Pharmaceutical sales jobs keep getting harder (and require an iPad)

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5.22.11 | David E. Williams
Pharmaceutical sales jobs keep getting harder (and require an iPad)

Not so long ago being a pharmaceutical sales rep could be a lot of fun. Jamie Reidy laid it all out in Hard Sell: The Evolution of a Viagra Salesman, one of the more entertaining books on the topic. In this interview from 2005, Reidy talked about how much fun it was and how the old tools for control of reps included hiring people from the military and Mormons, who were presumed to be honest and hardworking:

Reidy: Everyone works from their house and then has their own sales territory. So, no one ever knows where you are.
Smith: So it’s kind of freelance, where you set your own hours, and kind of have to be self-motivated?
Reidy: Yeah, so it shouldn’t be like freelance ’ they want you to be working from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day. But it’s freelance in the sense that nobody has any idea whether I’m doing that or not. So, they thought they could inherently trust former military officers as honest, hardworking guys who can be trusted to get up early and go do their job. And then the other thing that I learned later on is that military officers are also used to taking orders and Pfizer’s sales pitches were very drilled down from the top, and everybody was supposed to repeat the same thing all the time.
I remember Reidy describing various shenanigans in his book including how he and others gave out Viagra samples intended for the personal use of the physician and office staff in order to get in the door to pitch less sexy products.

Flash forward to today and BNET’s Drug Reps Fear iPad’s Spying; They Should Be Worried About Their Jobs article highlights the much diminished pleasures of being a pharmaceutical sales rep. The emergence of the iPad is the theme of the article, but it’s the broader context that’s more interesting. The author cites three trends driven by the iPad:

Pharma companies ’buying iPads in bulk for their salesforces even if they don’t have presentation software to run on them.’ Apparently they’re stockpiling them for when they’re ready, they’re so excited about it. This trend ’if true’ is pretty foolish, since those iPads will be obsolete within a year or so. If anything, that sounds like the old pharma way of doing things, spending money freely without thinking things through.
More physicians using iPads themselves. That one is certainly true. It also means there’s less interest in seeing a rep’s snazzy new iPad if the doc has one, and can presumably also run whatever app the sales rep is using to see the info in his or her own time.
Sales reps are starting to realize that iPads are tracking their every move and reporting back to big brother, i.e., sales management. That’s a jarring disconnect from the world Reidy describes, but as reps reflect on it they may realize companies have been doing this tracking for a while, using GPS systems tied to their cars, etc. Only now it’s getting much harder to get around.
In addition to the 3 factors cited by BNET, there are three other challenges for pharma reps:

Fewer doctors will see them at all, thanks mainly to policies put in place by their institutions
Doctors’ power of the pen is less mighty than it was as formulary compliance rises thanks to the role of pharmacy benefits managers and e-prescribing
Companies like Pfizer haven’t been producing exciting new drugs like Viagra, so there’s less to pitch. And when it comes to generic competition it doesn’t really matter how persuasive the sales person is if you’re competition is charging 90% less
There’s still a role for sales reps, but they’re having to work a lot harder and smarter to earn their keep. These days a guy like Reidy wouldn’t even last long enough to build up enough stories to write a book.

The author, David E. Williams, is the co-founder of MedPharma Partners who writes regularly on the Health Business Blog.

http://www.medcitynews.com/2011/05/...jobs-keep-getting-harder-and-require-an-ipad/
 




We're hardly working harder OR smarter. If anything, the gig has gotten more mindless because every little move is spoon fed to us. As long as you can kill your inner drive to do something meaningful with your life, this job gets easier by the day.
 








