Company: Oticon, Inc.
Contact: Gordon Wilson, VP of Marketing
Location: Somerset, NJ
Industry: Manufacturing (B2C)
Annual revenue: $960,000,000
Number of employees: 350

Quick Read:

The hearing aid industry for years has suffered from an image problem. Potential buyers were reluctant to buy hearing aids because the devices were perceived as ugly and only for elderly people. As a result, just 23% of those who needed hearing aids actually bought them. Denmark-based Oticon, like other manufacturers, faced a lack of market penetration.

In 2004, the company undertook extensive market research aimed at people with hearing loss who had opted not to buy a hearing aid. The research tried to identify the attributes of an ideal hearing aid and under what circumstances people would buy one. Oticon set out to use the latest technology to build a hearing aid that would address many of the concerns highlighted by the market research.

Two years later the company introduced the new device, which had a different look and fit from prior generations of hearing aids. The related marketing materials used younger-looking models wearing the small hearing in colorful designs. The new approach has paid off. In 18 months on the market, the new Delta hearing aid has helped Oticon nearly double the industry average in terms of the proportion of first-time hearing-aid buyers.

The Challenge:

Prior to 2006, Oticon's US sales—like those of its rivals—were stagnant, and its market penetration hadn't budged in years. The average age of the first-time buyer for all manufacturers was 69.

But hearing loss affects a large population of varying ages, and Oticon knew that it was leaving potential sales on the table because many suffering from hearing loss didn't want an unattractive hearing aid in their ear. However, it wasn't until the company conducted high-level market research that Oticon realized exactly what it was up against in terms of attitudes about hearing aids.

The research, begun in 2004, concentrated on those with a noticeable hearing loss who opted not to wear hearing aids. Researchers asked many pointed questions about why subjects decided not to wear the devices.

"We realized that the stigma (surrounding hearing aids) was more deeply felt than we had allowed ourselves to believe," said Gordon Wilson, Oticon's vice-president of marketing. "Some people felt that wearing a hearing aid was like wearing a glaring sign that said I am broken, I am not ideal. For some, the hearing aid had a very negative product connotation—and as a result, they would only get them when they were desperate to hear."

The Campaign:

Oticon decided it needed a very different sales approach to reach a wider audience and also change the hearing aid's image. The company had already begun redesigning its hearing aid when it launched its market research in 2004; now it used that research, as well as the latest technology, to finalize the design of the new device.

In March 2006 it launched what it called the Delta "personal hearing device." The Delta, so named after its triangular housing that contains the microphones and signal-processing electronics, is designed for people in their late 40s or older who don't want their hearing aids to be visible; the tiny over-the-ear device can be hard to detect if users keep their hair over their ears.

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Case Study: How a Hearing Aid Company Doubled the Percentage of Sales to Valuable First-Time Buyers

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