural disasters, geopolitical problems, general hardships, and health other than COVID-19. Most of us can manage through these waves since they are part of our everyday life and if a new pre-existing wave hit us, we can deal with it on a 1 to 1 basis. However, add these waves to the new waves created by COVID-19 and our ability to juggle all of this becomes difficult.  

DISRUPTIVE WAVES

A diagram of the disruptive waves would look like this.

The actual destructive force to us is from the constant exposure to many disruptive waves that hit us one after the other. The destructive force to us is not just about getting the COVID-19 disease, the secondary waves occur from many other sources. As human beings, we realize we are now a punching bag from these hits and we need help.

I chose to call the “force of impact” a wave since it reminds me of being at a beach while watching waves constantly pound the beach and grind the shells into fine white sand. The waves always seem to win the battle of the beach. If you have ever stepping to the ocean during rough surf, it is an amazing experience of power as you get smacked by wave after wave. You cannot fight a wave especially if they come with a strong force and repeat one after the other. 

The ability to adapt or collapse from the force of the waves seems to come from two things. One is our ability to embrace and manage change on a personal level. Each of us can help ourselves and one another with mental and emotional support thereby limiting the destructive impact of tertiary waves. The second is the need for leadership to guide us during troubling times on a community, business, or social level. Our ability to manage some of these waves is limited and high level leadership is required to help us through a coordinated effort.

COMPOSITION

To manage a wave, let’s look at its five properties and find solutions by understanding what the wave is and how they interact with one another.

  1. Composition
  2. Velocity
  3. Volume
  4. Periodicity
  5. Additive nature of waves

This article is not meant to provide solutions. Its purpose is to provide an understanding of the destructive nature of the forces that are changing how we live, work, and play. Through an understanding, you can develop solutions to address the threat. COVID-19 is an example of a primary disruptive wave but there will be more and they will take shape in various forms.

You cannot stop a wave but you can learn to adapt to it through understanding that in turn may alter the impact and nature of the disruptive wave.

This is a perfect time to embrace digital transformation. Connected businesses can adapt faster to rapid change and find their new sweet spot in the market as well as drive optimum customer experiences. COVID-19 nudged our world into chaos so be flexible and adapt quickly if you want to survive.

Filed Under: Consumer Engagement, Digital, Health, Insights - Analytics

Influencing Decision-Making To Support Engagement

April 15, 2016 by bobyurkovic

By Robert Yurkovic

April 15, 2016

Many businesses are focusing on customer experience, user experience, education, and incentives to engage people in healthy living for a healthier population. People are motivated by different things and we find that decisions play an important role in how people engage in healthy behavior. By focusing on how people make decisions, we engage them in a sustainable and meaningful ways.

Real engagement in health care is about constantly making good decisions that affects our health. For sustainable good health, the key word is constantly. In the HealthScape of things, it is a war out there and we are the victims. Supermarkets are loaded with bombs disguised as processed food. Physicians hand out meds at the end of each session because we expect to get something for the visit. If we do not receive our adult version of a goody bag, we feel unrewarded. Marketing has us confused with inconsistent, irrelevant labeling so we are not sure what to buy even though the product is labeled natural and good for you. Our day is loaded with stress and is compressed with work deadlines, family issues, and too many things to do and focus on. How can we focus on our health and stay focused? We need to understand how we make decisions on a daily basis and understand that we live around a stream of decisions that shapes what we do. I call the constant processing in our minds a decision stream, which is made up of micro-decisions, mini-decisions, and macro-decisions. If a person wants to do something, they have to make a decision to do it and if it is not in our crowded decision stream, it does not get done.

Engaging people to lead healthy lives is not about thrusting an informative paper or web page in our faces on how to sleep, what to eat, how to manage stress, work life balance, and what exercises you must do every day. A push strategy has shown little success and so we need to look inside of ourselves to see what makes us tick or, more simply put, how we make decisions on what we do and how we live. If we can influence decisions and gain entry into a person’s decision stream, we have a chance to obtain sustained engagement.

As human beings, we make decisions based on fact, fiction, and hearsay. We are easily influenced from a variety of sources and internal mechanisms. It is my theory that constant decisions form the basis for sustainable consumer engagement in healthcare so if we wish to achieve sustainable engagement, we must influence decision-making. I always thought of the mind as a balance of analytic and emotion components with emotional components having the greatest decision-making power. But I have learned there is much more to it, such as the unconscious mind, which influences our behaviors in subtle, but powerful ways. This increases the complexity of decision-making and makes engagement more difficult to understand. So far, I have identified five key decision-making influencers and am surprised to find that the analytic component does not have a major effect on decision-making in normal everyday life until the moment we are thrust into making difficult decisions due to an adverse event or situation.

In my recent book, “Commercializing Consumer Engagement”, I created a quote to set the tone for the material. In 2014, I said, “Human are extraordinary beings that rise to face adversity but need adversity to be able to rise.” We are truly motivated to make good decisions and act accordingly when placed in a position of adversity. In other words, we tend to eat the right foods just after we had a heart attack or reduce our sugar intake after we learned we have diabetes type II. But when things are good, we tend to relax on our decision-making expertise which often lead to experiences that are less than optimal.

I understand the meaning of the following saying, “Live life like it is the last day of your life.” If we believe we would die tomorrow, our decisions are more analytic in nature and lead to better outcomes. Mortality has a way to motivate us in making good life decisions. The question is, why wait until something goes wrong to make healthy decisions? Why not influence our decision-making now and achieve and maintain a healthy lifestyle?

Three Parts of the Mind Molecule

Before we get into the five influencers, let’s look at the mind and the role it plays in more detail. The mind plays 3 roles in decision-making and controls much of what we do and believe.

I found there is a middle brain and not just a right and left brain in how we think. I updated my earlier view of the Mind Molecule to include a third part … the unconscious mind. I moved knowing from mental part and habit/focus from the emotion part to the unconscious part. The middle brain or mind is the intuitive part of the mind.

We witness how the mind works in an event with potential danger. We can’t put our finger on it through analyzing our situation and while the event may seem like a lot of fun, we decide not to do it due to our intuitive mind advising us not to do it. While this example may keep us out of danger, it also provides the hurdle of inertia preventing us to make a change in our lifestyle.

The tree parts of the Mind Molecule make up three of the five key influencers in decision-making. That also means that two of the three influencers of decision-making do not even get processed in the conscious mind but are somehow connected to the unconscious.

Mind Molecule

Five Decision Influencers

The five decision influencers, which are identified below, show how difficult it is to make a decision since we are inundated with stimulus from multiple sources. Later, I will explore the need for decision mapping so we may understand what influences our decision-making behaviors with the hope of guiding us to make good decisions through positive motivation rather than experiencing an adverse event.

5 Decision Influencers

ANALYTIC

The analytic mind likes facts, numbers, logic, and quantitative data. We can get lost in the data and analysis with the emotional side of the mind finding it boring. In health, we don’t see a forthcoming threat until we experience pain. Facts and figures should be compelling enough to persuade us to do the right thing but this part of the mind only accounts for one-fifth of the decision-making process.

