Pharmafile Logo

Using patient personas to add a personal touch to clinical trial recruitment and retention

Discover how patient personas can revolutionise clinical trial recruitment and retention. Personalise outreach, build trust, and improve patient engagement.

Mother playing with son

Understanding your audience is essential for any type of campaign, but especially in clinical trials, where trust and relevance are paramount. Effective communication isn’t just about what is said, but to whom, how, and when. We often use personas as a tool to help us focus on the patient, enabling us to transform outreach from transactional into meaningful engagement. This is particularly important when creating direct-to-patient campaigns for recruitment, as ‘a powerful message has little impact if it reaches the wrong audience, and misses the intended one’.1

Why patient personas matter

At their core, patient personas are research-based archetypes that represent key patient groups. Built from rich qualitative and quantitative insights, they move beyond superficial demographics to more effectively embody patients’ lived experiences, challenges, and motivations.2

For example, a 34-year-old busy professional will likely have different priorities and preferences compared to a 20-year-old university student or a 67-year-old retiree. While some may prefer quick digital updates, others may lean on family to interpret medical information. These fictional yet evidence-driven personas can enable clinical trial teams to craft strategies that authentically engage patients by meeting them where they are, fostering trust and connection.

We recently attended the Global Clinical Trials Connect conference, where one speaker posed a vital question that underscored the importance of tailoring and personalisation of clinical study design: If your trial targets patients with vision-impairing conditions, why require them to navigate a visually demanding app for e-PRO questionnaires? Such missteps can discourage participation, turning willingness into withdrawal. Thoughtful adjustments, like accessible tools, show respect for patients’ needs and can significantly improve recruitment and retention.

What data makes personalisation possible?

Strong personas are built on ethically sourced, patient-centred data — and should never be used as a way of replacing patient involvement entirely.

Collecting meaningful insights ensures communication is relevant and impactful, and we recommend undertaking first-party research with patients to further dial in your approach.

Patient personas can be built from:

  • Social listening tools: Analyse online conversations to uncover patient priorities, attitudes to healthcare, overall sentiment, frustrations and needs
  • Patient advisory boards and surveys: Provide firsthand accounts of barriers, motivators, and preferences
  • Wearable tech and mobile health data: Reveal behaviour patterns and medication adherence
  • Customer relationship management (CRM) analytics: Track engagement and refine strategies

It is essential all data collection is conducted transparently and with proper consent.3 Patients’ privacy and anonymity matters, and securing trust builds the foundation for meaningful engagement.4

Tools and frameworks for personalisation at scale

Implementing personalisation across a broad patient group may seem challenging, but modern tools make it manageable. A few strategies for creating tailored communications without compromising efficiency include:

  1. Segmenting patients by shared characteristics, enabling message variation based on need, not just age or location5
  2. Journey mapping highlights patient touchpoints during the trial, from recruitment to follow-up, ensuring timely communication at each stage
  3. CRM Systems automate outreach, like personalised and texts or emails at the right time, while retaining a human touch
  4. A/B testing refines messaging by identifying what resonates most with patients

These frameworks amplify creativity while ensuring communication feels relevant and sensitive to patients’ perspectives, enabling trial sponsors to better meet their needs.5

Balancing automation and empathy

Automation optimises trial operations by streamlining processes, but balance is crucial.6 While automated texts or reminders are efficient, emotionally sensitive interactions require a personal touch. Imagine patients receiving sterile, chatbot responses to complex queries — that is where technology falls short.

Patients are more than data points; they are individuals with emotions and unique stories. Empathy and ethics must guide the development of recruitment and retention strategies. Automation and AI tools can be used to support with logistics, leaving complex emotional interactions to real people like nurses or coordinators, who should have the training and experience needed to support patients effectively throughout the duration of the study.

The takeaway

Understanding lies at the core of effective communication. By using patient personas fuelled by ethically sourced data and supported by smart tools, clinical trial sponsors can personalise outreach without losing empathy; not only speaking to patients but collaborating with them. When done right, personalisation strengthens trust, improves recruitment, and reinforces patient-centricity at every trial stage.

Want to hear more about enhancing patient engagement? Let’s talk to build strategies that prioritise meaningful patient communication or sign up to our new report, offering insights from over 700 participants and industry leaders for a 360-view of clinical trial participation.

References

  1. Cuttsy+Cuttsy. Direct-to-patient, or direct-to-problem? The challenge of using social media to recruit for clinical trials. Available here. (Accessed June 2025).
  2. Pelizzari N. Journal of World Languages. 2025. DOI: 10.1515/jwl-2024-0068.
  3. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. Patient and Public Involvement Policy. Available here. (Accessed June 2025).
  4. Wilkins CH. Medical Care. 2018;56(10):S6-8. DOI: 10.1097/MLR.0000000000000953.
  5. Deloitte Digital. Personalising The Customer Experience. Available here. (Accessed June 2025).
  6. TrialX. From Clinical Trial Search to Screening: Accelerating Patient Recruitment with AI-Driven Tools. Available here. (Accessed June 2025).

This content was provided by Cuttsy + Cuttsy

Company Details

 Latest Content from  Cuttsy + Cuttsy 

Cuttsy+Cuttsy achieves Platinum accreditation from Investors in People

Cuttsy+Cuttsy is proud to have achieved a Platinum accreditation from Investors in People, placing them among the top 2% of organisations assessed globally.

Cuttsy+Cuttsy awarded Gold EcoVadis sustainability rating

Cuttsy+Cuttsy proudly announces their Gold Medal achievement from EcoVadis for 2024, placing them among the top 5% of companies assessed and within the 97th percentile, a testament to their unwavering...

Age is not just a number when it comes to clinical trials

In this blog we look at the critical underrepresentation of older adults in clinical trials, emphasising the need for inclusive trial designs and targeted strategies to ensure safe and effective...

How to boost clinical trial access and make patients health-empowered

Clinical research is becoming more patient-centric, but there's still more that needs to be done to make clinical trials available to everyone. This could include wider participation.

Closing the loop: Why clinical trial results matter to participants

Discover why sharing clinical trial results with participants is crucial for respect, informed health decisions, and fostering strong researcher-participant partnerships.

Unveiling the truth: A journey into women’s representation in clinical trials

We explore the historical exclusion of women from clinical trials, its consequences on medical research and treatment efficacy and the ongoing efforts to ensure their representation.

Clarity in clinical trials

Discover how transparent, empathetic communication and health literacy principles can empower patients and enhance engagement in clinical trials, transforming participants into active partners in their healthcare journey.

Caring for patients’ mental health in clinical trials

We look at why ensuring continuous mental health support for patients in clinical trials is essential to enhance their overall well-being and trial engagement.

Driving equitable healthcare: The role of DE&I in clinical trials

Diversity, equity and inclusion (DE&I) is becoming a bigger topic of conversation and meaningful action within clinical trials. And for good reason, too. Find out why we embrace this and...

Empowering patients through more accessible clinical trial information

Senior Medical Writer, Scott Palmer explores the challenges and solutions in enhancing patient engagement in clinical trials, from the pivotal role of healthcare professionals, to the importance of user-friendly trial...