Start Small. Think Big. Move Fast.
          An Inside Look at
 Mayo Clinic’s Center for Social Media

          Lee Aase (@LeeAase)

Director, Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media
           #MCCSM or #mayoragan
               March 15, 2011
Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media
• Our Raison d’etre: The Mayo Clinic Center
 for Social Media exists to improve health
 globally by accelerating effective application
 of social media tools throughout Mayo Clinic
 and spurring broader and deeper
 engagement in social media by hospitals,
 medical professionals and patients.
• Our Mission: Lead the social media
 revolution in health care, contributing to
 health and well being for people everywhere.
Overcoming Objections to Using
  Social Media in Health Care
• Assertions
  − “We should focus on ‘real, grown-up’ media
    where we can reach the most people”
  − “Employees will just waste all their time on
    Facebook instead of doing their work”
• Assertions disguised as questions
  − “Isn’t Facebook full of viruses?”
  − “What about HIPAA?”
  − “What’s the ROI?”
Agenda As Advertised
• How social media tools transform health care
• Why your organization can use social media
 to do well by doing good
• How using social media externally makes the
 best case for internal applications
• Why social media is (are) a key to higher
 productivity, not a time-waster to be blocked
 by IT
One of my heroes...
Two More Heroes

 Six Magic Words
Four Reasons Why
They’re True for You
“I’ll bet I
could do
  that!”
About Lee Aase (@LeeAase)
• B.S. Political Science
• 14 years in politics and government at
 local, state, national levels
• Mayo Clinic since April 2000
  − Media relations consultant
  − Manager since 2004
    − Media Relations/Research Comm
    − Syndication and Social Media
2009 Brand Preference Summary
                   Healthcare Decision-Makers Aged 25+
                                                                Total

     Mayo Clinic                   13     5.4
                                                                18.4%
            AMC 1           4    2.5                            6.6%

            AMC 2        2 1.5                                  4.8%

            AMC 3        2 1.4                                  3.4%

            AMC 4        2 1.1                                  2.8%

            AMC 5       1 1.3                                   2.3%

            AMC 6        2 0.8                                  2.3%


                                                1st Mention
2009 US Consumer Brand Monitor, n=3336          Add'l Mention
A Brief History of Social Media
       at Mayo Clinic ...
Mayo Clinic Medical Edge
Syndicated News Media Resources
First Foray in “New” Media




• Existing Medical Edge radio mp3s
• Launched Sept. ‘05; Downloads up
 8,217 percent Oct. vs. Aug.
Regrouping to Plan
Just as genomics is the future of personalized
medicine, personalized media are changing the
way people get the news and information they
want and need. But as genomics increasingly
supplements and improves traditional medicine
without replacing it, new media are helpful
additions to mainstream, mass media. We
strongly recommend reforming our processes
to efficiently produce content that can be used
for both mass media and personalized media.


        Content Creation Task Force, 7/26/2006
We recommend a three-phase approach. First,
take our existing products and, with minimum
incremental effort, place them in new media
formats. Second... work across teams ... to make
best use of the audio and video production
resources we have. Third, get more resources...
to produce timely or even daily content...

We have not recommended a blog strategy at
this time, primarily because we have emphasized
developing audio and video content that could
have multiple uses in both mass media and
personalized media, with relatively limited
physician involvement.
My First Blog Post - 7/30/06
Jan. ’07 - Warming to Blogging
Private Blog for Public Affairs
Free Wordpress.com option
Our First Social Media
Consultant: Feb. 2007
Executing Phase One Strategy
@LeeAase on Twitter: 3/13/07
Personally Exploring Business
 Uses of Facebook - Aug. ‘07
Blogging an Event: Nov. 2007
Discovering Involuntary Social
   Network Representation
Facebook: 11/7/07
A Pivotal Presentation
Second Consultant: Jan. 2008