Even though data suggests a proper direction to be taken or a decision to be made, we often ignore it due to an emotion or “gut feel” that another viewpoint is more compelling. Sometimes, the first stage of the decision process is to perform an analysis so we can tell ourselves we did our due diligence to make an informed decision. Check mark! Then we move on to convince ourselves that this could be wrong. Why? Emotions and influencers are more powerful that logic and facts. Sometimes, rules are not to be followed and better judgement comes from other sources and sometimes, the data leads us in the wrong direction.

EMOTION

Most of us understand that many decisions we make are based on emotion, such as buying a car or clothes. Many companies use the coolness factor to influence our decision to buy and use. Advertising plays off of this premise so we buy products based on emotional impact instead of actual product content.

With regard to health, not many of us actually read the contents of food products we buy at the supermarket so packaging and brand influences most of our purchase decisions. Consumerism plays a huge role in decision making so we look for products that are convenient and easy to prepare. These products satisfy an emotional need for comfort and simplicity even if the decision is … I made my life easier. Health, on the other hand, is not easily attained and requires focus and work.

Emotions may not lead to rational decision-making and in the case of consumerism, convenience over powers a healthy lifestyle. Emotion can trick us into thinking that ‘easy’ provides a good lifestyle and we deserve it since we work so hard. Our mind is confused by good lifestyle and healthy lifestyle. The analytic mind is needed to focus our decisions so that good now means healthy and we are now emotionally satisfied with being healthy.

With emotions playing such as large role in decision-making, one would think that the emotional satisfaction of looking good in a bathing suit in the summer would be enough to persuade us to be healthy and lose our winter weight. But, no, the unconscious mind has a strong influence over our emotions and the habit of eating more during the winter is so strong, its inertia carries us through the summer months.

UNCONSCIOUS

The unconscious mind is an important part of the decision-making process and, like snowflakes; our unconscious minds are unique to each of us. Influences come from our habits, rewards, personal associations, ethics, and social proof. These are things that make us feel comfortable. We make decisions in this area before they even get to the conscious mind for emotional or analytic review. We tend to do what is expected by others and conform to an acceptable, comfortable norm. Yes, we are creatures that do not like change.

With many variables embedded in our unconscious mind, it may be challenging to understand what key influencers are impacting health related decisions. The unconscious mind is a very personal view of ourselves since the mix of variables makes us quite unique. It is important to understand how the unconscious mind affects out decision-making process by searching for hidden root causes. This is an another reason why hypnosis can work on treating chronic diseases since it has so much power of the analytic and emotion side of the mind.

BODY

Another major influence on decision-making is our physical bodies. Our bodies seemed to know what we need to eat when we need essential minerals or compounds. We get a craving that fires off an action to consume spinach for its iron or bananas for their potassium. I believe craving stimulates an automatic part of the mind that makes a rapid-fire decision that may not be rational, habitual, or emotional. The physical body bypasses the analytic, unconscious, and emotional decision part of our brain and we go from physical body right to action without conscious or unconscious thought … we immediately decide to eat something to satisfy a physical need.

The physical body is a real time trigger for decision-making. The body tells us to stop eating when we are full. This may be overridden by the desire to eat more ice cream or drink too much beer because we receive emotional value from it.

What if we use connected devices to monitor the body and inform us to take action for a specific need. We now combine body and the fifth influencer … digital.

DIGITAL

When we add connected devices (IoT) to the mix, we will probably see more decisions made through devices that bypass our mind for authority. Yes, these decisions are made for us as we enter a new wave of digital evolution called Controlled Living. The connected devices feed off of our body’s data and these semi-intelligent devices trigger a response or decision to do something. This can simplify a saturated, internal decision-stream by routing micro-data to devices for making micro-decisions so we don’t have to think about it. This concept makes our world more convenient but also removes the human element of health care. This certainly fits into the key tenets of consumerism – convenience and easy to use.

The implications cause some concern. While I like the idea of reducing errors through rules-based connected devices, I want important health or personal decisions to be made by my emotional, unconscious, rational, crazy mind. Maybe it is better to have devices make micro-decisions since I am not shedding 10 pounds by my present method of decision-making. I may need a kick in the butt by a digital conscience or motivator. Digital therapy can be useful if properly integrated into the other four influencers in decision-making.

In the years to come, IoT will play a larger role in decision-making so my question is, what will drop out of the decision stream to accommodate it or will the decision-stream become less cluttered to allow for more significant decisions?

Balance

There needs to be a balance of power between the analytic, emotion, and unconscious mind. We can also use the emotion side and unconscious side of the mind to influence healthy decisions instead of providing rational logic and information to people. Combine the mind with the body and digital devices and we can create influencers for a decision experience supporting decisions around healthy choices.

Since we may not be able to balance a person’s decision-making process, it is important to understand how they make decisions and which of their decision influencers are in control so we can focus on the key influencers from that part of the mind-body. I am not suggesting we manipulate the person’s mind, but instead work within their own framework to trigger decisions based on a healthy lifestyle.

The Mechanics of Decision-Making

DECISION STREAM

We process information at an alarming rate and I see people making multiple decisions every second. I call the small ones micro-decisions and the 5 plus decisions made every second makes up a decision stream. Micro-decisions may be thought of as seeing a color and deciding on whether you like it, seeing something and deciding to view it more closely, or seeing a person and deciding whether to talk to them and then another decision fires immediately about the topic to talk about. The decision stream is a crowded place filled with micro-decisions and big decisions. We prioritize what goes into the decision stream based on the influencers and their importance. I could say that micro-decisions add clutter and impedes our ability to focus on what is important so focusing on the ‘now’ and prioritizing health decisions as important is critical for our mind to process them.

As discussed earlier, decision influencers are the mind (conscious analytic, conscious emotional, unconscious), physical body, and digital. There is only so much bandwidth available in the mind-body to accommodate decisions so if we are to engage someone in a healthy behavior; we need influencers to be inserted into the decision stream as our thought processes occur. While decisions flow into the decision stream, they go through a four step process for action or for a person to engage.

5 DECISION-MAKING STEPS

There are 5 key steps toward making a decision that leads to engagement.

  1. If a person has a chronic health condition, they need to be aware of it and recognize it is a problem. At this point, the issue is now in the decision stream in which it can flourish or die.
  2. Next, they have to understand its effect on them and internalize it thereby making it personal. At this step, the issue takes root in the mind as a priority in the decision stream.
  3. The next step is about how a solution can help me as I seek to validate a solution before making a decision to proceed.
  4. The fourth step is about authorizing myself to do something. This is where many people get lost. They agree to do something with a ‘check mark mentality’ and enter a holding pattern of inaction. For fitness, they may buy a connected device to track activity, but fail to integrate it into their lifestyle.
  5. The final step in the decision-making process is to make a final commitment and prioritize a place in the decision stream so we constantly decide to do it over and over again.

