Health Communication vs. Content Marketing

Content From: Erin Edgerton Norvell, Founder and Principal Strategist, Digital Edge CommunicationsPublished: November 03, 20152 min read

Topics

Erin Edgerton Norvell, Digital Edge Communications
Erin Edgerton Norvell, Digital Edge Communications

Editor's Note: HIV.gov recently had the honor of attending and being a part of the Planning Committee for the NIH Digital Summit. Here is the second of 2 blogs about the event from panelist Erin Edgerton Norvell. Recently, I was honored to join an excellent line-up of digital health communicators at the NIH Digital Summit and we call it “health communications.” And, it may come as no surprise, that brands are winning in this struggle. Specifically, I think they’re doing a better job at leveraging existing target audience behaviors, driving deeper engagement, and focusing on high-quality content. I see this as a problem for those of us in public health because we’re working towards a goal loftier than product sales. We’re working towards a nation of healthier Americans. So it’s important that we find a way to enhance our efforts and do a better job competing with these brands.

While our end goals may differ, there are several things we can learn from brands and adopt into our own work. Specifically, I think we need to:

  • Get personal. Tell stories. Drive deeper engagement.
  • Focus on channels that build engagement.
  • Build a relationship with the online community.
  • Build brand affinity for our organizations.
  • Establish more public-private partnerships.
  • Continuously evolve in tiny increments.

Ultimately, we’ll do a better job competing in this ongoing tug-of-war if we remember that: It’s not about the channel. It’s about engagement. We should be putting our energy towards building a consistent, positive relationship with our target audience through meaningful engagement, regardless of the platform or channel. We may never be able to compete with the amount of money big brands spend on marketing, but we can offer a unique value proposition: as public health communicators, we are the only ones with the end goal – not of sales or profit margins – but of improving the health of the communities around us. Let’s work together to do a better job of holding our ground in this tug-of-war, of making sure that our science-based messages get heard among the brand chatter, and of working together to create meaningful engagement that will help us make progress towards our goal of a national of healthier Americans.

For more on this presentation:

*****

Read the first blog from the NIH Digital Summit here.