“The world has voted, and we want to
watch videos on YouTube.”
Reclaiming YouTube: Feb. ’08
Joining The Blog Council
• Membership organization of blogging
 “companies”
• Typically Fortune 500 members
  − Coca-Cola, P&G, Wells Fargo, etc.
  − Mayo Clinic, Kaiser Permanente, U.S.
    Navy among “non-traditional” members
• Now the Social Media Business Council
@MayoClinic on Twitter: 4/29/08
Podcast Blog: April ’08
Transforming YouTube Channel
• Started with Medical Edge TV foundation
• Coca-Cola Conversation @ Blog Council
The $4-a-month online newsroom
Let’s Talk “site” - May 2008
Sharing Mayo Clinic - Jan. 2009
Wordpress MU Platform
A Broader Historical Perspective...
Thesis #1: Air was the
original social medium
Mayo Clinic and Word of Mouth

• 91 percent of patients surveyed say
 they have said “good things” to an
 average of 40 people after a Mayo visit
• 85 percent say they recommended
 Mayo to a friend
 − Advised an average of 16 to come
  − 5 actually came
Sources of Information Influencing
       Preference for Mayo Clinic

     Word of mouth                                        84

Stories in the media                            57

MD recommendation                          44

        Advertising              27

  Internet/Websites             26

Personal experience             24

   Mailings to home        18

                       0   20         40        60   80        100
#2: Electronic tools merely
  facilitate broader, more
 efficient transmission by
  overcoming inertia and
            friction
#4: Social media are the
third millennium’s defining
   communications trend
Gutenberg: Global Mass Literacy
Zuckerberg: Global Mass Publishing
If you’re still in doubt, ask these guys:
#7: Hand-wringing about
merits and dangers of social
 media is as productive as
      debating gravity.
If you think blocking is a viable
       long-term option...
Implication
• You already have most of the risks...
 why not also get some of the benefits
 from these powerful tools?
#12: Communications and
  marketing professionals
   who fail to understand
social media flirt with media
        malpractice
#14: Strategic thinking about
social media is no substitute
          for action
Working from the Outside In...
• Lines from Lee/SMUG
• Public Affairs Wordpress.com blog
• Wordpress.com blog for symposium
• Long-term external Wordpress.com blogs
• Wordpress blog behind the firewall
• Self-hosted Wordpress MU platform
#16: Social media tools
make the once-scarce power
 of mass media available to
          everyone
As Uncle Ben would say...
Not that Uncle Ben. This Uncle Ben
#17: Social media are free in
 any ordinary sense of the
word (or at least ridiculously
       inexpensive)
Total Cost for Mayo Clinic
Facebook, YouTube and Twitter




  $0.00
In the European Union, based on
     current exchange rates:




   €0,00
Answers to Objections
• “But what about the cost in staff time to
 maintain all of these social media
 platforms? They’re not really that
 cheap!”
  − AT&T free phone service in 1971
  − Pitney Bowes free fax machines and
    supplies in 1991
  − YouTube, Facebook and Twitter are free
    in 2011
#18: As I approaches zero,
 ROI approaches infinity
#28: Paying for advertising
while not taking advantage
of free online opportunities
  isn’t particularly astute
#33: Social media will
decrease diffusion time for
 research and innovations
Discovery by Richard Berger, M.D., Ph.D.

 Ulnotriquetral (UT) Ligament Split Tear
Jayson Werth’s Experience
USA Today
Nov 12, 2009




               3031031-7
Last Friday




              3031031-9
Less than 24 hours after my initial appointment, I not
  only had a new diagnosis - a UT split tear - but had
  surgery to correct the problem. As I write this, my
     right arm is in a festive green, but otherwise
   annoying cast. The short-term hassle, however,
 should be more than worth the long-term gain - the
  potential for a future without chronic wrist pain. A
 future, that without Twitter and those in the medical
      community willing to experiment with new
    communications tools, might not exist for me.