DECISION EXPERIENCE AND MAPPING

As people, it is our habit to focus more on our health after something goes terribly wrong. The emotional aspect of a health event forces the analytic part of the mind to play a larger role in decision-making. We start to eat more healthy foods after a heart attack or stop eating so much sugar and carbs after being diagnosed with diabetes. Our decision-making priorities have shifted decision control to reason. It seems adversity is a key motivator for making smart health decisions. The trick to engagement is to force a decision to the analytic mind before we experience adversity in our health. We can capture our attention in the decision stream through feelings in the emotional mind and through influencing in the unconscious mind. We need influencers and raised awareness in the early stages of potential adverse health conditions to shift decision-making focus on them to avoid a drastic health event. If we want to influence decisions and engage people in better health habits, we need to understand their decision streams and what influences their decisions to engage people in healthy behaviors. We must get past the emotional and unconscious aspects before we tap into the analytic mind to educate people in making informed decisions. Customer experience and user experience does not cover this. I believe Decision Experience (DX) is required to account for this. Decision mapping may be the next thing in understanding how to engage consumers in better health.

When performing a decision map exercise, use personas as you would with a customer experience journey map. There are so many variables in the unconscious mind, the personas will allow you to focus on key influencers and group them.

Select a persona and a chronic disease, such as class 1 obesity, before proceeding. Develop an approach to engaging them with that chronic disease.  The approach includes influencers and tasks for each decision step. Ask the people if that influencer resulted in a positive decision for each step and apply a diamond to the appropriate layer. At the end, you should expose influencers that worked the most for that persona with a specific chronic disease. This will also allow you to focus on correcting influencers to provide a correct decision. The more positives in the Correct Decision band should result in sustained engagement.

Decision Map

Decision mapping identifies triggers and influencers along the path of engagement for people. Instead of identifying our emotional satisfaction or experience at interaction / touch points as we map Customer Experience journeys, we identify influencers and triggers at decision points along the person’s thought process. Understanding the DX for a person enables us to shape an experience in their decision stream and guide them along the 4 steps of decision-making to achieve sustainable engagement. The objective is a healthier population by engineering an environment to facilitate proper decision-making before adversity occurs.

Filed Under: Consumer Engagement, Devices - IoT, Digital, Health, Insights - Analytics

Digital Comes in Waves – IoT and Health

January 24, 2016 by bobyurkovic

By Robert Yurkovic

January 24, 2016

Digital is not new, it’s just a hot topic as we make another leap forward in technology. Computers ushered in a new era in the 60’s and 70’s through automation to businesses and our lives. Digital continues to impact our lives every decade in a significant way. But only recently has it taken an interesting turn whose impact will be felt in every aspect of our lives and lifestyle. As computers invaded our lives, they started with industrial applications and shifted to consumer-centric uses. IoT is also experiencing the same shift and we see this in the growth of personal devices supporting uses such as health, fitness, and home automation. Is this a great time or what? Or is it a time to think about what we are doing with technology before it alters our lifestyle, or worse, eradicates the human element?

digital evolution

Health care needs technology to connect disparate services and provide relevant data enabling health professionals to collaborate and make intelligent medical decisions about our health. IoT can also help expose medical mistakes before causing serious harm. Connected devices are permeating the health industry with new applications and promises of better health. How we implement technology is as important as the technology we use.

Consumer Behaviors and Health

The era of online consumerism has forever changed the way we think as well as what we expect. We expect services that are easy and convenient, and products that appear at our doorstep only a day or two after placing an online order. The concept of quick and easy is seen in the marketing of health products offered to the public – lose weight, look younger, or get healthier in a few weeks. Consumers want to feel good and if we can do it quick and easy, it fits into our hectic lifestyle. With our busy schedules, we don’t have time to think and patience is a trait not worth waiting for. Unfortunately, good health requires an investment of time that is not often convenient to our lazy mindset.

Connected Living

The proliferation of connected devices reinforces the behaviors of convenience as we sit back and let micro-devices begin to control our life. Wouldn’t it be great if a device attached to your skin senses an abnormality, which could trigger a future heart attack, and then the device sends a warning to your smartphone, care-givers, or a local medical center? Perhaps a connected device samples your saliva and finds your glucose level is high, which could be a sign of pre-diabetes or finds a high level of specific bacteria in your mouth indicating probable tooth decay. These examples help the person to manage their health in real time and provide early treatment with a side effect of lower medical costs. They are examples of Connected Living. Connected health care has many benefits for the person, community and economy. Connected Living is good for everyone and the healthcare system also benefits.

Controlled Living

However, if we continue to follow our path of convenient and easy living, we can become too reliant on connected devices to make decisions for us. With a high number of connected devices residing on the network, there has to be a form of artificial intelligence (AI) among themselves since a trillion devices would clog the network and ultimately the connecting hubs. The connected devices could share data with each other and make, what I call, micro-decisions using light AI. A blood monitoring device could regulate insulin delivery based on data received by that device. This is good and the person benefits. The danger is, if a collection of devices expand beyond a specific function, such as insulin delivery, and makes micro-decisions affecting our environment; it alters our lifestyle and habits based on device data and micro-decision rules. When AI’s ability goes beyond light AI, we enter the digital stage of Controlled Living. Keeping the human element in our lives is important and especially important for our health and lifestyle. Just because I am feeling a little blue one day, I do not want a device to detect this and inject something to perk me up. The rule of “if feeling bad, correct by drug” may seem logical since who doesn’t want to feel good but not in a way that is manipulated by a device or logical rule. Perhaps I need to feel a little blue since my dog was injured and the experience is part of living. No amount of digital data and logic rules can replace the intuition and problem solving capability of medical professionals.

Artificial Intelligence

Stephen Hawking warned us about the risks of artificial intelligence. We need light AI to manage the network of connected devices to keep the network from over-saturating. But when AI takes over personal decision-making, we welcome an easier lifestyle and become lazy and complacent. The nation’s population is becoming unhealthier every year as we continue adopt lazy and complacent behaviors. Our bodies are deteriorating so let’s not let the mind suffer as well. Decision-making keeps us healthy and helps us learn as we experience life.

Decision-Making

Decision-making has three components – the analytic side, emotional side, and the unconscious side of the mind. We make most of our decisions based on the emotional side and the unconscious side. Last year, I created a Mind Molecule model showing the analytic and emotional elements of our minds. I added a new lobe, the unconscious side where decision-making occurs through influences, habits, and internal ethics. The model supports the components of how we think and behave. Emotions, such as compassion, are not logical and cannot be programmed into a connected device so the device has a limited ability to make complex, worldly decisions. Influences from other stimuli can provide good and bad outcomes and we have already seen this with social media. Now we can think about the impact of device media – shared opinions from digital devices.

