Your team invests months developing launch materials—crafting key messages, designing visual aids, building patient education resources—only to discover in the field that core messages don't resonate, visual logic confuses rather than clarifies, and HCPs dismiss content as irrelevant to their practice.
This is what every commercial team fears as they conduct market research before launching a new product.
And the consequences of mistakes like these extend far beyond wasted design hours:
Let’s dig into why this can happen, and how to prevent it.
Most pharma teams rely on fragmented approaches to validate their messaging.
Internal stakeholder reviews ensure medical accuracy but can't predict field reception. Agency partners polish creative execution but lack direct access to target prescribers. And by the time sales teams or MSLs gather enough anecdotal feedback to identify patterns, months have passed and significant budget has been committed.
Too often, teams develop materials through internal consensus, make assumptions, then launch only to discover that field teams can't gain traction. Without systematic pre-launch testing, critical disconnects only surface after it's too late for efficient correction.
Traditional market research methods tend to amplify the weaknesses of this approach:
These fragmented approaches lack the infrastructure for iterative refinement. Teams get one chance to test, then must commit to production without the ability to validate whether revisions actually improved effectiveness.
How, then, can pharmaceutical companies overcome the weak points of traditional approaches?
Our suggestion: treating message testing as an ongoing process rather than a discrete event, leveraging technology to gather structured HCP feedback throughout the product lifecycle.
Commercial teams don’t have to rely on infrequent in-person meetings with HCPs to perform market research anymore.
Rather than relying solely on internal reviews and agency input, teams can test interactive visual aids with HCPs before releasing them to the field using virtual engagement tools such as video conferencing and discussion boards.
And because these engagements are virtual, they aren’t as constrained by geography or the expense and administrative logistics of coordinating in-person meetings. This often means a more diverse segment of the target audience(s) can participate, and cost-effectively.
Through asynchronous discussions and targeted surveys, it’s possible to collect structured feedback on whether messages are clear and whether the materials address what actually matters to the target audience.
This allows for visual aids to be edited based on real HCP input—before a single sales representative walks into an office.
For example:
One company used ExtendMed's Health Expert Connect™ platform to conduct message testing as they prepared to expand into the nephrology market.
They needed answers to specific questions: Is our message clear for nephrologists? Are these interactive visual aids that sales representatives will share actually addressing what matters to this specialty?
Rather than conducting traditional focus groups, they used asynchronous discussions and surveys to collect feedback from nephrologists on their own schedules. This approach enabled them to share visual aids in advance and gather structured reactions before releasing materials to the field.
The company made changes to their interactive visual aids for two consecutive years based on feedback gathered through this ongoing engagement. This wasn't a one-time validation exercise—it was a systematic process of testing, refining, and re-testing that continued throughout the product lifecycle.
Another powerful application for virtual tools involves testing patient education materials before distribution.
For example:
One pharmaceutical team started by asking patients about their experiences, then developed educational pamphlets incorporating patient language and concerns. But they didn't stop there.
They brought those draft materials back to patients and asked: Have we hit the mark? They even presented two or three design variations to test which cover would make patients want to open the pamphlet and read further. Which version rings most true to your experience? Which one pulls you most? Which makes you want to read on?
This iterative approach accomplished multiple objectives simultaneously. It demonstrated to patients that the company heard them by incorporating their words directly into materials. It validated which messaging and visual approaches would perform best. And it created materials that genuinely resonated with the intended audience because they were co-created with them.
Every commercial team knows nothing is more effective than hearing directly from HCPs about what resonates and what creates barriers.
Through recorded discussion sessions, commercial teams can capture not just what HCPs say, but how they say it—the language they use, the concerns they raise unprompted, the questions that surface naturally.
A 30-second video clip of an HCP describing a clinical challenge in their own voice can be extraordinarily motivating for internal teams. It brings the target audience to life in ways that survey data or written reports never can. These insights can push teams to refine messaging quickly and help ensure that materials address real clinical needs rather than assumed ones.
The systematic approach outlined above requires technology that enables rapid iteration, captures authentic feedback, and stores insights where they are easy to find and compare.
ExtendMed's Health Expert Connect™ platform was designed to support exactly this type of structured HCP engagement:
Based on ExtendMed's work with pharmaceutical clients conducting market research and message validation:
Traditional testing approaches struggle with fragmented tools—email chains for distributing materials, spreadsheets for tracking feedback, separate platforms for surveys and discussions and manual processes for analyzing results. This fragmentation creates administrative burden precisely when teams need simplicity.
An effective message testing platform should provide:
ExtendMed's Health Expert Connect™ platform consolidates these capabilities in a single, branded environment where commercial teams can conduct systematic message testing throughout the product lifecycle.
If any of these sound familiar, your message testing approach likely needs strengthening:
Message testing isn't optional infrastructure for launch success—it's essential for ensuring commercial investments deliver returns. The cost of structured testing is a fraction of the cost of failed messaging in the field.
ExtendMed's Health Expert Connect™ platform enables pharmaceutical commercial teams to gather authentic HCP feedback throughout the product lifecycle through virtual advisory boards, asynchronous discussions, and integrated survey tools.
Request a demo to see how Health Expert Connect™ can help you test smarter and launch with confidence.
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