I found this video of a man opening his new CareLink Home Monitor when it was posted on our Yammer network. It has a new pacemaker patient opening and showing the content of his new CareLink Home Monitor. The CareLink Home Monitor is a device that gathers data from a patient’s cardiac device and sends it to their physician’s office for review. The CareLink Network has a website that the physician and patient can see the data from the device in charts and graphs and the physician can import that data into their EMR system. Pretty neat stuff.
However, what I’m interested in is the experience this guy has opening the box. The entire CareLink Network doesn’t work if the patient can’t get the device set up and working properly. So when he opened the box I was disheartened to see that it looked like a Dell computer box. Everything was packaged in one compartment, cords were stuffed into one side of the cardboard sleeve, the instructions were in a plastic back dropped on the bottom, and the instructional DVD was floating in the box by itself. It struck me as a gap in our ability to deliver a good patient experience. I know we would have tested the experience of using the monitor, the instruction card, and probably everything in the box; just not the process of opening the box itself. I’m not here to indict the package designer who created the packaging. I’m sure it’s the cheapest and most efficient design that can stand up to any abuse it might encounter in shipping. But I don’t think that’s enough any more. We need to move from a pure engineering company, to a company that’s passionate about the experience.
Now I don’t want to just complain without offering a solution. I think we have to look at the current state of consumer electronics for a good direction. I recently purchased a Belkin wireless router for my home. The box had a flip-top lid, which has a greater surface area that showed me both the router itself and the single-page quick start guide. As I pulled out the router the network cord and power cable were labeled with large numbers and already attached, ready to use. The only thing I had to do was plug it into the wall and my modem. Another nice touch was that the unique network password was printed on the bottom of the router itself so you would never lose it. All thoughtful touches that make the experience of using the product for the first time more enjoyable.
As another example that’s totally unfair example I present the Presentation Zen Bento box, a DVD, sketchbook, and accessories to improve your presentation skills. I think it’s a great example of how the attention to the experience changes the perception of the product. A DVD and sketchbook aren’t anything truly special, but the presentation makes it remarkable. (and you can get it on Amazon for under $30)


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