Mind Molecule

Insurance Payers and Technology

Another issue that is surfacing recognizes many medical professionals are processing people quickly and not taking the time to discover root causes. In an effort to reduce medical costs, some Payers limit the time per patient and limit treatment to reduce waste. For doctors to make reasonable a profit, they quickly identify a symptom, treat it, and move on to the next person. The concept of value based compensation may change this if the Payers let the doctors do their job properly, but controlled devices will exacerbate this problem if Payers rely on technology to diagnose and treat people. Technology may not show all evidence of a health problem or the root cause; the health problem may require more than device data to solve it. This became evident when I interviewed a physical therapist. She stated the Payer would only let her treat the neck where the pain was located even though she knew, through her training, that the cause of the neck pain was from the hip area. Again, being quick and easy does not improve health care – we are complex systems and deserve more.

Digital Technology as an Enabler

Technology is not a solution, but an enabler to a solution. With technology, it is important to implement it in a way that does not interfere with the human element in decision-making. Effective health care requires the human element. We must harness the power of technology and manage it in a way that supports a better life and solutions that enable individuals and professionals. We are in a stage of Connected Living and it is important to chart our course carefully without making things too easy and convenient. Sometimes, low cost and a short cut is not the correct answer to support quality of life. I agree with Professor Hawking in that Controlled Living dehumanizes people so beware; we need to shift the current trend of removing the human element as we embrace IoT.

Filed Under: Digital, Insights - Analytics

Key Influencers on How We Make Decisions

November 10, 2015 by bobyurkovic

As human beings, we make decisions in the most peculiar ways. Decisions are influenced from a variety of sources and internal mechanisms. It is my theory that decisions form the basis for sustainable consumer engagement in healthcare so if we wish to achieve sustainable engagement, we must understand what makes us tick – what makes us decide to do things. I always thought of the mind as a balance of analytic and emotion components with emotional components having the greatest influencing power. But I have learned there is much more to it and this increases the complexity of decision-making and makes engagement more difficult to understand. It is interesting to explore the need for decision mapping so we may understand what influences and engages people.

Decision mapping will be a key to understanding how we influence and engage people.

EMOTION

Most of us understand that many decisions we make are based on emotion, such as buying a car or clothes. Many companies use the coolness factor to influence a decision. Advertising plays off of this premise so we buy products based on emotional context instead of actual product content. With regard to health, not many of us actually read the contents of food products we buy at the supermarket so packaging and brand influences most of our purchase decisions. Consumerism plays a huge role in decision making so we look for products that are convenient and easy to prepare. These products satisfy an emotional need for comfort and simplicity even if the decision is … I made my life easier.

UNCONSCIOUS

At the recent Next Edge Health Experience Summit in Philadelphia, I talked with a fellow speaker, Philip Graves, about his point of view that healthcare needs to consider the unconscious mind for engagement. He also said we cannot understand what it takes to make each one of us engage since we are so unique. The unconscious mind is an important part of the decision-making process and, like snowflakes, our unconscious minds are unique to each of us. Philip says influences come from habits, rewards, associations and social proof. We make decisions in this area before they even get to the conscious mind for emotional or analytic review. We tend to do what is expected by others and conform to an acceptable norm.

BODY

Another major influence on decision-making is our physical bodies. In a chat with Dennis Robbins during the Next Edge event, we were walking along the waterfront and talking about health and the importance of person-centric care. I mentioned that our bodies seemed to know what to eat when we need essential minerals or compounds. We get a craving that fires off an action to consume spinach for its iron or bananas for their potassium. I believed craving stimulates the mind to make a decision, but Dennis said the physical body bypasses the analytic and emotional decision part of our brain and we go from physical body right to action … we immediately decide to eat something to satisfy a physical need. The physical body is a real time trigger for decisions.

DECISION STREAM

Now to make matters more complex, I see us as making multiple decisions every second. I call them micro-decisions and the 5 plus decisions made every second makes up a decision stream. Micro-decisions may be thought of as seeing a color and deciding on whether you like it, seeing something and deciding to view it more closely, or seeing a person and deciding whether to talk to them and then another decision fires immediately about the topic to talk about. You get the basic idea. In reality, we make a lot of decisions all the time and most of them are small micro-decisions. As discussed earlier, decision influencers are the mind (conscious analytic, conscious emotional, unconscious), physical body, and soon to come … IoT. There is only so much bandwidth available in the mind-body to accommodate decisions so if we are to engage someone is a healthy behavior, we need influencers to be inserted into the decision stream as a priority over something else already in the stream. Whether that means squeezing out micro-decisions to make room for substantial important health decisions or raise the priority of health decisions in the stream. I could say that micro-decisions add clutter and impedes our ability to prioritize and focus on what is important so losing a few may make us saner in the long run.

DIGITAL

When we add connected devices, IoT, to the mix, we will probably see more decisions made through devices … yes, decisions made for us as we enter a new digital evolution wave of Controlled Living. The connected devices feed off of our body’s data and these semi-intelligent devices will trigger a response or decision to do something. This can simplify a saturated decision-stream by routing micro-data to devices for decision-making so we don’t have to think about it. This certainly fits into the key tenets of consumerism – convenience and easy. The implications cause some concern. While I like the idea of reducing errors through rules-based connected devices, I want important health or personal decisions to be made by my emotional, unconscious, crazy mind. Oh, maybe it is better to have devices make micro-decisions. I am not shedding the 10 pounds I need to lose by my present method of decision-making. I need a kick in the butt by a digital coach. In the years to come, IoT will play a larger role in decision-making so my question is, what will drop out of the decision stream to accommodate it? Scary question.

5 Decision Influencers

Five Decision Influencers

DECISION EXPERIENCE AND MAPPING

As people, it is our habit to focus more on our health after something goes terribly wrong. The analytic and emotional parts of the mind start to play a larger role in decision-making. We start to eat more healthy foods after a heart attack or stop eating so much sugar after being diagnosed with diabetes. We need other influencers in the early stages of potential health conditions that are not as drastic as a major health event. If we want to influence decisions and engage people in better health habits, we need to understand their decision streams and what influences their decisions to engage people in healthy behaviors. Customer experience and user experience does not cover this. I think I created a new term … Decision Experience (DX). Decision mapping may be the next big thing and I cover some of this as the 4 key steps to decision-making in my book, Commercializing Consumer Engagement. Decision mapping identifies triggers and influencers along the path of engagement for people.

Filed Under: Consumer Engagement, Culture, Insights - Analytics

We Need More Cultural Disruption

April 8, 2015 by bobyurkovic

We tend to focus on disruption in technology, but we should notice a disruption in culture as well. This may sound strange coming from a person educated in engineering but I found that healthcare requires cultural disruption in order to fix healthcare as we know it … broken pieces to a consumer’s eyes.

Technology

Everyone loves technology and it surrounds us cradle to grave. Why not? Technology disruption creates opportunities, instability (catalyst for change), and perspective shifts in our thinking. The issue is that we tend to focus on technology disruption while ignoring the potential for cultural disruption. Technology disruption enables things to change using technology as a tool. Technology enablers include such things as mobility, devices (IoT), cloud, and analytics. They are very important and have led to great discoveries and cool tools such as smartphones and innovative medical devices. We design them based on usability standards and consumer needs. But, is that enough?

