Healthcare personalization is stuck. Privacy-safe identity is the key to empathetic engagement

by Kevin Dunn, Chief Revenue Officer 5 min read April 2, 2026

Healthcare personalization needs privacy-safe identity

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.

Illustrated consumer profile card showing a person with icons representing interests like wellness, music, and fitness

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.

Woman with health icons

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:

Predict

Build an AI-ready data foundation from first-party data, then enrich it responsibly so models and segmentation reflect patient and consumer context.

Activate

Reach people in the channels they actually use, using privacy-safe identity, tokenized activation, and governance that supports compliant engagement in regulated environments.

Connect

Keep identity consistent across channels, so communications feel relevant and coordinated, not repetitive or fragmented, while maintaining compliance in a tokenized or de-identified fashion.

Prove

Tie engagement back to meaningful outcomes using our identity spine, so teams can learn what reduces friction and improves follow-through.

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

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

Signal and Tapad, now part of Experian, partner to expand customer reach across devices

Partnership combines customer connections and cross-device scale to deliver more strategic customer insights NEW YORK AND CHICAGO — March 16, 2017 — Signal, the global leader in customer identity, today announced a partnership with Tapad, now part of Experian and the leading provider of unified, cross-screen marketing technology solutions. This global integration extends device connectivity for Signal’s clients across North America, APAC and EMEA by leveraging Tapad’s proprietary Device GraphTM. With Signal’s Customer Identity Solution, brands benefit from more visibility of known customers, lower costs to reach those customers and decreased expenses and data loss that often results from using multiple vendors. Integrating with Tapad’s Device Graph, which connects billions of devices, enables Signal clients to build an even broader view of their known customers across multiple devices. This integration combines Signal’s customer identity scale with Tapad’s device scale to expand the reach of addressable media channels and enhance customer journey insights across touchpoints. Tapad and Signal were able to drive incremental device connections for more than 65 percent of customer profiles, linking an average of 6.8 browsers and devices per customer. With this combined data set, Signal clients can expand their authenticated view of a customer to all associated devices and realize more strategic insights into their high-value users. The partnership also allows Signal’s clients to integrate in real-time with Tapad’s media platform, Unify. This proprietary technology enables advertisers to make real-time activation and buying decisions with maximum scale, as well as automated reporting and measurement. “Continuously recognizing customers across devices instantly and in a privacy-safe way is essential for marketers to stay competitive,” said Marc Kiven, founder and CRO of Signal. “We are thrilled to enter this unique, global partnership with Tapad, enabling our clients to access their technology and more effectively reach customers in real-time and at scale.” “Being able to leverage a persistent view of customer connections across devices is a huge challenge for brands,” said Pierre Martensson, SVP and GM of Tapad’s global data division. “With Tapad, Signal is now able to connect with the billions of existing data points in our device graph to help clients better understand customer behavior and realize even stronger customer engagement.” Contact us today

Published: March 16, 2017 by Experian Marketing Services

Early successes include revenue increases, global partnerships and fundraising NEW YORK, March 16, 2017 /PRNewswire/ — Tapad’s entrepreneurial mentorship initiative, the Propeller Program, has seen extremely positive results since it began in September 2016. The five early-stage startups selected from Norway have gained momentum in establishing a U.S. presence. Tapad, now a part of Experian, is the leader in unified cross-device marketing technology. The company was acquired by the Telenor Group in 2016. Among the successes within Propeller: Xeneta, the leading ocean freight price comparison platform and contracted rate database, has raised an additional $12M in funding since beginning the Propeller Program. Before the end of 2016, the company had exceeded its revenue expectations by nearly 30 percent, proving the European-focused business could succeed in the American market. “Aside from directly impacting our revenue, the Propeller Program has provided us with incredible access to a countless number of external resources, including subject matter experts from the fields of fundraising, public speaking, corporate structuring and immigration law,” said William Di Ieso, GM of North America for Xeneta. “We remain extremely grateful for the opportunity and exposure the program has provided for Xeneta.” Bubbly, an in-store real-time engagement tool for non-buyers, now has clients on four continents. After only a few months in the U.S. market, Bubbly has signed deals with one major retail brand, one major toy manufacturer and a major global consulting firm. The Propeller Program has also opened doors for greater opportunities in Scandinavia and EMEA. After an introduction to Telenor Group’s President and CEO Sigve Brekke, Bubbly is currently piloting its IoT kiosk with the company. “The mentoring sessions have been very valuable and have given us guidance as to how to best enter the U.S. market,” said Marianne Haugland Hindsgaul, Bubbly CEO and co-founder. “Learning to do business in the U.S. is not something you can necessarily learn from a book. The most impactful lessons are based on real-world experience, and that is what the Propeller Program has given us.” BylineMe, a marketplace for freelancers, publishers and brands to connect for content creation and distribution services, has built an extensive network of potential clients and investors. The company has tested its product in the U.S. market and gained valuable feedback for further development. Eventum, a property-sharing group that digitally assists in securing venues for meetings and corporate events, has closed a seed round of funding for nearly $1M. Eventum has also made key hires in the areas of business development and engineering “It is so rewarding to be able to support these Norwegian startups in a meaningful way,” said Are Traasdahl, CEO and founder at Tapad. “Mentor relationships are critical for strategic growth, and I am proud to be able to pay forward the experiences I have gained as an entrepreneur. To me, the Propeller Program is a shining example of the magic that can happen when Norwegian innovation meets American opportunity.” Contact us today

Published: March 16, 2017 by Experian Marketing Services

Subscribe to our newsletter

Enter your name and email for the latest updates

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

About Experian Marketing Services

At Experian Marketing Services, we use data and insights to help brands have more meaningful interactions with people. As leaders in the evolution of the advertising landscape, Experian Marketing Services can help you identify your customers and the right potential customers, uncover the most appropriate communication channels, develop messages that resonate, and measure the effectiveness of marketing activities and campaigns.

Visit our website

Subscribe to our newsletter

Stay up to date on the latest industry news and receive expert tips from our marketing experts.
Subscribe now!