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Monetizing healthcare’s C2B consumer data explosion

Monetizing healthcare's C2B consumer data explosion

Editor’s note. This article was originally posted on OliverWyman.com.

Boom! Healthcare is smack in the middle of a seemingly never-ending data explosion. Many industry players are already combining claims data, lab values, and risk assessments with less traditional data sources. In the meantime, most consumers never dream of leaving home without their phones – powerful, handheld computers that continuously collect and synchronize thousands of data points to make everything from reading the news to staying fit more personal. Consumers’ habitual interactions with apps that call cabs on demand, bots that book yoga classes with the tap of a thumb, and personal assistants that predict their music preferences are now the norm.

What’s next?

In an exciting plot twist, the next evolution of healthcare’s data explosion will be owned by consumers: not payers or providers. According to Oliver Wyman’s 2018 Consumer Survey of US Healthcare, consumers are willing to share their health information (for the right value proposition, that is). We found 63% of consumers are quite willing to share their personal health data to ensure their medical care is the highest quality possible. And, 41% of consumers say they’re willing to share their shopping behavior to ensure top-notch medical care, as well. This kind of consumer information provides opportunities for companies beginning to merge consumer data points together to better manage health costs and empower and engage consumers. This kind of information can also help companies launch new business models that create and capture value in ways brand new to healthcare.

One critical factor, however, is the recent evolution of consumer access to their own information. Regulation and technology are forcing the inevitable release of data out of closed ecosystems into an environment where consumers control their data and share it with whomever they choose, whenever they want. For example, earlier this year, The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services proposed rules dramatically increasing consumer access to their own data—requiring that healthcare organizations provide health data to consumers in a machine-readable format they can push to an app of their choice—for free.

Apple, as just one example, is enabling consumers to aggregate their activity, biometric, and consumption data and share it with others. Legislation beyond the US (for example, The General Data Protection Regulation—a European Union framework driving Europe’s digital privacy legislation) looks increasingly likely to make its way over to the United States from abroad over time.

Our potential to link physical, digital, and social assets to paint more holistic pictures of individuals’ behaviors and habits is rich, vast, and must be executed with purpose. As healthcare’s explosion presses onwards, here’s (on the facing page) how to leverage opportunities amidst the clearing smoke.

Compelling consumer value propositions

As consumers take ownership of their data, there will be seismic shifts in strategic control for healthcare businesses. Companies with compelling consumer value propositions—those that are experiential, monetary, loyalty based, and the like—will earn the right to create innovative economic models for their shareholders and be better positioned to impact healthcare costs and future outcomes.

Nine ways to monetize healthcare’s data sharing boom

Connector. A third party creates a magnetic consumer healthcare platform that connects consumers to services. The platform owner collects rents through sponsorships or other payments from service partners. This could take the form of advertisements, but more likely will come in the form of curated experiences.

Chris Schrader is principal, health and life sciences, Oliver Wyman

 

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