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Case Study: Multi-Channel Digital Outreach to Enhance Therapy Awareness Among Psychiatrists

Faceless shot of anonymous woman sitting with patient during home visit and taking notes on clipboard

Background

Effective communication with healthcare professionals (HCPs) is critical in ensuring awareness and understanding of therapeutic solutions—especially in fields like psychiatry where clinical nuance matters. To support this need, a focused digital engagement campaign was designed to strengthen visibility and clinician recall for an anxiolytic therapy across psychiatrists in India.

The initiative ran for two months (July–August 2024) and aimed to reach psychiatrists nationwide with consistent, relevant messaging that highlighted key clinical benefits. The approach prioritized digital platforms and creative formats to ensure wide exposure and measurable interaction.

Objectives

The primary goals of the campaign were:

Methodology

The campaign employed a multi-touch, digital-first strategy structured around creative medical education content and targeted delivery. Key components included:

This multi-layered approach ensured repeated exposure, allowing psychiatrists to encounter the content across different contexts and formats.

Results

The campaign delivered strong performance across key digital engagement metrics:

Performance Overview

MetricResult
Reach6,211 psychiatrists
Impressions126,146 views
Clicks5,893 interactions
Click-Through Rate (CTR)5%

Key Highlights

Insights & Learnings

Conclusion

This campaign demonstrates how a multi-channel digital engagement strategy can significantly improve awareness and interaction among specialist healthcare professionals. By combining creative educational content with targeted delivery and analytics tracking, the initiative not only exceeded its engagement goals but also provided actionable learnings for future campaigns.

Such a structured approach to digital outreach reinforces the value of integrating creative formats, data insights, and consistent follow-ups when communicating clinical information to busy specialists.

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