
Healthcare organizations have invested heavily in digital engagement over the past decade. Patient portals. CRM platforms. Campaign automation. Consumer data platforms. And yet, personalization in healthcare still feels stuck.
Outreach is often generic. Preventive care reminders go unopened. Screening campaigns underperform. Value based care programs struggle to engage the very patients they are designed to support.
I hear a version of the same frustration from health system and life sciences leaders. Their engagement stack keeps expanding, but their impact on the patient experience remains limited.
While many healthcare organizations have abundant data, most have an identity and context gap.
Personalization stalls when identity never moves beyond the EHR
A diagnosis tells you what care is needed, but it doesn’t tell you how to reach someone, when they are most receptive, or what barriers might prevent follow-through.

When identity stops at the electronic health record (EHR), engagement becomes a series of educated guesses about a real person’s needs, preferences, and circumstances.
Patients don’t live inside the EHR
Consider how most preventive outreach works today. A patient leaves the hospital with instructions and a recommended follow-up appointment, and the system triggers a standard sequence of reminders.
The intent is right. The execution is usually constrained by missing context.
- Will they see the message in the channel you chose?
- Is a caregiver involved in coordinating next steps?
- Is the barrier logistics, or clarity on what to do next?
These factors determine whether follow-up happens. They also determine whether “personalization” actually feels personal, or just automated.

In other industries, personalization advanced by connecting transactional data with behavioral and household context. In healthcare, those signals remain separate to protect patient data, often resulting in a disconnect between strong clinical insights and effective patient engagement.
Connecting the dots is the hard part
There’s a common narrative that healthcare needs more data to improve personalization. In practice, the bigger challenge is connecting what you already have in a way teams can trust. Identity, preference, household context, and engagement history often live in different systems, and they rarely resolve cleanly to a usable profile.
A privacy-safe identity foundation changes that. When organizations can link records across sources with strong match discipline, governance, and tokenization, they can turn fragmented data into more relevant decisions without exposing more than is necessary.
Watch our Q&A with Cristin Liberatore from IQVIA Digital on healthcare marketing
How we approach this at Experian
At Experian, this is the lens we use:
What privacy-safe identity makes possible in regulated patient engagement
In regulated categories, accuracy, governance, and privacy are non-negotiable. That’s why I push teams to think about identity as infrastructure, because people move, households change, and preferences shift.
At Experian, that infrastructure includes:
- Marketing Attributes and Enrichment: Adding context to first-party data so planning and decisioning reflect the person you’re trying to reach.
- Offline and Digital Graphs: Connect identity across touchpoints so experiences stay consistent as people move between channels.
- First-Party Onboarding and data marketplace: Activate consented consumer and patient data across digital environments in a privacy-safe way. Our data marketplace extends that strategy with third-party partner segments, improving your personalization efforts to encourage a more proactive approach to healthcare.
- Curated Deals: Support upper-funnel awareness by aligning audience insight with higher-quality inventory in environments that can improve visibility, context, and campaign efficiency.
Watch our healthcare marketing panel from CES 2026
Identity must come first in healthcare marketing
Healthcare personalization has plateaued because engagement strategies have stayed too narrow and disconnected from the realities that shape follow-through.
The next phase of healthcare engagement will be defined by organizations that treat identity and additional patient context as the foundation for decisioning, activation, and measurement. When identity connects to real-world context through privacy-safe, governed, and tokenized practices, outreach becomes more relevant, easier to receive, and easier to act on.
About the author

