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Imaging Modality Trends (Large Organizations) Imaging Modality Trends (Large Organizations)
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Imaging Modality Trends (Large Organizations)
Significant Changes On The Horizon

author - Coray Tate
Author
Coray Tate
author - Alex McIntosh
Author
Alex McIntosh
 
June 29, 2016 | Read Time: 2  minutes

Imaging centers are becoming less of the standalone profit centers they once were, and technology and support have become driving factors in large organizations’ plans to expand or decrease what they purchase from imaging vendors. Traditionally, the imaging market has been dominated by Siemens and GE Healthcare, with Philips and Toshiba bringing up the rear. Now, Siemens has begun to pull away, and Toshiba has lost momentum. Smaller niche vendors like Hologic and Carestream are filling the gaps in mammography and x-ray, but other small vendors have yet to make a sizable imprint. KLAS spoke to some of the largest providers in the US to find out which vendors are most trusted for future purchases.

1. SIEMENS IS ONLY COMPREHENSIVE VENDOR POISED FOR SIGNIFICANT GAINS

Siemens has very deep market penetration, and due to the vendor's productive partnerships and aggressive development, providers are over 10 times more likely to increase their purchases with Siemens than to decrease them. Providers also point to Siemens' strong MR and CT technology, willingness to work with existing customers, and highly functional support as driving forces behind their plans to purchase more Siemens modalities. The current trajectory puts Siemens on track to overwhelmingly be the top choice in providers’ future imaging decisions.

2. TOSHIBA LOSING HARD-FOUGHT GROUND IN LARGE ORGANIZATIONS

Toshiba was once viewed by providers as setting the standard for support, but customers report that the strength of Toshiba's relationships, support, and development has declined over the past year; employee turnover has increased, and interactions with Toshiba representatives have become less personalized. Toshiba is the only vendor poised for declines in future purchases, though some providers are interested to see whether Canon's plans to acquire Toshiba will result in a restoration of the levels of support and trust they once had with Toshiba.

who are providers turning to for future purchases

 

3. GE HEALTHCARE AND PHILIPS STAGNANT AMID WIDELY VARIABLE CUSTOMER EXPERIENCES

Large providers are just as likely to decrease their purchasing volumes with GE Healthcare and Philips as they are to increase them. While some GE Healthcare and Philips customers report good experiences, others report difficulties with support. Negative interactions with sales and support employees and lagging mammography, x-ray, and mobile x-ray technology have a number of GE Healthcare customers looking to focused vendors for these modalities. GE Healthcare’s MR and CT growth remains positive. Provider trust in Philips has continued to suffer since the vendor’s failures to deliver on CT, and several providers view Philips as having a lower technology standard than GE Healthcare or Siemens.

top reasons for increase and decrease in purchasing

4. SUPERIOR TECHNOLOGY AND SERVICE HELPING CARESTREAM & HOLOGIC GAIN TRUST OF LARGE ORGANIZATIONS

Carestream and Hologic have been able to build strong relationships with large organizations based on what providers view as these vendors’ industry-leading technology and exceptional support. Providers plan to increase purchases from these vendors in the future. Carestream is the only x-ray focused vendor to stand out in this manner. An early entrant to the women’s imaging market, Hologic set the bar for both digital mammography and tomosynthesis by providing high image quality with low dose; GE Healthcare and Siemens have been left struggling to compete for market share. Canon, Fuji, Hitachi, Samsung, and Shimadzu have limited market penetration and receive little attention from large organizations.

primary sales method

author - Alex McIntosh
Writer
Alex McIntosh
author - Natalie Jamison
Designer
Natalie Jamison
author - Robert Ellis
Project Manager
Robert Ellis
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This material is copyrighted. Any organization gaining unauthorized access to this report will be liable to compensate KLAS for the full retail price. Please see the KLAS DATA USE POLICY for information regarding use of this report. © 2024 KLAS Research, LLC. All Rights Reserved. NOTE: Performance scores may change significantly when including newly interviewed provider organizations, especially when added to a smaller sample size like in emerging markets with a small number of live clients. The findings presented are not meant to be conclusive data for an entire client base.

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