Early-stage product commercialization continues to challenge even the
most skilled and highly respected marketing and drug development
organizations. Changing government regulations, pharmacoeconomics,
health care practices, and scientific innovations have transformed the
drug development landscape in the past decade. As patent protection
narrows on many companies’ top-selling brands, the race to market
profitable products in record time is intensifying. These
transformations have been met concurrently with rising drug development
costs and diminishing R&D productivity.
These business drivers require organizational and cultural changes
within drug companies in order to unite R&D and marketing – and to
direct them toward shared objectives early in development. Injecting
market input into drug discovery and early clinical development enables
marketing and R&D to focus limited resources on the most promising drug
candidates. With market information, R&D can develop drug target
libraries and hone in on endpoints with the greatest likelihood of
fulfilling unmet medical needs. Ultimately, a continuous exchange of
information between R&D and marketing enables companies to make more
informed portfolio decisions, to serve their markets better, and to
achieve higher profits.
This report covers the critical areas in which R&D and marketing need
to work together, including portfolio planning, resource allocation,
product hand-offs and ownership, and project and product team
structures. Best practices and case studies illustrate numerous tools,
tactics, organizational structures and strategies used by top-performing
pharmaceutical and biotech companies to bridge the gaps between R&D and
marketing in early-stage drug development
Best practices and case studies illustrate a variety of tools,
tactics, organizational structures and strategies used by top-performing
pharmaceutical and biotech companies to bridge the gaps between R&D and
marketing in early-stage drug development. This report covers all the
critical areas in which R&D and marketing need to work together,
including portfolio planning, resource allocation, product hand-offs and
ownership, and project and product team structures.
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