Prime for acquisition? PR and marketing will pay dividends

One of the clear and obvious trends in healthcare IT in 2012 has been an increase in the number of companies coming into the UK market following the end of the NHS’ National Programme for IT. Most noticeable has been the influx of new companies coming in from overseas, particularly from the US, but equally there’s been a huge increase in the amount of new start-ups launching in the UK trying to get their share of the NHS market. With that, you’d think therefore the number of suppliers trying to access the market would have almost doubled!

But almost as quickly as new companies are forming, they are being acquired by larger organisations looking to expand their own portfolio, absorb their innovation, or wipe them out of the way as a competitor! And as a PR and marketing company we often work with innovative, growing and successful clients who are prime targets for acquisition, whether they feel ready to be or not!

Attending eHealth Insider’s Health IT Business Summit in partnership with Investec this week, reinforced just how important PR and marketing is in not only raising brand awareness to extend a company’s reach but also in order to raise a company’s value or share price ready for acquisition. At the event, it was interesting to hear an audience member raise the question: “Does good PR and marketing affect the share price?”

An investor, one of many there scouting for innovative SMEs to invest in for future financial gain, replied “One of the first things that we do when we learn about a company that we could be interested in investing in, is look at their web presence, a key factor to us is how highly they rank on Google, if we find them on the 5th or 6th page it certainly portrays them more negatively.”

Being high up on Google rankings is, of course, predominately down to good search engine optimisation (SEO) but key words in text simply don’t cut it anymore in getting a company to the top. Now inbound links, video content, compelling blogs, regular social media content and thousands of clicks often generated by individuals seeing news stories in the press, are just some of the key ways to get your company in front of people browsing the internet.

Meanwhile, aside from SEO, there’s almost no doubt that indirectly, strong brand marketing affects share price, especially over time. If a brands reputation is strong enough, customer loyalty should increase and a company’s client base should grow.

Even when times are hard and contracts aren’t being won month-in, month-out, if PR is done correctly and continuously, finding different ways of keeping a company in the limelight gives the perception that it’s highly active in its field. Thought leadership around prospects for the company and its R&D plans will ultimately attract investors and ensure they realise the potential for the company as well as the vision of its leaders.

So while good PR and marketing may seem like another overhead at the start of any product or company launch or campaign, the likelihood is that when the time comes to plan your exit strategy, it will have been a critical investment that will truly pay dividends.

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