Wearables are gaining in popularity and also end up in your dresser draw in a few weeks or months once the novelty wears off. The reason we stop using them could be due to several reasons.

  1. Lack of usefulness – there is no health program attached to them so their value is limited to monitoring data – that can get boring quickly
  2. The coolness factor dissipated
  3. There is no consideration for cultural disruption and conversion

It is fine to offer cool technologies that have the potential to add value to our lifestyles, but if you want true sustainable engagement, cultural disruption must also occur.

Cultural Disruption

Cultural disruption focuses on our and the larger communities behaviors. Behavioral change can lead to sustainable shifts in what we do and how we act. Cultural enablers include social, community, personal behaviors, customer experience, and organizational behaviors. Cultural disruption can lead to sustainable change because it focuses on us, the consumers and our surrounding community. Our inner core being must be touched in order to make and keep a change in our behavior. We look to other people as influencers to help us with decision-making and on what we adopt. Localization has a strong impact on health programs. Health care is personal and local programs tend to work better than pushed remote, corporate programs because they deal with the cultural aspect of our lives that reside in our homes and community. Cultural disruption can help consumers manage chronic diseases by altering their perspective on their health and in decision-making behaviors.

Cultural disruption causes a shift in our thinking and expectations. It also sets up new internal rules for us to follow. From this disruption, we may decide to integrate something into our lifestyle, decide what we focus on, or behave in a different way. If we want to make a change in how we manage our health, a wearable device by itself is not enough. We need cultural disruption to occur.

Apple did it

Steve Jobs performed cultural disruption very well with his innovative mobile products and those products were more about cultural change than they were about technology. That technology had been around a while, but Jobs focused on how it would impact our lifestyle, particularly around entertainment.

Disruption in Healthcare

Health care needs to focus on cultural disruption and continue to make advances in the areas of technology. Technology alone will not make a sustainable difference. Businesses allocate large budgets on IT and they should think about allocating resources around culture as it impacts their organization and products. Technology disruption must be aligned with a cultural disruption to make a difference in consumer engagement or any engagement for that matter. We need more cultural disruption in all industries.

Filed Under: Culture, Health, Insights - Analytics

Decision-Making Behaviors

November 18, 2014 by bobyurkovic

According to Procter & Gamble, shoppers make up their minds about a product in 3 to 7 seconds, just the time it takes to note a product on a store shelf (Proctor & Gamble, 2006). P&G calls this time the First Moment of Truth (FMOT), and it’s considered the most important marketing opportunity for a brand at the time (WSJ, 2005). The First Moment of Trust occurs at the “shelf” or buying area. The stimulus represents advertising, which influences the decision to purchase and occurs before the consumer reaches the shelf to make a purchasing decision.

FMOT 2

Proctor and Gamble’s View of Marketing

ZMOT

Google came up with the Zero Moment of Truth or ZMOT (Lecinski) . This occurs before the First Moment Of Truth and influences the decision making process before the time of purchase. The Second Moment Of Truth (SMOT) occurs after you take the product home and use it. If the SMOT is shared, the SMOT becomes the next person’s ZMOT, providing a constantly evolving influencing cycle. You can see how experiences can go viral rapidly through social sharing.

ZMOT 2

Google ZMOT

Why is the ZMOT important? It was found that the ZMOT is a major influencer in making purchasing decisions; even more so than the point of stimulus. It is also important because most of us use it and we are not even aware of it.

Would it surprise you to know that:

  • 70% of Americans now say they look at product reviews before making a purchase? (Google Z. M., 2011).
  • 79% of consumers now say they use a smartphone to help with shopping? (MediaCT, 2011)
  • 83% of moms say they do online research after seeing TV commercials for products that interest them? (Google O. , 2009).

Shoppers today use twice as many sources to arrive at a decision than they did in 2010. This is almost 100% growth in four years. In health care, about 11 sources are used in ZMOT (Sciences, The Zero Moment of Truth page 9, 2011).

The following diagram uses data from a study asking the question, “When you were considering purchasing, what sources of information did you seek out to help with your decision?”

ZMOT avg sources used 3

Number of Sources Used in Decision-Making

The real power of social media and social channels is this is where the influencers are connecting with consumers. It is where the influencing is done and where consumers learn. Decision makers seek out influencers in order to make decisions. Decision makers want to be advised, so targeted messaging needs to occur from the influencers. This is the reason why content is so important in the new rules of marketing since relevancy matters.

Content becomes the basis for teaching influencers. In the health management space, members will make health decisions based on what others say and the content supporting it. Content is the fuel and social is the conduit. Mobility is the accelerator.

The following diagram uses data from a Google study asking the question, “When you were considering purchasing, what sources of information did you seek out to help with your decision?” (Google/Shopper Sciences, 2011).

MOTs and sources 2

Sources of Information Used in Purchasing Decisions

Google (Sciences, The Zero Moment of Truth page 12, 2011)

It was found that the ZMOT was more influential in making decisions than the FMOT or Stimulus stages. Many companies are shifting advertising budgets from advertising to social areas to gain greater impact in the consumer’s decision-making process. The role of social media is very important since it acts as a platform for the ZMOT to occur, thus replacing Stimulus as the predominate influencer.

Companies no longer create brands; they are now created by consumers and companies during the moments of truth and based on experienced emotions and perceived value.

  • Companies can earn relevance through moments of insight from consumer interactions or see brand deterioration when negative experiences goes viral
  • Post-commerce experiences contribute to the customer relationship through moments of emotions

The value of engagement must be determined if a great experience is to be realized. The value, if not measured alone, is what it does or fixes; it must have an emotional satisfaction component with it. An experience can be disrupted in any MOT so thought must be taken during experience development since it affects all MOTs.

The value is impacted by the customer’s experiences and those experiences are shared and can influence other people’s experiences. A shared experience can be “owned” once embraced, even those it was not realized personally (perceived reality). The relationship can be altered through an indirect interaction – someone else’s experience.

Brian Solis developed a concept called the Ultimate Moment of Truth (UMOT) in his book, “What’s The Future of Business” (Solis, 2013). The UMOT occurs long after the date of purchase and after consumers have experienced the use of the product or the company’s customer service.

ZMOT and Healthcare

I observed similar behaviors between buying products and in decision making for health care, since decisions made for your health are similar to purchasing a product or service.

Engagement is about adopting and deciding to manage one’s health. So a process and system for coaxing buyers down the funnel to a buy decision is basically the same as a process to engage members in health management – engaging them in small steps through awareness/informing/education using content. Marketing automation calls this lead nurturing. In the health engagement space, I call it health nurturing.

MOT healthcare

Moment of Truths in Healthcare

It is important to understand why the ZMOT and customer experiences are important for Payers and Providers.