We're hardly working harder OR smarter. If anything, the gig has gotten more mindless because every little move is spoon fed to us. As long as you can kill your inner drive to do something meaningful with your life, this job gets easier by the day.

thank you for this post. it's true. my inner drive was snuffed out ages ago. i put this job in a little box, open it up during work hours, then seal it up at end of day. my mind is not engaged at all during the day other than by how many hours are left to fill up by stopping in to md offices, not to sell anything, but ONLY to ensure that I have the rapport still for the next time the A**hole district manager wants a ridealong. that's honestly the ONLY reason why i even bother. when i need to get somethign done, i have great relationships in offices from the years of trust that has built up. the operating mantra, the daily and weekly modus operandi is "stay off the radar". that is all.

i jus thave to ask, who really runs this business..this industry? All these stupid companies follow the same damned model, and micromanage for the sake of micromanaging and CYA. doesn't ANYONE ever say at a higher level: no this is a dumb way to run a business and a dumb way to motivate a field force. ? anyone?

thanks for the post. made my day
 




thank you for this post. it's true. my inner drive was snuffed out ages ago. i put this job in a little box, open it up during work hours, then seal it up at end of day. my mind is not engaged at all during the day other than by how many hours are left to fill up by stopping in to md offices, not to sell anything, but ONLY to ensure that I have the rapport still for the next time the A**hole district manager wants a ridealong. that's honestly the ONLY reason why i even bother. when i need to get somethign done, i have great relationships in offices from the years of trust that has built up. the operating mantra, the daily and weekly modus operandi is "stay off the radar". that is all.

i jus thave to ask, who really runs this business..this industry? All these stupid companies follow the same damned model, and micromanage for the sake of micromanaging and CYA. doesn't ANYONE ever say at a higher level: no this is a dumb way to run a business and a dumb way to motivate a field force. ? anyone?

thanks for the post. made my day



For the few of us left that remember AstraMerck, those were the best days. We were not micromanaged at all and we actually sold something. As soon as Zeneca entered the room it all went to hell. Never ever the same since nor ever will be. So sad.
 




thank you for this post. it's true. my inner drive was snuffed out ages ago. i put this job in a little box, open it up during work hours, then seal it up at end of day. my mind is not engaged at all during the day other than by how many hours are left to fill up by stopping in to md offices, not to sell anything, but ONLY to ensure that I have the rapport still for the next time the A**hole district manager wants a ridealong. that's honestly the ONLY reason why i even bother. when i need to get somethign done, i have great relationships in offices from the years of trust that has built up. the operating mantra, the daily and weekly modus operandi is "stay off the radar". that is all.

i jus thave to ask, who really runs this business..this industry? All these stupid companies follow the same damned model, and micromanage for the sake of micromanaging and CYA. doesn't ANYONE ever say at a higher level: no this is a dumb way to run a business and a dumb way to motivate a field force. ? anyone?

thanks for the post. made my day

a year and a half late on my post, but THIS post is amazing and on target. continued rapport is the only motivation, so when I get the call for the ridealong its as smoothe as butter. I know who and what to expect when d*ckhead is with me. There is no under drive to actually accomplish anything anymore, the M O is to stay off the radar, nothing more. we can all thank zs associates and their brethren for that. I know what the model is now, so I just let them think I not only drink the Kool aid but that I bathe in it.
 




Here's a prediction.

Someday someone who knows how broken the sales model is will become CEO of a major pharmaceutical company. Maybe a former rep. They will completely blow up the model and replace it with something radically different.

In the timed honored spirit of monkey see monkey do other companies will follow suit.

It has to happen. The current model is broken beyond repair.
 




We have it made in the shade! I haven't worked a full week in over a decade. I have lied about my calls for as long as I can remember. My "sales" are good. I eat free lunch almost every day. My job is not getting harder...it's getting easier!!! My DM hasn't worked an entire field day since I first got the bitch! She conveniently has the ever present "conference call" right after lunch and has to leave! I love her to death! She's a bigger liar than I am! Come on, just sit back, do the least you can, and enjoy life!
 




Above poster has the right idea and is truthful. Unfortunately, this type of gig does more harm on your personal life and your conscience. It's fine when you're young and don't really care but it will wear on you when you realize what you do could be done by a mature 15 year old. Everyone knows this that's why no one does anything about it.