Kaiser Permanente - Marketing Forces and Diversification
Kaiser Permanente shares the concerns of other American hospitals regarding competing effectively with other hospitals while constantly improving quality of care. Kaiser is unique, however, in that its scope and resources allow it to mount an aggressive, nationwide marketing campaign directed at least theoretically to every American. Though it is difficult to reduce the success of Kaiser's marketing activities to numbers, Kaiser certainly shows signs of marketing success through extensive recognition, including but not limited to awards touting Kaiser's excellence and effectiveness.
Marketing Plan
Kaiser Permanente serves approximately 9 million members and operates in 8 regions, including Northern California, Southern California, Colorado, Georgia, Hawaii, an area embracing Maryland, Virginia and Washington, DC, Ohio, and an area comprised of Oregon and Washington (Kaiser Permanente, 2012). In addition, Kaiser Permanente acts as "the caregiver, the hospital, the laboratory, and the pharmacy" (Kaiser Permanente, 2012). Due to these extensive geographical and service categories, Kaiser Permanente markets nationally and regionally, and recruits salespeople/marketers nationally and regionally (Kaiser Permanente, 2012). As Kaiser states, its marketing strategy is driven by: distinguishing itself as simultaneously an insurance provider and health care provider; anticipating and responding "to the ever-evolving demands of our customers, members, regulators, and the marketplace" (Kaiser Permanente, 2012) and maintaining a constant commitment to "health advocacy and total health" (Kaiser Permanente, 2012). Kaiser's decisions to distinguish itself from other providers and to anticipate/respond to evolving demanding are in sync with the decisions of the community hospital featured in Noonan's and Savolaine's article because that hospital also sought to differentiate itself from other health care providers and studied the diversity of possible patient population to determine the population's needs (Noonan & Savolaine, 2001). Furthermore, Kaiser's intimate connection between health advocacy/total health and marketing is in keeping with the community hospital's commitment and marketing about that commitment (Noonan & Savolaine, 2001). The major marketing difference between Kaiser and the community hospital is, of course, the widely differing scope of their geographic areas, as the community hospital is dedicated to serving a far smaller community while Kaiser operates nationally and regionally.
Assessment of...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now