Reasons why the ZMOT and the UMOT are important

  • Influencers in health plan purchasing choices, plan use, and customer service.
  • The brand is ever more important in a B2C world and the brand is crafted in the ZMOT and social media by consumers.
  • Relationship building can increase in the UMOT to support consumers’ use of health benefits.
  • Good customer service and engaging consumers both happen in the ZMOT.
  • You need to understand the ZMOT in building experiences for consumers. Generating useful experiences will impact organization alignment to be more consumer-centric.
  • Managing social network interactions directly influences the ZMOT.
  • The ZMOT occurs in real time and anywhere through mobile enablement.
  • Information captured in the ZMOT is used to enhance processes, products, and services.
    As the industry shifts and business strategy changes, making changes requires communicating those changes and listening in the ZMOT.

Excerpted from my book titled, “Commercializing Consumer Engagement.”

Filed Under: Consumer Engagement, Experience, Insights - Analytics

Point of View in Consumer Centricity

June 26, 2014 by bobyurkovic

Whitepaper

Abstract

Companies launch products and services to consumers with the thought that their product will offer so much value to the consumer without considering the bigger picture. It is a holistic view of the consumer experience that matters if consumer centricity is to be attained. The combination of a product’s functionality and the experience it offers sets a condition for potential consumer engagement and relationship development. Translating this to healthcare, it is important for payers to provide information and tools so members manage their health while offering a connected experience to simplify and navigate the complex maze of healthcare.

Executive Summary

The shift to consumer-driven health is evolving rapidly. Payers need to adapt to retain their members, stay relevant, and manage costs. With medical costs rising and consumers managing their health, payers want to engage them in healthy behaviors and cost-effective decision making. To engage members, payers need to develop trusted relationships and form useful interactions with their members. Relationships require a combination of a superior experience and products that help members manage their health.

A once antagonistic relationship can turn into a productive, lasting relationship by forming an experience high in usability around services and products that interact with consumers, as well as creating the whole experience or journey in dealing with a payer.

Traditionally, healthcare payers focused on providing support to their members through transactions. Transactions include such tasks as looking up benefits, submitting claims, and looking up providers. This is a “get the job done” mentality and lacks a good experience. Transactions support only a fraction of what members need in a consumer-driven world. Health reform and Consumer-Directed Health Plans (CDHPs) started the transformation to consumer-focused healthcare. CDHPs put the consumer or member in control of their health, which places demands on the payers to provide relevant information and useful tools that support decision making and healthy living.

Payers cannot develop meaningful relationships through transactions alone. They need to go where consumers engage with life every day: their lifestyles. Lifestyle is the day-to-day living where healthy behaviors are set and routines developed. Enablers in healthcare, such as biometric devices and mobility, offer a strong connection to consumers, providing immediate monitoring and feedback of their health indicators. The devices and their applications are tools that support members’ healthy lifestyles. A great experience with useful products that target a member’s lifestyle is a winning combination to improve personal health and manage costs.

Doing The Job

There is a need to combine experience and function into a consumer model, and I believe there is a strong use for it in healthcare to achieve member engagement. An idea came to me after I read about the work of Clayton Christensen and a fellow researcher. It was an article on “Milkshake Marketing” from Harvard Business School published in 2011. Clayton’s claim is that 95% of new products fail, and companies need to look at products in the way that customers do: how a product “gets the job done.” Jobs have functional, emotional, and social dimensions.

I was fascinated by this article, which followed the role of a milkshake in the eyes of a consumer. The goal was to increase the sales of milkshakes. The study found that consumers bought the most milkshakes in the morning and for a common reason. Consumers faced a long commute and needed something to make their commute more interesting. They were not hungry but would be by 10:00 a.m. The milkshake was thick, so sucking through a straw gave them something to do. They were in business clothes and the milkshake was less likely to get their clothes dirty than a donut or bagel would; it was contained enjoyment.

Traditional marketing says to segment the market by demographics and product. Clayton’s argument was to segment according to jobs-to-be-done. Focusing on the job, they found that by increasing the thickness and adding chunks of fruit, they enhanced the job-to-be-done and sales increased. They also had another version, a treat for children with a thinner consistency so parents would not have to wait for them to finish it. This shows two jobs that needed to be done. Now add experience.

Experience

I noticed a correlation between a product’s job and the overall experience the person has with it. It seems that more than just user experience (usability), this involves the journey or customer experience of the event before use, during use, and after use. I observed that products that were lean on features but robust on the experience were more likely to be adopted and succeed. The concept of consumers choosing packaging over content has been around for a while. We choose a laundry detergent because our family used it when growing up (brand) or the color of the package is striking (packaging). Not many people actually read and understand the chemistry of the ingredients (content). Maybe we are seeing a shift in consumer behavior and the new form of “packaging” is the experience. Personally, I sacrifice features to remove the hassles of product selection, purchase, and use. To me, experience became the product differentiator, if for no other reason than to avoid adding frustration to my busy lifestyle. If a vendor has a useful product with a great experience, then I do not mind waiting in lines to get it, either. Even the wait can turn into an interesting experience if we design the experience well.

The following figure shows a model for connecting the experience and functionality with consumer relationships

job-experience

Scenario 1 – High excitement and limited use

Product type                  Fad
Consumer feeling         Excited
Consumer mode          Courtship

If you have a useful product that offers a great experience in purchasing it and using it, you could see strong user adoption. The excitement may not be sustained over time, as users realize the “fun” is gone and the usability of the product has waned. Remember the fads of yesteryear. Clothing can fit into the category of a fad. Articles of clothing that have lost their excitement include bleached jeans, hoop earrings, penny loafers, and leggings. They are still functional, but a shift in the experience occurred. Experience can impact the functionality, as well. If a style no longer creates a good feeling while wearing it, the clothing no longer “performs its job” to make the person feel good, and it will be discarded for another piece of clothing. In this mode, you create a short-term relationship and the product seems more like a fad with a short lifecycle.

Scenario 2 – High use and limited experience

Product type                  Commodity
Consumer feeling         Bored
Consumer mode          Acceptance

A product such as phone service and cable TV from a cable provider, which does an OK job and provides a poor customer experience, may not have a foundation for a relationship to develop. Forrester reports the customer index for cable TV providers is in the poor range. From a consumer perspective, we put up with the cable TV provider and consumers accept what they are given but will jump to another provider at an opportunity if the product stops performing or they are fed up with the experience. This industry has retention issues, which could be more severe if there were more vendors offering services. The barrier to switching to another provider is low.

Scenario 3 – High use and high experience

Product type                  Valued
Consumer feeling         Satisfied
Consumer mode          Engagement

If you have a service with great products and a satisfying experience, such as Amazon. com, there is a foundation on which to build a relationship – even online. Amazon ripped business away from brick-and-mortar stores and offers excellent customer service throughout my shopping experience. I get reviews of products, updates on my order, and an evolving shipping status in real time. The experience supports two tenants of consumerism: It is convenient and fast. Facebook is another example of a product that does the job without getting overly complicated and offers a good experience. Users of Facebook are truly engaged and we see this in how much time is spent on it. It has integrated into the user’s lifestyle – a powerful combination.