                                                         3031031-10
#35: Social technologies will
   transform healthcare
And just over a week ago...
The 37th Thesis

Applying social media in health care isn’t
just inevitable: it’s the right thing to do in
the interest of patients.
Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media
• Our Raison d’etre: The Mayo Clinic Center
 for Social Media exists to improve health
 globally by accelerating effective application
 of social media tools throughout Mayo Clinic
 and spurring broader and deeper
 engagement in social media by hospitals,
 medical professionals and patients.
• Our Mission: Lead the social media
 revolution in health care, contributing to
 health and well being for people everywhere.
Social Media Health Network
• Membership group associated with
 Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media
• For organizations wanting to use social
 media to promote health, fight disease
 and improve health care
• Dues based on organization revenues
• Industry members, but no industry
 grant funding
Social Media Health Network
• Announced here Sept. 28, 2010 with six
 charter members
• Up to 43 member organizations as of
 this morning
• http://socialmedia.mayoclinic.org/
 network/
Charter Members
• Mayo Clinic
• Bon Secours Health System
• Inova Health System
• Mission Health System
• Radboud University Nijmegen Medical
 Centre, Netherlands
• Swedish Medical Center (Seattle)
Key Benefits
• All employees of member organizations
 have access to Network member site
  − Curriculum
  − Sharing case studies, developing best
    (or at least better) practices
• Discounted admission to conferences,
 webinars
• Free admission to member meetings,
 some workshops, webinars
• Network site as prototype for yours
Member Site Features
• Practical, step-by-step “how to”
 curriculum
• Sharing of Case Studies, Practices
• Prudential curriculum on Privacy,
 Professionalism, Ethics
• Forums for discussion
• Wikis for collaborative resource
 development
• Networking with peers
Launched Feb. 10
Upcoming Events
• Webinars
• Seattle Summit April 13-15, 2011
• Rochester Summit October 17-19, 2011
Dr. Will Mayo @ Northwestern
Are you not be amazed and
grateful for today’s revolutionary
     communication tools?
Will you join us in the Revolution?

http://socialmedia.mayoclinic.org/

Social Media Summit Keynote

  • 1.
    Start Small. ThinkBig. Move Fast. An Inside Look at Mayo Clinic’s Center for Social Media Lee Aase (@LeeAase) Director, Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media #MCCSM or #mayoragan March 15, 2011
  • 3.
    Mayo Clinic Centerfor Social Media • Our Raison d’etre: The Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media exists to improve health globally by accelerating effective application of social media tools throughout Mayo Clinic and spurring broader and deeper engagement in social media by hospitals, medical professionals and patients. • Our Mission: Lead the social media revolution in health care, contributing to health and well being for people everywhere.
  • 4.
    Overcoming Objections toUsing Social Media in Health Care • Assertions − “We should focus on ‘real, grown-up’ media where we can reach the most people” − “Employees will just waste all their time on Facebook instead of doing their work” • Assertions disguised as questions − “Isn’t Facebook full of viruses?” − “What about HIPAA?” − “What’s the ROI?”
  • 5.
    Agenda As Advertised •How social media tools transform health care • Why your organization can use social media to do well by doing good • How using social media externally makes the best case for internal applications • Why social media is (are) a key to higher productivity, not a time-waster to be blocked by IT
  • 6.
    One of myheroes...
  • 10.
    Two More Heroes Six Magic Words Four Reasons Why They’re True for You
  • 12.
  • 15.
    About Lee Aase(@LeeAase) • B.S. Political Science • 14 years in politics and government at local, state, national levels • Mayo Clinic since April 2000 − Media relations consultant − Manager since 2004 − Media Relations/Research Comm − Syndication and Social Media
  • 19.
    2009 Brand PreferenceSummary Healthcare Decision-Makers Aged 25+ Total Mayo Clinic 13 5.4 18.4% AMC 1 4 2.5 6.6% AMC 2 2 1.5 4.8% AMC 3 2 1.4 3.4% AMC 4 2 1.1 2.8% AMC 5 1 1.3 2.3% AMC 6 2 0.8 2.3% 1st Mention 2009 US Consumer Brand Monitor, n=3336 Add'l Mention
  • 20.
    A Brief Historyof Social Media at Mayo Clinic ...
  • 21.
    Mayo Clinic MedicalEdge Syndicated News Media Resources
  • 22.
    First Foray in“New” Media • Existing Medical Edge radio mp3s • Launched Sept. ‘05; Downloads up 8,217 percent Oct. vs. Aug.
  • 23.
    Regrouping to Plan Justas genomics is the future of personalized medicine, personalized media are changing the way people get the news and information they want and need. But as genomics increasingly supplements and improves traditional medicine without replacing it, new media are helpful additions to mainstream, mass media. We strongly recommend reforming our processes to efficiently produce content that can be used for both mass media and personalized media. Content Creation Task Force, 7/26/2006
  • 24.
    We recommend athree-phase approach. First, take our existing products and, with minimum incremental effort, place them in new media formats. Second... work across teams ... to make best use of the audio and video production resources we have. Third, get more resources... to produce timely or even daily content... We have not recommended a blog strategy at this time, primarily because we have emphasized developing audio and video content that could have multiple uses in both mass media and personalized media, with relatively limited physician involvement.
  • 25.
    My First BlogPost - 7/30/06
  • 26.
    Jan. ’07 -Warming to Blogging
  • 27.
    Private Blog forPublic Affairs
  • 28.
  • 29.
    Our First SocialMedia Consultant: Feb. 2007
  • 30.
  • 32.
  • 33.
    Personally Exploring Business Uses of Facebook - Aug. ‘07
  • 34.
  • 35.
    Discovering Involuntary Social Network Representation
  • 36.
  • 37.
  • 45.
    Second Consultant: Jan.2008 “The world has voted, and we want to watch videos on YouTube.”
  • 46.
  • 47.
    Joining The BlogCouncil • Membership organization of blogging “companies” • Typically Fortune 500 members − Coca-Cola, P&G, Wells Fargo, etc. − Mayo Clinic, Kaiser Permanente, U.S. Navy among “non-traditional” members • Now the Social Media Business Council
  • 48.
  • 49.
  • 50.
    Transforming YouTube Channel •Started with Medical Edge TV foundation • Coca-Cola Conversation @ Blog Council
  • 51.
  • 55.
  • 56.
  • 57.
  • 58.
    A Broader HistoricalPerspective...
  • 64.
    Thesis #1: Airwas the original social medium
  • 66.
    Mayo Clinic andWord of Mouth • 91 percent of patients surveyed say they have said “good things” to an average of 40 people after a Mayo visit • 85 percent say they recommended Mayo to a friend − Advised an average of 16 to come − 5 actually came
  • 67.
    Sources of InformationInfluencing Preference for Mayo Clinic Word of mouth 84 Stories in the media 57 MD recommendation 44 Advertising 27 Internet/Websites 26 Personal experience 24 Mailings to home 18 0 20 40 60 80 100
  • 68.
    #2: Electronic toolsmerely facilitate broader, more efficient transmission by overcoming inertia and friction
