Conceivable
“Conceivable’s new app puts a fertility clinic in your pocket.” - TechCrunch
The Problem: How do you transform a brick-and-mortar fertility wellness clinic into a digital-first solution that you can put into the hands of millions of infertile couples?
The Solution: It’s Conceivable. We worked with patients, clinicians, and digital-only consumers to create a solution that outperformed our clinical models. We analyzed nearly a quarter million data points to create a program that generated pregnancy rates more than 250% higher than natural averages, all while creating heathy behaviors and without pharmaceuticals. Daily engagement rates topped 80% by giving women the information that they needed, exactly when the needed it.
“Conceivable’s new app puts a fertility clinic in your pocket.”
— TechCrunch
The Problem: How do you transform a brick-and-mortar fertility wellness clinic into a digital-first solution that you can put into the hands of millions of infertile couples?
The Solution: It’s Conceivable. We worked with patients, clinicians, and digital-only consumers to create a solution that outperformed our clinical models. We analyzed nearly a quarter million data points to create a program that generated pregnancy rates more than 250% higher than natural averages, all while creating heathy behaviors and without pharmaceuticals. Daily engagement rates topped 80% by giving women the information they needed, exactly when they needed it.
My Role: Product and Content Lead
Understanding the clinical experience.
The idea for Conceivable was simple: How do you take a successful clinical practice and scale it with technology so millions of infertile couples can access a suite of science-backed tools to improve their fertility, naturally? To accomplish this goal, we brought together a diverse team of clinicians, designers, and technologists to produce a product that literally changed lives.
As the design team laid the visual foundation for the brand, our product team started by breaking down every aspect of the existing clinical system. From a patient’s first phone call to their experience in the treatment room, we wanted to understand each experience. We used this experience research to build an understanding of how health care providers and patients exchanged knowledge and to identify key areas where trust, relationships, and education were built or destroyed. We interviewed dozens of clinicians and patients to address their needs, desires, and frustrations with the current clinical experience.
Key takeaways:
In-person clinicians were generally good at building trust, but often missed opportunities to educate patients.
Moreover, patient education ended at the treatment room door. Opportunities for learning, understanding, and behavior change were non-existent after hours.
Clinicians spent the majority of their time collecting and analyzing data instead of “treating” the patient. Clinicians often struggled to quickly and systematically assimilate diagnostic info and relied on shaky patient data recall. Providers needed a way to cut through the fog and collect the same data over time in order to track patient progress and reassess treatment plans.
Technology creates an opportunity for change.
When we built Conceivable, we didn’t just want to recreate the clinical experience; we wanted to make it better. We recognized that technology gave us a new way to interact with patients. Instead of weekly or monthly “brain dumps” between patient and practitioner, real time responses to patient-tracked data meant that patients received ongoing, vital information in real time. This allowed us to create education plans for patients to keep them involved in their care and help them make healthy lifestyle changes over time. Our algorithms helped to triage symptoms and modify treatment plans in real time.
Practitioner-approved content. User-centered design.
Our key metrics of success for Conceivable were when patient’s adopted new habits, changed to more healthy lifestyles, and got pregnant. We identified patient education as a crucial aspect in compelling sometimes difficult lifestyle changes (smoking cessation, healthy eating, or stress reduction). While practitioners tended to shower their patients with their depth of understanding, patients quickly became overwhelmed and had difficulty retaining information. At Conceivable, we adopted a “just-in-time” system for delivering education. We wrote hundreds of science-backed and easily digestible articles that were distributed to patients according to either time- or action-based cues.
Conceivable also gave patients a way to track the data that were most important to them. We evaluated existing period tracking apps to identify areas for improvement. While most apps allowed users to track fundamental data, such as date of their last period, uncomfortable menstrual symptoms, or even their basal body temperatures, these apps failed to answer important questions for users — specifically, “What does it all mean?” To address this shortcoming of other apps, Conceivable provided educational articles to users around their tracked data, as well as rolled this data into an overall score that gave users a clinically relevant indicator of their progress in the program.
Results
During our beta program, we collected more than 240,000 data points on lifestyle factors, general wellness, menstrual health, and conception chances. In addition to understanding how our users interacted with Conceivable, we evaluated whether Conceivable was producing clinically meaningful results. Conceivable not only kept 80% of our users engaged on a daily basis, but we produced a 22% percent pregnancy rate which beat our clinical success rates. For women with the lowest chances of conceiving naturally, Conceivable had the most pronounced effect, with women aged 35-39 seeing a 167% higher than average success rate for their age and women aged 40-44 seeing a whopping 260% higher success rate.
In addition to their fertility results, our users saw increases in other essential measures of menstrual and overall health. On average, our users experienced more than a 50% decrease in uncomfortable menstrual symptoms like PMS and period pain.
Perhaps our biggest accomplishment was helping users increase healthy behaviors. For example, we saw a 43% increase in the number of servings of vegetables consumed and a 35% reduction in stress.
Conceivable was named a winner for Healthline’s Best Fertility Apps of 2016.
What I learned:
In-depth UX research is critical to understanding both strengths and weakness in current models, as well as key opportunities for innovation and change.
A good solution must balance product efficacy with user engagement. It doesn’t matter how well your product works if a user won’t keep using it. Content and programming that engage a user at the point of tracking spur engagement and reduce churn.
How do be a fluid translator among parties with different experiences, expertise, and interests. As the product lead, I was in constant dialog with key stakeholders (clinicians and patients), business leadership, marketing, biz dev, design team, content team, and product developers.
Conceivable in the press: