1 / 57

January-December 2013

Strategic Marketing and Communications Plan. January-December 2013. Mission & Goal. The mission of ASU Health Solutions is to bring forth innovative healthcare solutions that result in better outcomes for people at a lower cost.

robert-ward
Télécharger la présentation

January-December 2013

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Strategic Marketing and Communications Plan January-December 2013

  2. Mission & Goal • The mission of ASU Health Solutions is to bring forth innovative healthcare solutions that result in better outcomes for people at a lower cost. • Our goal is to build awareness and understanding of those efforts among students, faculty, alumni, donors/investors, and other thought leaders in the healthcare industry.

  3. Desired Perception ASU is doing cutting-edge work to improve human health and longevity

  4. Objectives (must be measurable)

  5. Approach • Place bets that focus on IMPACT vs. activity • Represent the voice of the CUSTOMER… always! • Create compelling stories that can be EXTENDED • Use social vehicles to increase ENGAGEMENT • Cultivate third parties to lend CREDIBILITY • Speak to TRENDS and identify TENSION that peak customers’ and influencers’ interest • Drive an accurate and consistent BRAND EXPERIENCE aligned with ASU brand attributes

  6. Audience & Influencers Include who or what informs and influences each audience Audience • Students & prospective students • Faculty & prospective faculty • Donors/investors & prospective donors/investors • Funding agencies • Partners (e.g. Mayo, Banner) • Alumni • Other Thought Leaders • Possibly local & state gov’t officials Infuencers

  7. Key Message (Short) The healthcare industry is transforming and our goal at ASU is to prepare students to embrace change and lead through this transformation. Students working together across disciplines, faculty and other thought leaders at ASU are doing innovative work to improve human health and longevity while at the same time lowering the costs of healthcare.

  8. Key Messages (Long) • The healthcare industry is transforming. We are preparing students in health at ASU to embrace change and lead through this transformation. (cite ASU alumni and other thought leaders doing great work locally and nationally) • Most corporations and institutions are focused on healthcare delivery and genetic research which, combined, only determine 30 percent of an individual’s health and longevity. (cite studies and examples that box competitors in to focus on treating/medicating the sick vs. preventative, long-term health & wellness) • ASU students, faculty and other thoughts leaders are doing innovative work to bring forth comprehensive solutions which include lifestyle decisions that determine the other 70 percent of the outcome. (emphasize cross-discipline, team-based approach, new degrees & delivery models, work with Mayo and other strategic partners, specific innovations) • Americans spend too much money on healthcare with suboptimal results. ASU is dedicated to making health solutions not only more effective, but also more affordable. (cite cost of healthcare today with diminishing returns, our vision of a better future and what needs to change, proof of impact/improved outcomes)

  9. Possible Stories (turn into headlines) Latezia • Mindfulness • Teri Pipe • Affordable Healthcare (Clinics) • Diane/Denise • Obesity Solutions / Lifestyle Choices • Betty Phillips • Jim Levine • Nutrition • Glenn Gaesser - was on Dr. Oz • Chris Powell, ASU grad – Extreme Makeover Weight Loss Edition • Linda Vaughn – garden to kitchen • Healthy Aging • Exercise & Non-Exercise

  10. Campaigns • Did You Know? • Fact based • Tout impressive stats that drives awareness for ASU in health • We Can Make a Difference • Emotional connection • Highlights students & team-based approach to solving problems • Leading Health Transformation • Trend/thought leadership series • Spotlights faculty, alumni & other thoughts leaders across ASU

  11. Did You Know? • List tactics that map to objectives and accrue to desired perception

  12. We Can Make a Difference • List tactics that map to objectives and accrue to desired perception

  13. Leading Health Transformation • List tactics that map to objectives and accrue to desired perception

  14. Programs Executive Communications News Center Third Party Advocacy Events Internal Communications Paid Media

  15. Executive Communications • What’s included • How to implement • Key spokespeople and areas of expertise • Establish process & rhythm of communications • Get calendars of key meetings and speaking engagements

  16. News Center • What’s included • How to implement • Establish process (editorial board) and rhythm • Editorial board helps brainstorm story ideas, are subject matter experts (SMEs) or work with SMEs to help produce content and help extend stories that marcomms produces • Includes Web and social media as means to extend stories

  17. Third Party Advocacy • What’s included • How to implement • List third parties who can advocate for us and their areas of expertise; can be at or outside ASU; should include students, faculty, alumni and other industry thought leaders

  18. Events • What’s included • How to implement • Ensure clarity of the ROI

  19. Internal Communications • What’s included • How to implement: SharePoint for daily, targeted info that cuts across the org; scrub DLs if email is needed occasionally; Quarterly All Hands meetings led by Deans to provide vision and state of the union • Establish group of brand ambassadors that can be immersed in our branding guidelines and tools; ambassadors ensure accuracy and consistency in how the brand is represented within their units and ultimately across the org • Establish contacts (likely admins) and rhythm for getting SharePoint content ready in a timely matter (will require training co-led with Henry’s team)

  20. Paid Media • What’s included • How to implement (use ASU media buyer on Terri’s team) • This includes our approach to paid advertising and promotional materials; branding guidelines will be intertwined

