Looking Ahead to 2024: A More Nuanced View of the Hearing Care Market

Looking Ahead to 2024: A More Nuanced View of the Hearing Care Market

With 2023 coming to a close, one year of OTC under our belts, and managed care continuing to gain traction in many parts of the country, it’s a good time to look ahead to 2024 and examine how the market for hearing devices and professional services will continue to evolve.

One positive development in 2023 that should continue to advance over the next few years is how we view the market for hearing care services. Due to some new research and a few fresh perspectives, today, we have access to much more nuanced views of the market for hearing care.

To fully appreciate our progress in better understanding the various market segments and how they might be of value to hearing care professionals, it helps to examine how market segmentation has evolved over the past decade.

Let’s go back ten short years. It was in March of 2014 at the annual AAA meeting in Orlando, Florida (the final year of the legendary Trivia Bowl) and I was fortunate enough to be part of a panel hosted by Karl Strom and sponsored by CareCredit. During that event, I discussed the slide shown in Figure 1. The consensus opinion is this little pyramid was first created by the late Bob Oliveira, CEO of Hearing Components in the 1990s. This much traveled pyramid still serves as a good, albeit crude way of understanding the untapped market for hearing devices.


Figure 1. Estimated hearing aid uptake rates (blue section of triangle) as a function of degree of hearing loss.?

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For the unversed, what is illustrated in Figure 1 is an estimate of the number of hearing aid owners striated by degree of hearing loss. Unsurprisingly, people with mild hearing loss by far have the lowest rates of hearing aid use. Considering Bob Oliveira was talking about this challenge thirty years ago, combined with the fact that the schematic is still widely discussed at many state and national professional meetings today, underscores just how little hearing aid uptake rates have evolved until recently. Which brings us to a fresher approach to understanding the challenge of low uptake rates, one first published about four years ago.

Although the data in Figure 1 is directionally correct, it doesn’t tell the whole story. In February 2020, Seminars in Hearing published an insightful article by Brent Edwards of NAL that built on Oliveira’s pyramid and helps us better understand the challenges associated with poor hearing aid uptake rates. Using two variables, degree of hearing loss on the audiogram and self-reported hearing difficulties, Brent was able to shift the focus away from singular attention on the audiogram and degree of hearing loss by adding the individual’s own perception of their hearing difficulties to the mix. He devised the four-quadrant matrix, shown in Figure 2, as a way to fully capture the unmet need for hearing devices and professional services. I would encourage everyone to read the article linked above to fully appreciate his take on gaps in the hearing care market.


Figure 2. The population segmented by hearing loss and self-reported hearing difficulty. Edwards, 2020.

By thinking about persons with measured hearing loss on the audiogram and self-reported hearing difficulties as two separate yet overlapping categories of potential consumers, Edwards expanded our understanding of different segments of the market and how each individual’s perception of value differed — depending on the quadrant they fell into. With OTC on the drawing board in 2020 when this article was published, Figure 2 helped us realize at the time that OTC and other direct-to-consumer devices and services would probably only appeal to a relatively small untapped segment of the market -- those who rejected in-person clinical care and medical-grade hearing aids. (Category E in Figure 2). His thinking also clarified there were other segments of the market that would see value in devices like multitasking hearables/earbuds or other yet-to-be-defined products or services.

Today, although we are now more than a year removed from the FDA’s codification of OTC hearing aids, and despite ample evidence demonstrating their technical viability, uptake rates for OTC are unsurprisingly mired in the low single digits while the uptake of prescriptive hearing aids remains unchanged.

Fortunately, some recent research, published in late 2023, has evolved beyond the more traditional medical model of care in which we view the consumer through the lens of their audiogram or hearing handicap score. Instead, this new bit of research relies on understanding the consumer archetypes of people who might be shopping around for hearing care. First, it helps to know a little about customer archetypes. In short, they are a pattern of behaviors and attitudes that describe a group of consumers. More specifically, consumer archetypes are?abstract, symbolic representations of various customer groups — highlighting their motivations, characteristics, and needs. Consumer archetypes are commonly generated by behemoths like Coca-Cola, Proctor & Gamble, and Nike to help them build their brands and develop messaging that resonates with distinctive market segments. By developing archetypes, businesses can identify target markets, understand the values of various market segments, and determine the most effective ways to communicate with each segment.?

In an open access December 2023 AJA article , Singh and Dhar, maybe for the first time in our profession, applied customer archetypes research to hearing care. They found there are two unique consumer archetypes in hearing healthcare: Explorers and Entrusters. Table 1 describes some of the important characteristics of each of these archetypes.?


