Sticky

Do you have a store or shop you regularly patronize? Have you ever stopped to consider why? There are numerous reasons, of course, but it boils down to one concept. Given a choice between two alternatives, the store you prefer offers sometime that the other doesn’t. That something might be an employee, or customer service. It might be convenience of location or hours. We call patients with an allegiance to a business sticky customers.

If you are operating a pharmacy, your goal is to attract and maintain long-term, loyal, sticky patients. But what differentiates one pharmacy from the next? It likely isn’t the medications: most every pharmacy has access to the same product. Patients perceive that all community (retail) pharmacies to the same thing. Jerry Seinfeld’s observation on pharmacy sums up what many believe pharmacists do

“I’m workin with pills up here. I’m taking pills from this big bottle and then I’m gonna put them in a little bottle!”

Jerry Seinfeld

Many customers really don’t understand what pharmacists and pharmacies actually do. As a result, a lot of patients are sticky to chain or box store pharmacies simply because they don’t know that not all pharmacies follow that model.

Of course there is always churn in pharmacy. The most common reason a patient switches pharmacies is customer service. Even just one bad customer service experience can result in a patient transferring to a new pharmacy. While customer service can help with achieving a sticky customer base, and poor service can certainly result in the loss of customers, customer service alone doesn’t really differentiate a pharmacy.

If you start to compare chain and independent pharmacies, you start to recognize that there are a lot similarities beyond just prescriptions. Things like a drive-thru window, over-the-counter medications, greeting cards, and sundries are all common features in pharmacies. Things like delivery and durable medical equipment might be less common, but again, there are multiple options typically available to the pharmacy customer. This begs the question: what can one do to truly differentiate a pharmacy?

Differentiation

When trying to define something that truly differentiates a pharmacy, it essentially boils down to the same question. “Where else can I go to get this?” In a small market, if the answer is more than zero, it isn’t a differentiator. In a larger market, it can be more than zero, but it still has to be fairly small.

It isn’t enough to offer something uncommon, it also has to be in demand and the quality has to be high. This applies to services as well as product. Ultimately, a well differentiated pharmacy is the only place you can go in the area to get something that is in demand. Of course, this isn’t an easy thing to achieve. It requires thinking outside of the box. Once you determine your niche, it requires marketing and effort to grow it.

Perhaps the easiest path to differentiation is to know what your competition does and compare it to what your pharmacy offers. These things are not differentiating your store. The trick is to identify what you might add as a service or product that they don’t do. Ideally, it would also be something that your competition cannot offer because if you do hit a home-run, the competition will want in on the action.

We obvioulsy cannot offer individualized suggestions to every independent pharmacy here in this article. Today, we will discuss one example that many independent pharmacies could implement.

Professional Supplements.

One way to differentiate an independent pharmacy from the chain pharmacy competition is supplements. Every pharmacy can order national brands of vitamins and supplements. You can go to almost ANY pharmacy and pick up a bottle of Nature Made Stress B-Complex. If the pharmacy doesn’t stock it and there is demand, they can add it. But what if you could order a supplement line that was unavailable to the chain pharmacies?

Professional Supplements refer products that are not sold by the traditional wholesale channels in pharmacy. Companies Ortho Molecular only sell their products to independent pharmacies. These are high quality products that one cannot purchase from your local big-box pharmacy.

Just putting in a quality product that is unavailable elsewhere isn’t generally enough. While there may be existing demand for the products in your area, the public needs to know that you have the product and learn why they need it. In other words, adding a professional supplement line is just step one. Marketing and education follow, to raise awareness and create demand.

In order to create the demand for professional supplements, it is necessary to reach out to practitioners and prescribers that understand the importance of quality supplements and are receptive to general aspects of functional medicine. It also will require the pharmacists and staff to become familiar with nutrition, nutrient depletion and supplementation, and to become comfortable with the basics of functional medicine. This requires ongoing, significant professional commitment and work in marketing and education. Is it worth it to go down a path like this? It absolutely can be a big win for the pharmacy. Margins on supplements are very good, and the patient interactions can be very rewarding.

In a given market, it is possible that two pharmacies might both sell one or more professional supplement brands. While this may or may not be an issue depending on the market saturation, it does diminish the differentiation factor. If you achieve respectable sales of a profesisional product, you might then consider private labeling some of the products. This means that the professional product X becomes YOUR own product, under its own brand, with a different name. Now, even your local competitor cannot offer your product (unless you sell it to them).

Obviously, there are lots of different ways a pharmacy can create truly sticky customers. Differentiation is necessarily an individual process, and there may be a variety of ways to achieve this goal. The important lesson: you have to make the effort. If you don’t make Every Encounter Count in your pharmacy practice, you will miss opportunities!

Published by

Michael Deninger

Mike graduated from the University of Iowa with a BS in Pharmacy in 1991 and completed his Ph.D. in 1998. He has over 20 years of practice experience, over half of which is as a pharmacy owner. Areas of expertise also include technology in practice, including integration with data sources.

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