  • 70.
    #4: Social mediaare the third millennium’s defining communications trend
  • 72.
    Gutenberg: Global MassLiteracy Zuckerberg: Global Mass Publishing
  • 73.
    If you’re stillin doubt, ask these guys:
  • 74.
    #7: Hand-wringing about meritsand dangers of social media is as productive as debating gravity.
  • 76.
    If you thinkblocking is a viable long-term option...
  • 78.
    Implication • You alreadyhave most of the risks... why not also get some of the benefits from these powerful tools?
  • 79.
    #12: Communications and marketing professionals who fail to understand social media flirt with media malpractice
  • 80.
    #14: Strategic thinkingabout social media is no substitute for action
  • 82.
    Working from theOutside In... • Lines from Lee/SMUG • Public Affairs Wordpress.com blog • Wordpress.com blog for symposium • Long-term external Wordpress.com blogs • Wordpress blog behind the firewall • Self-hosted Wordpress MU platform
  • 83.
    #16: Social mediatools make the once-scarce power of mass media available to everyone
  • 85.
    As Uncle Benwould say...
  • 86.
    Not that UncleBen. This Uncle Ben
  • 88.
    #17: Social mediaare free in any ordinary sense of the word (or at least ridiculously inexpensive)
  • 89.
    Total Cost forMayo Clinic Facebook, YouTube and Twitter $0.00
  • 90.
    In the EuropeanUnion, based on current exchange rates: €0,00
  • 91.
    Answers to Objections •“But what about the cost in staff time to maintain all of these social media platforms? They’re not really that cheap!” − AT&T free phone service in 1971 − Pitney Bowes free fax machines and supplies in 1991 − YouTube, Facebook and Twitter are free in 2011
  • 92.
    #18: As Iapproaches zero, ROI approaches infinity
  • 95.
    #28: Paying foradvertising while not taking advantage of free online opportunities isn’t particularly astute
  • 96.
    #33: Social mediawill decrease diffusion time for research and innovations
  • 97.
    Discovery by RichardBerger, M.D., Ph.D. Ulnotriquetral (UT) Ligament Split Tear
  • 98.
  • 103.
    USA Today Nov 12,2009 3031031-7
  • 105.
    Last Friday 3031031-9
  • 106.
    Less than 24hours after my initial appointment, I not only had a new diagnosis - a UT split tear - but had surgery to correct the problem. As I write this, my right arm is in a festive green, but otherwise annoying cast. The short-term hassle, however, should be more than worth the long-term gain - the potential for a future without chronic wrist pain. A future, that without Twitter and those in the medical community willing to experiment with new communications tools, might not exist for me. 3031031-10
  • 110.
    #35: Social technologieswill transform healthcare
  • 119.
    And just overa week ago...
  • 121.
    The 37th Thesis Applyingsocial media in health care isn’t just inevitable: it’s the right thing to do in the interest of patients.
  • 122.
    Mayo Clinic Centerfor Social Media • Our Raison d’etre: The Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media exists to improve health globally by accelerating effective application of social media tools throughout Mayo Clinic and spurring broader and deeper engagement in social media by hospitals, medical professionals and patients. • Our Mission: Lead the social media revolution in health care, contributing to health and well being for people everywhere.
  • 125.
    Social Media HealthNetwork • Membership group associated with Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media • For organizations wanting to use social media to promote health, fight disease and improve health care • Dues based on organization revenues • Industry members, but no industry grant funding
  • 126.
    Social Media HealthNetwork • Announced here Sept. 28, 2010 with six charter members • Up to 43 member organizations as of this morning • http://socialmedia.mayoclinic.org/ network/
  • 127.
    Charter Members • MayoClinic • Bon Secours Health System • Inova Health System • Mission Health System • Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Netherlands • Swedish Medical Center (Seattle)
  • 128.
    Key Benefits • Allemployees of member organizations have access to Network member site − Curriculum − Sharing case studies, developing best (or at least better) practices • Discounted admission to conferences, webinars • Free admission to member meetings, some workshops, webinars • Network site as prototype for yours
  • 129.
    Member Site Features •Practical, step-by-step “how to” curriculum • Sharing of Case Studies, Practices • Prudential curriculum on Privacy, Professionalism, Ethics • Forums for discussion • Wikis for collaborative resource development • Networking with peers
  • 130.
  • 131.
    Upcoming Events • Webinars •Seattle Summit April 13-15, 2011 • Rochester Summit October 17-19, 2011
  • 133.
    Dr. Will Mayo@ Northwestern
  • 135.
    Are you notbe amazed and grateful for today’s revolutionary communication tools?
  • 136.
    Will you joinus in the Revolution? http://socialmedia.mayoclinic.org/