To sustain the relationship and use, you must either tune the experience to keep it fresh or maintain the usefulness of the product. I believe I see this in Apple’s iPods. I own four iPods and wondered, “Why?” Apple generated a fun experience for me with their initial product launch. For me, it hit the fad stage first and moved into the valued area. Early iPods did the job of playing music, but over time I began to retire my iPod to a drawer. Why? I found that the excitement of having one diminished and the experience decreased. I then moved into the commodity area.

Soon, Apple released a newer model, which increased my excitement, and the bonus was the newer model had a new feature, making it seem more useful to me. So I bought it. I believe that I quickly moved back to the fad area. Usefulness and experience are high again, so I drift into the valued area. Repeat that cycle nine months later.

It seems like the experience was being pulsed to hook me into buying “upgrades” to keep the experience going. I call this “Pulsating Experience Marketing.” I was an experience junkie, and the behavior seemed a lot like the way I play with a cat. I would put a toy on a string and then tease the cat by moving the toy close and then pulling it away. Repeat for a sustainable experience. Without the introduction of a new experience, the first iPod would have gone to my daughter’s play box with no repeat of the cycle. I believe that experience and usefulness are closely linked to driving consumer behavior, and behaviors drive consumer engagement.

Experience + Job = Relationship

Expanding on the concept of “Milkshake Marketing” and translating it to healthcare and consumer engagement, payers “do the job” of providing benefit plans and services to consumers. In their annual customer experience index, Forrester ranks health plans in the “poor-to-very-poor” range, mostly because the experience of purchasing and using health plans is less than desirable. On top of this, payers lack differentiation between themselves, and there is a low barrier to change payers for consumers. This is largely because payers do not practice relationship building with consumers.

Contrary to popular belief, payers want to engage consumers and help them live a healthy life, but consumers do not want to be engaged by payers at this early stage. Instead, consumers prefer to have an existing relationship in place with payers in order to build a deeper relationship. Only when the consumer experience and the “job to be done” are considered acceptable by the consumer, can a payer then begin to build and nurture the relationship.

If you ask them, payers may say there is a lack of consumer or member experience during the claims process because payers process the claims internally and the member does not participate directly. The payers to a degree can be considered right and wrong in this regard. They are right in that payers do not in fact generate a member experience during this process and it is possible that the member will start wondering what happened to their claim. Payers are wrong in that there is no managed experience – a missed opportunity in relationship building. After all, it is human nature to think the worst, and in this case, members imagine their claim is not going well or something has gone wrong.

delivery channels

After a period of time, the member will enter the frustrated stage and call their payer to find out the status of their claim. This call will end up costing the payer approximately $3 to $5. If payers could generate a better member experience around the claims process, the payer would not incur the cost of this call. Perhaps, payers could provide a message to members using SMS or email to advise them where their claim is in the process. They could use a simple graphic with a five-stage process or a text message stating the claim is in “Stage 3” with “We are processing your claim with no expected delays,” which provides the necessary and relevant information to prevent the consumer from entering the “frustrated stage.” Does this sound familiar? Amazon accomplishes this feat by communicating order-tracking information to show consumers their order statuses. Seeing order activity or progress eases the concerns of consumers as they wait for their order to be processed and shipped.

In a consumer-driven world, we usually do not like to wait. That being so, if payers were able to communicate the status of a consumer’s claim as it traveled through the process, the member experience would be much more enjoyable. Members would become satisfied, since the payer took the action first and generated a dialog around the claim event. This may even sound like a reassuring voice, such as, “Don’t worry, we are providing personalized attention to your claim.” With this capability, members would be able to choose how much information they want to receive, how often, and even select their preferred channel of delivery. After all, it is all about “me” in the world of the consumer.

By providing a positive member experience coupled with products that do the required job, payers are now able to build relationships with members through useful communications and interactions. Over time, as the relationship grows, the opportunity for engagement by the payer will be created.

In order to build relationships with members, however, payers must focus on the following three guidelines:

  1. Offer a product that does the job for members in a way they want the job to be done.
  2. Provide a grand experience in two areas: a well-designed member experience on all member touch points and a tuned member experience so that consumers are happy interacting with the payer.
  3. Extend their products to be more than benefit plans and provide members the tools to help them in their pursuit of healthy living and enjoyable lifestyles. The result is that the “doing the job” indicator goes up.

Building relationships aids in member engagement and increases retention. It is about the quality of the interaction, and not the quantity. The relationship is formed around common goals such as improving members’ health. If the interaction is pointless and without value, it becomes annoying to the member and the experience deteriorates.

Engagement is Good for Everyone

Engagement at a member level has many benefits, not only for members, but also for payers and the health system. At the “Engaged Stage,” payers can:

  • Modify member behaviors to lower likelihood of chronic diseases
  • Promote healthy living for members
  • Offer information and tools to help members make intelligent health decisions

Because medical costs are increasing at an alarming rate each year, member health is a priority for payers and providers in order to manage costs. The CDC says chronic diseases account for $3 of every $4 spent on healthcare and that chronic diseases are preventable by modifying consumer behaviors. This is a perfect example of how consumer engagement solutions can help lower costs and decrease chronic diseases, but member relationships are required for engagement programs. For payers to engage their members, they need to focus on two areas:

  1. The customer and user experience
  2. A product or service that performs what the member wants to do

By bringing these two items into the design of a mobile app that supports healthy behaviors with relevant content, healthy tips, and encouragement, the payers open the door to engagement with members by helping them modify their behaviors that lead to chronic diseases. That is a lot to say, but you can see how it is all connected, and healthcare has many moving parts.

Consumer Centricity

A rise in priority of consumer centricity is just as important as cost management is for payers. Engaging members in healthy living and using self-service tools is important to lowering health costs and empowering members in an era of consumer-driven healthcare. Therefore, in the end, a sustainable solution to lowering health costs and having a healthy member base over the long term can be achieved through consumer centricity. This approach takes time and is an investment in the health system and in its members.

If you are looking for low-hanging fruit and easy successes, focus on the user experience. The fastest road to a good experience is to remove pain points in services and products that touch customers. Usability testing can provide enlightening results and insight into any such pain points. An annoyed customer can be transformed into a satisfied customer by assessing online assets and updating the design based on the findings.

In order to offer a more consumer-centric experience, some solutions could be to offer consumer-centered products and services that are aligned to the consumer’s personalized needs, tune customer experiences to build relationships, or engage members in healthy living and decision making with personalized programs. These are all examples that can contribute to lower costs by improving member health and consumer engagement. Payers now have a raison d’etre and they remain relevant. Payers can use their big data repositories filled with member information to provide members with targeted and relevant information and tools backed by a terrific experience. Why would it work? Payers would take time to build relationships and trust with their members and shift into a consumer mode of business. Moving to a consumer view is a graceful transition toward diversification, since payers can provide solutions that accommodate members where they live the most: in their lifestyle.

