Predicting Commercial Success, Not Revisiting the Past
The pharmaceutical industry is facing increased pressure to improve its performance and efficiency as the challenges of an increasingly dynamic and complex marketplace have conspired to erode the robust sales and profit growth of the 1990s. Marketers' measurement tools often don't help them improve productivity because they track past performance of existing programs. Rather, marketers need tools to help them predict which programs will be the most effective in the future. Marketers should combine refined adoption funnels and more sophisticated segmentation, to help identify factors that drive key physician segments to prescribe.
By Sumit Aggarwal, John Forsyth, Rajesh Garg, and Ian
St-Maurice
The pharmaceutical industry is facing increased pressure to improve its performance and efficiency as the challenges of an increasingly dynamic...
Read the full article – start your free trial today!
Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on In Vivo for daily insights
Editor’s note: This is your final call to participate in the survey to better understand our subscribers’ content and delivery needs. The deadline is 20 September.
Mary Jane Hinrichs, Ipsen’s head of early development, talks to In Vivo about getting ahead of the competition by securing deals for candidates before they enter Phase I trials.
Editor’s note: We are conducting a survey to better understand our subscribers’ content and delivery needs. If there are any changes you’d like to see in the coverage topics, content format or the method in which you receive and access In Vivo, or if you love it how it is, now is the time to have your voice heard.
The cell and gene therapy (CGT) clinical trial landscape in general and CAR-T cell clinical trials in particular are a special focus for the FDA, EMA, and other regulatory agencies. The whole industry is thus aware of the recent FDA safety investigation and requirements for labeling CAR therapy products.
Flagship Pioneering senior partner Raj Panjabi discusses shifting health care from reactive treatment to AI-powered prediction and prevention of disease before symptoms emerge.
Namrata Saroj, chief business officer of Ocular Therapeutix, is highly respected in the retina community for her contributions to drug development. She talked to In Vivo about her journey in ophthalmology, leadership philosophy and the importance of authenticity in a close-knit specialty.