  21. Calendar (slide 1 of 2)

  22. Calendar (slide 2 of 2)

  23. Core Materials • Logos & Templates • Signatures & Voicemail • Boilerplate • Key Messages & Proof Points • Fact Sheets • Master Q&A • Editorial Calendar & Experts List • Media List (Health Solutions, ASU-wide, local, national, social) • Crisis Plan & After Hours Contact • Strategic Brief (for press releases/announcements) • Briefing Doc (for interviews) • Campaign Content • Bios/Photos • Annual Report & Investor List • Advertising & Promo (flyers, brochures, giveaways) • Events List • Preferred Vendors List

  24. Budget/Resources • List Internal & External (where vendor support required) as well as any other dependencies such as IT • Note Professional Development budget managed centrally by HR

  25. APPENDIX

  26. Marketing Communications Team

  27. Team Org Chart (Current) Melissa Harris Thirsk Director of Strategic Marketing and Communications Plan, Strategy, Performance Management, Integration Melissa.HarrisThirsk@asu.edu |602.496.0877|425.444.5520 |17-Mar Marketing Coordinator TBH Latezia Fletcher Marketing Specialist Latezia.fletcher@asu.edu 602.496.0915|480.221.3692|17-Jun Julie Leuthard Web Content Administrator Julie.Leuthard@asu.edu 602.496.1123|480.216.5821|4-Aug Juliana Campbell Senior Editor Laurie Trowbridge Web Content Editor Laurie.trowbridge@asu.edu 602.496.0759|309.310.7494|XX Shannon Murray Student Intern semurra3@asu.edu 602.496.2297|858.663.0998|15-Jul Caitlin Cole Student Intern Caitlin.cole@asu.edu 602.496.2297|480.776.8262|27-Dec

  28. Team Org Chart (Future) Melissa Harris Thirsk Director of Strategic Marketing and Communications Plan, Strategy, Performance Management, Integration Melissa.HarrisThirsk@asu.edu |602.496.0877|425.444.5520 |17-Mar Marketing Coordinator Administrative Support Campaigns/Project Manager Support Business Development Story Optimizer Web Development/DLs Internal Communications Special Projects • Storyteller/PR • Earned Media/Editorial Board • Thought Leadership • Executive Communications Story Extender Web/Digital Content Social Media Third Party Advocacy Paid Media/Events Advertising/Promotional Materials Events Branding Guidelines/Ambassadors Writer/Researcher Press Releases, Fact Sheets, etc. Trends-Spotter Competitive Intelligence Roaming Reporter (Student Intern) Roaming Reporter (Student Intern)

  29. Team Schedule

  30. Distribution Lists (Laura/IT/HR to help?)Health Solutions DL (approx. 500 people) College of Health Solutions • Doctor of Behavioral Health Program • Audience | DL • Department of Biomedical Informatics • Audience | DL • School of Nutrition and Health Promotion • Audience | DL • School for the Science of Health Care Delivery • Audience | DL College of Nursing and Health Innovation • Audience | DL • Shared Solutions • Office of Clinical Partnerships DL • Administrative & Business Services DL • Information Technology DL • Marketing & Communications DL • Facilities DL • Human Resources DL • Educational Support Services DL • Research Collaboration & Support Services DL • Development/Alumni Relations DL

  31. University Integration Calendar • Other: • Digital Strategy Board (closed group) – sets policy for website, social media strategy • Social Media – every two weeks • Media Board – focused on video production

  32. Internal Training Needs • Branding/Guidelines (Brand Ambassadors) • SharePoint/Internal Communications (SMEs/Content Providers) • How to Handle Interviews (Spokespeople) • How to Share Our Story (Start with Editorial Board) • How to Engage People (Social Media, etc.)

  33. Fundraising(Eric)

  34. Fundraising Goals CHS • Currently at about $550k • Eric Spicer developing goals with Keith CONHI -> by FY17 • Raise $2M annually • 50 endowed scholarships & awards = $332k annually • Currently 39 endowed scholarships and awards and about $255k in privately funded support • 5 new faculty fellowships/ professorships ($500k each) • Raise $300k for the Hartford Center of Geriatric Nursing Excellence • To meet the challenge grant put forth by the John A. Hartford Foundation

  35. Student Enrollment - CHS(Alison)

  36. Fall 2013 enrollment goals • Freshman Success Program CI <93

  37. Health Solutions UG and G Programs Graduate Programs “Centers”

  38. BLS Job Outlook

  39. College of Health Solutions Overview

  40. Graduating Senior Report Card • Needs (2011-2012) (very satisfied/satisfied) • Advising/employment • SNHP = 59% • DSHS = 54% • Faculty feedback • DSHS = 57% • Overall experience (2011-2012) (very satisfied/satisfied) • SNHP = 94% • DSHS = 91%

  41. Student demographics (UG) • SNHP • Female = 63% • Resident = 80% • White = 58.7% • Hispanic = 21% • cGPA = 3.05 • Yield rate = 20-37% (?) • DSHS • Female = 92% • Resident = 81% • White = 68.8% • Hispanic = 18.1% • cGPA = 3.09 • Yield rate = 35%

  42. EnrollmentSpring 2012 v Spring 2013

  43. EnrollmentSpring 2012 v Spring 2013

  44. EnrollmentSpring 2012 v Spring 2013

  45. EnrollmentSpring 2012 v Spring 2013

  46. EnrollmentSpring 2012 v Spring 2013

  47. EnrollmentSpring 2012 v Spring 2013

  48. EnrollmentSpring 2012 v Spring 2013

  49. EnrollmentSpring 2012 v Spring 2013

  50. EnrollmentSpring 2012 v Spring 2013 *15 students currently enrolled in Barrett

More Related