HealthScape

The traditional interaction with payers has been around transactions: find a doctor or pharmacy, look up my benefits, and look up my claim. This is the transaction layer in the consumer relationship. There is little opportunity for a payer to develop a relationship and generate consumer stickiness in this area. Members, in this case, only go to the transaction layer to perform a transaction, which for any large payer is about one to two times a year. The main reason that many members perform a transaction is because they are going through a health event, like a sickness or medical condition, and members are already in a stressed state of mind dealing with a personal or family health issue. This is not the best time to generate a relationship. The best way a payer can generate a positive experience in this layer is to provide superior support for the member when needed. This translates to a flawless experience by offering a caring connection, managing administrative tasks and processes, and performing event logistics so members can focus on their health. In order to build productive relationships, payers need to go where the people are when they are in a good state of mind.

The following figure shows a representation of the HealthScape from a consumer perspective. There are three distinct layers around health and consumer involvement, with the transaction layer being at the core. Each layer is different in how often members interact in each layer.

HealthScape

In the “Transaction Layer,” members may interact several times a year with a payer performing a health transaction. In the “Wellness Layer,” members interact far more often, such as one to two times a week, depending on their personal plans for nutrition and exercise. When in the “Lifestyle Layer,” there is a potential for members to be involved in health every day, as it becomes part of a routine in a person’s daily living. In the “Lifestyle Layer,” a payer has the potential to achieve relationship nirvana – stickiness.

While in the “Wellness Layer,” members are focusing on sustaining or achieving a state of wellness. In this layer, the main issues on members’ minds are nutrition, exercise, and healthy behaviors. Members are focusing on their health to minimize the risk of becoming sick and maximize the potential of leading a productive life. Members also begin to enter into a relationship with wellness providers and coaches to engage in healthy behaviors. Telephone coaching is an example of this. However, wellness is one of many personal priorities a member manages, so it may not be their top priority all the time. For wellness to be embraced, a member must absorb healthy thinking into their life on a daily basis and it must become part of their lifestyle.

In a “Lifestyle Layer,” members interact, work, play, and experience life every day. Examples of health in the “Lifestyle Layer” are the many new devices that monitor daily activity, such as sleeping habits and nutrition. The “Jawbone UP” and “Fitbit Flex” are wearable devices providing biometric data to consumers throughout the day. These devices provide feedback to members so they can adjust their actions and behaviors in order to reach their desired goals. These devices become part of the wearer’s lifestyle and that lifestyle changes based on the feedback they receive. If a member works in an office and sits at a desk too long, an alarm will go off, letting the wearer know they need to be more active and move around. If this happens often enough, their thinking will be changed and a new behavior formed, leading to healthy outcomes.

Solutions in the “Lifestyle Layer” focus on supporting consumers in their quest for sustained healthy living. It is important to help members approach health in a holistic manner and offer encouragement in the form of helpful tools that promote education in the areas of nutrition, exercise, stress, care, community, and healthy living habits. In this layer, relationship maturity can blossom. To assist payers in their vision to diversify, they can take advantage of this opportunity in the “Lifestyle Layer” by offering such tools to reinforce healthy behaviors for their members and provide more than just health plans. The definition of health to a payer is more about healthy living for members and not just paying a claim.

Years ago, the same transformation occurred in the banking industry. Banks interacted with consumers simply by performing transactions such as depositing a check. Now banks offer a full suite of services, such as financial planning for retirement, college savings, and family growth, supporting a person throughout their life.

An extension of a payer’s offer could be to aggregate data from multiple biometric devices to provide services to their members such as a health dashboard with relevant content to support decision making and behavior changes in pursuit of healthier living. As mentioned under the “Engagement Section,” healthy behavior lowers the likelihood of chronic diseases, which in turn lowers medical costs in health care.

Summary

It may appear that payers are losing some control to consumers, but in reality, they are increasing cost control through member enablement. It is important for payers to trust and empower members to do the right thing for their health. Payers must provide relevant information and decision tools to arm their members in their pursuit of a healthy lifestyle.

The benefits of consumer centricity align well with payer value:

  • Coordinated member experience
  • Personalized communications to channel preferences for engagement
  • Usable consumer tools and online assets to manage the experience
  • Align consumer programs with the business strategy to manage effectiveness
  • Drive member healthy behaviors to manage chronic diseases and manage costs
  • Support consumer health decisions with information and tools to manage costs
  • Unified platform for member communications for consistency
  • Generate 1:1 relationships with members for retention and engagement
  • Increase stickiness with members for retention
  • Compliance to CMS and federal disabilities organizations to minimize risks
  • Integrated mobile and social enablers to optimize consumer engagement
  • Payer remains relevant through useful solutions

Payer centricity and provider centricity is replaced over time with consumer centricity. Consumers begin to take control of their health, with payers and providers transforming to meet the consumer challenge of a long, productive life and quality care while managing costs.

The goal is to have an engaged, healthy community of people. With so many moving parts and interactions, a thorough assessment of the payer’s approach to a consumer-driven world is required before embarking on launching disparate tactical programs, or confusion replaces engagement.

Filed Under: Consumer Engagement, Experience, Health, Insights - Analytics

Health and Our Decline

May 20, 2014 by bobyurkovic

What is Health About?

Our health is a combination of several key things that need to stay in balance in order to remain healthy. We need to feed our bodies, we need to flex our bodies, we need to rest our bodies, and we need to manage the external forces that affect us. If we are out of balance, chronic diseases and other disorders may occur.

There are 7 components to health and to be healthy, all 7 must be in balance.

What is Health 8

How far out of balance are we?

Sometimes tough facts are difficult to swallow, but denial is no longer an option. Let’s take a look at two chronic diseases, obesity and diabetes. About 1 in three people are obese in America. The alarming statistic is the increase from 15% of the population in 1990 to 34% in 2013. The figure rises 6% year over year. A study in 2010 by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) said 75% of Americans will be overweight by 2020. Obesity is responsible for 5-10% of total health expenditures in the United States. An obese person incurs 25% higher health expenditures than a person of normal weight in any given year. In the United States, obese people are 76% more likely to suffer short-term disability adding production losses to health care costs that account for over 1% of the GDP. The costs will rise as obesity related diseases develop. A Johns Hopkins University researcher claims, in the 2008 journal Obesity that about 65% of Americans will be overweight by 2030. Costs to treat obesity and health related costs could also rise at staggering amounts. Our economy may not be able to support those increased costs.

obesity facts 2

If we look at diabetes, about 7% of the population has been diagnosed with diabetes. The alarming facts is about 26% of Americans are on the verge of diabetes or undiagnosed. Complications due to diabetes lead to more serious diseases such that the related costs are $245 billion in 2012. According to the CDC, 1 in 3 adults could have diabetes by 2050 if current trends continue. The International Diabetes Federation predicts as many as 438 million people in the world will have diabetes by 2030.

diabetes facts 2

The trends in both diseases are similar and growing at high rates. How we address chronic diseases in people requires immediate attention if we are to manage medical costs and the population’s health.

Excerpted from my book titled, “Commercializing Consumer Engagement.”

Filed Under: Consumer Engagement, Health, Insights - Analytics Tagged With: chronic diseases, health

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