1 / 14

Promoting Organ Donation – A Winning Experience

Promoting Organ Donation – A Winning Experience. Kathy Schultz Senior Marketing Consultant, UW Health Trey Schwab Outreach Coordinator, UW Organ and Tissue Donation Suzanne Rasmussen Waitlist Candidate, UW Health Transplant . Our History: Charter Media and UW OTD.

urban
Download Presentation

Promoting Organ Donation – A Winning Experience

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. Promoting Organ Donation – A Winning Experience Kathy SchultzSenior Marketing Consultant, UW Health Trey SchwabOutreach Coordinator, UW Organ and Tissue Donation Suzanne RasmussenWaitlist Candidate, UW Health Transplant

  2. Our History:Charter Media and UW OTD • July 2007: Met with Charter Media to discuss a TV advertising campaign to promote organ donation • September 2007: Asked WPS Insurance to sponsor first TV ads and a series of on-demand videos ($60,000 for this package) • WPS agreed to underwrite the entire package if Charter agreed to match it by 3:1 ratio – so we would receive $240,000 in paid advertising • DONE DEAL! We produced the commercials and were on air by March 2008 (commercials featured our UW OTD staff – great idea from Iowa)

  3. Ads and videos ran statewide for 12 months (March 2008 - March 2009) Saturation campaign – more than 6,000 ads ran Prior to donor registry: Message – sign your license and talk to your family Showed increase in donor designations of 1.5% total (approx. 100,000 new designations) Really difficult to effectively measure results without a donor registry “Priming the pump” for Wisconsin donor registry launch on March 29, 2010

  4. Zoom ahead to 2010: Scripted series of events, campaigns, Transplant Games, etc. to really promote donation for the full year; no advertising ran during this time Fall of 2010 – Met with Charter Media and various potential sponsors to try to find someone to underwrite a new TV campaign; unsuccessful March 2011: Charter’s “contest” to test various combinations of advertising platforms (TV ads, Charter Main Street, on-demand, Music Choice, web advertising)

  5. Charter would donate a large package to a charitable non-profit organization who could return accurate data measurements before, during, and after the campaign Competition with several non-profits (Red Cross, Susan B. Komen, etc.); each met with a Charter sales team and regional managers to present their case UW OTD/organ donation selected in April 2011, just prior to the last Doug Miller Symposium

  6. The Power of One Campaign

  7. Used Every Charter Media Advertising Component: Series of web ads that featured Dottie Digital Choice Music ads Charter Main Street Channel ads

  8. Produced videos for Charter on-demand • Selected seven transplant recipients and two wait list candidates/families to feature • Produced three TV ads using same • recipients/patients • General Donation Facts • Hockey Grandmother • Mechanic

  9. Campaign Timeline Research, planning, graphic design, online ads, and music channels ads start to air: April 2011 Recipient and patient interviews: April - July 2011 Filming and editing TV and videos: September 2011 Production/editing done: December 2011 TV ads ran: December 2011 - April 2012 Campaign ended: April 30, 2012

  10. Results Online ads: Exceeded national averages for click-through rates (.07% vs .03%) Music Choice ads: Increased Dottie’s Facebook likes by 23% Charter Main Street channel ads: Increased Dottie Dolls sales by 183% during campaign Television ads: Online donor designations increased 10.5% during campaign On-demand videos: Viewing rate was 27% higher than the average viewing rate of other on-demand health-related videos

  11. Value Internet advertising: 300,000 impressions = $3,600 Music Choice advertising: 6 months = $1,800 Charter Main Street advertising: 4 months = $14,400 Television advertising: Production + 4 month air time = $56,500 On-demand videos: Production + 6 month air time = $54,000 Total Value = $130,300 Cost to UW OTD = $0

  12. How Did This Whole Effort Start?

  13. A physicians assistant at UW Health Transplant was dating someone who worked at Charter Media and she helped to arrange a meeting with him, Kathy, and Trey.Ripple effect still happening six years later!

  14. Suzanne Rasmussen Transplant Waitlist Candidate

More Related