Entrusters

·?????? Highly independent

·?????? Comfortable buying online

·?????? Verifies sources prior to buying

?Explorers

·?????? Rely heavily on others in the buying process

·?????? Not comfortable buying online

·?????? Does not check multiple sources prior to buying

?

Table 1. Brief descriptions of the two major customer archetypes in hearing care. Singh and Dhar, 2023.

Interestingly, according to their research, both Explorers and Entrusters have a strong preference for in-person delivery pathway as 84% of both groups preferred in-person pathway to online/direct-to-consumer care. Their reliance on the in-person pathway for care delivery probably reflects both a lack of knowledge and trust in the OTC channel. Some time and effort building this channel in a responsible way could yield some real improvements in uptake rates, especially among the Explorer archetype who might come to value the OTC channel in time.

Oddly enough, another 2023 article mentions customer archetypes. And it too helps us gain a deeper understanding of the untapped market for hearing devices and the professional services that often accompany them. Their framework, illustrated in Figure 3, shows there are three elements of hearing care: Technology (hearing devices), Service (assistance, counseling) and Channel (the way in which technology and service is delivered). All three of these elements exist independent of each other and exist on a continuum with clinic-driven care on one side and consumer-led, self-directed care on the other.

This framework allows us to see how technology, service and channels can be mixed and matched, depending on the needs or wishes of the person with hearing difficulty. For example, someone could begin their journey with the purchase of OTC devices on-line and eventually find their way into a clinic for an assortment of professional, counseling-related services.

The authors suggest there are eight archetypes of solutions that stem from this framework. A topic that will be the focus in the next article posted here.

Figure 3. The hearing care framework created by Brice, Saunders & Edwards, Seminars in Hearing Vol 44, No. 3, page 222.

When customer archetypes data is combined with our knowledge of the more medically oriented four-box approach shown in Figure 2, we have a much more nuanced view of hearing care. A more refined approach to understanding the diverse market for hearing care products and services will enable us eventually to devise more effective clinical and business strategies. Strategies that improve the uptake rates of hearing devices and create more customer value in various types of services. Let’s hope 2024 brings even more fresh thinking to improving how we address the unmet need of hearing loss in adults.

Given the more nuanced view of the market that is emerging, there is room at the table for prescriptive hearing aids, over-the-counter (OTC) hearing aids and the direct-to-consumer (DTC) acquisition of products and services. If you’re interested in OTC hearing aids, want to know more about them, and see some excellent options, Signia offers Sony OTC hearing aids . For an overview of prescription devices, including the highly successful Signia IX platform, go to signia-pro.com .

Andrew Bellavia

Business Development l Branding l Advisor l Speaker l Content Creator l Hearing Care & Communication Advocate l Co-Host of This Week in Hearing Podcast

11 个月

Great article Brian. I wholeheartedly agree that there is "value in devices like multitasking hearables/earbuds or other yet-to-be-defined products or services." Both Brent Edwards' 2020 paper (which I have quoted from many times) and the pyramid make it clear there is a large population who would probably appreciate situational devices for those times when they struggle. That many people desire professional assistance to help find the best solution makes sense given the increase in options. This is all to the good if people can be reached in the way they prefer. The paper by Sophie Brice, Elaine Saunders, & Brent you highlighted is especially relevant in this context. In addition to reading the paper, people can also check out Sophie & Brent describing their work on This Week in Hearing: https://youtu.be/dpFMhotbZUY?si=_PJl5m84Ht2EEghy

Sandra Vandenhoff

Au.D. | Aural rehab services

11 个月

Great article and references, Brian! Thank you.

回复
Juli?tte Sterkens, AuD

TEDx Speaker & National Hearing Loop Advocate

11 个月

(Part 2) Kochkin, in his "A Comparison of Consumer Satisfaction, Subjective Benefit, and Quality of Life Changes Associated with Traditional and Direct-mail Hearing Aid Use" article concluded: ...it appears that most hard-of-hearing consumers can be satisfied with a hearing aid, but?significantly MORE satisfied if the hearing professional in the clinic or office employs ALL BEST PRACTICES. SATISFACTION FROM DIRECT-MAIL PURCHASE EXCEEDS THAT FROM OFFICES WHERE BEST PRACTICES ARE NOT FOLLOWED. Kochkin further stated: The key factor in success appears to be improved audibility (JS: something that can ONLY be verified using Real-Ear Measures.) (Capitalization all mine) The hearing aid industry would do well to emphasize the need for Best Practices and help consumers hear in as many places as possible (and thus increase MELU) to increase the uptake of hearing aids. For the foreseeable future that means that audiologists and hearing instrument specialists should recommend "Public Access Ready" hearing aids and educate clients about not only about what is in the future (Auracast), but also explain how hearing aids can link into existing assistive listening systems via telecoils TODAY. ?Thomas Kaufmann

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