Kevin Dunn
Chief Revenue Officer, Experian
Kevin Dunn joins Experian Marketing Services with more than 20 years of leadership experience across marketing and advertising technology, most recently serving as Senior Vice President of Brands and Agencies at LiveRamp. In that role, he led growth across retail, CPG, travel, hospitality, financial services, and healthcare, overseeing new business, account expansion, and channel partnerships.
Kevin is known for building cohesive, accountable teams and leading with optimism, clarity, and a strong sense of shared purpose. His leadership philosophy centers on empowering people, driving positive outcomes for clients and fostering a culture where teams can grow, take smart risks, and succeed together.
Latest posts
Tom Rolph, VP EMEA at Tapad, part of Experian, says that ad-sponsored streaming services can be successful if they can deliver a higher quality viewer experience than other streaming services. Last week, Hulu, the streaming service acquired by Fox and now owned 60 per cent by Disney, announced it will be regularising its ad loads. The streaming service will be bringing ad breaks down to 90 seconds in an effort to deliver a better viewer experience. This is a positive move from Hulu and one which other ad-supported streaming services should follow in order to be successful in a competitive market. Previously ad breaks on Hulu could vary wildly, from 180 seconds to 240 seconds, due to existing deals with its three owners: Disney, Comcast and AT&T. Over in the UK, we haven’t suffered from quite as inconsistent an approach as in the US, but there is still viewer frustration with the ad experience on ITV Hub and All4, where the problem tends to be over exposure of the same ad. Therefore, this move to standardise ad break lengths for streaming platforms is one that should be embraced on both sides of the pond. An important shift in this space will be to limit the number of ads during each show, but have better ad targeting to minimise repetitive advertising and increase the ROI of ad spend. All of which can be accomplished by investing in identity resolution products that can support CTV devices. Last year Ofcom found that in the UK subscriptions to Netflix, Amazon and NOW TV have risen above those to traditional pay TV services. With Netflix and Amazon both ad-free and NOW TV only a limited ad funded model, it’s clear that there is a growing appetite for ad-free viewing models. A fact that is only further supported when you consider the role of the BBC and BBC iPlayer. But the picture isn’t entirely negative for ad-funded models. There is demand for great content on ad-funded services in the UK, with ITV Hub boasting over 1bn requests and 540m hours of TV watched. The ITV Hub mobile app has also been downloaded on over 27m devices across the country – with over 22m people now registered to ITV Hub database, including more than half of Britain’s 16-24 year olds. However, to continue to attract and retain younger viewers, the experience will have to improve. There are several areas where ad-supported streaming providers need to improve in order to remain top players in this space: Ad experienceAs explored above, both volume and repetition of ads can be a turn off for viewers, but with Brits already spending a total of £303.16m every month on TV streaming services, according to Finder.com, there is potential for free, ad-funded models to flourish as people hit a limit on what they are willing to spend. There are already signs of improvement with the ad experience, with ITV just signing a deal with Amobee to allow for addressable ads on ITV Hub, while Sky’s AdSmart technology remains best in class and has now crossed over the pond to be used by Comcast stablemate NBC. Server reliabilityA cursory search finds little evidence of ongoing reliability problems with Netflix, but much evidence of problems with ITV Hub and All4, which are both prone to crashing. To compete with bigger players with massive server farms, server capacity needs to be tackled. This is especially true when it comes to live events, where many people will recall ITV Hub’s famous fails during the World Cup. While even some of the larger players have had similar streaming issues (for example, Amazon’s move into live sports streaming when they had to pull UK streaming of the US Open Tennis due to user complaints), viewing experience should be prioritised as the space gets increasingly competitive. Getting the content rightAmazon and Netflix have huge content budgets, but UK broadcasters remain strong in this regard, Channel 4 has enjoyed viewing figures of 7.5m for the Great British Bake Off, while ITV pulled in 13.7m for I’m A Celebrity. By building on UK-specific content that speaks to UK audiences, ad-supported streaming services can continue to pull in more viewers. Mobile accessMore and more Brits are choosing to watch TV content on their smartphone or tablet, according to UKOM-approved comScore data. In fact, 6.5m adults visited the BBC iPlayer app to watch video on either a smartphone or tablet, edging out Netflix which attracted 5.8m Getting the experience right on mobile, with the option to download content so it can be viewed in areas of low or no signal, is key.If UK ad-supported TV stations can crack these key areas for their Connected TV offering then they will be set up to succeed and offer a true home-grown alternative to the US streaming giants. Full article here. Contact us today
Tapad’s, part of Experian, SVP of Identity shows us how marketers might communicate seamlessly through emerging channels like voice, the smart home, and, yes, podcasts.In his relatively new role as senior vice president of identity at Tapad, a part of Experian, Ajit Thupil keeps a close eye on the evolution of marketing as it becomes more intent on using data and identity technology to track ROI. Here he sits with Chris Wood at Tapad’s New York offices to discuss the future of identity. (To capture the inventive atmosphere at this location, the room they chatted in was named after Leonardo da Vinci.) For Thupil, it all comes back to the customer, whether it’s a brand client or a consumer. Brands want measurability and customers demand a seamless experience across the many devices they use in a day. While consumers are understandably reticent about giving up personally identifiable information (PII), current identity solutions use anonymous data profiles to connect the dots at the individual or household level. Given the frequency that users switch devices, along with their tendency to share bigger screens like TVs, there’s no dearth of challenges for this “head of problem solving” to solve. Contact us today
Tapad, part of Experian, brings global insights to arm Treasure Data’s enterprise CDP technology
Featured storiesJoint solution will enhance accuracy and reach across North America, EMEA and APAC NEW YORK, April 17, 2019 /PRNewswire/ — Tapad, a global marketing technology company and leader in digital identity resolution solutions, today announced a new joint capability with Arm®Treasure DataTM , a leader in enterprise customer data management. The partnership combines The Tapad GraphTM technology with Arm Treasure Data’s robust enterprise Customer Data Platform (CDP), enabling advertisers in the Arm Treasure Data marketplace to access Tapad’s datasets. With the integration of Tapad’s Graph and Arm Treasure Data’s existing first party data, marketers will be able to deliver scalable, cross-device messaging with precision. In addition, marketers can benefit from anonymous customer journey analysis, audience expansion and online and offline attribution. Arm Treasure Data’s APAC market customers will have access to expanded audience reach by leveraging Tapad’s global, proprietary datasets. While Tapad will be able to extend its presence into the APAC region, tapping into Arm Treasure Data’s existing footprint. “The Tapad GraphTM is a trusted and established platform with a history of innovation,” said Stephen Lee, Senior Director, Business Development, Arm Treasure Data. “Integrating Tapad’s technology into the Arm Treasure Data CDP will allow for streamlined experiences across markets, achieving global scalable reach.” For more information about The Tapad GraphTM, or to request a demo, visit our identity page. About Tapad Tapad, Inc. is a global marketing technology company and leader in digital identity resolution solutions. The Tapad GraphTM, and related solutions, provide a privacy-safe approach to connecting device identifiers to brand and marketer data, thereby allowing for enhanced measurement, attribution, reach and ROI of marketing campaigns. The Tapad GraphTM enables marketers around the world to maximize campaign effectiveness and drive business results. Tapad is recognized across the industry for its innovation, growth and workplace culture, and has earned numerous awards, including the TMCnet Tech Culture Award. Based in New York, Tapad also has offices in Chicago, London, Oslo, Singapore and Tokyo, and is a wholly owned subsidiary of Telenor Group. About Treasure Data Arm Treasure Data enterprise Customer Data Platform (CDP) unifies data from multiple sources – online, offline, IoT and device generated data – and empowers enterprises to disrupt their markets with superior customer experiences. Our customers are creating transformational customer relationships by connecting the data dots with our CDP. Arm Treasure Data is fully owned by Arm Holdings and has a global customer base of over 300 enterprises including Fortune 500 and Global 2000 companies. Our clients manage over 130 trillion records, resulting in more predictable and profitable business results. Contact us today