Customer Company Size
SME
Region
- America
Country
- Canada
Product
- GenoLogics LIMS
Tech Stack
- Cloud-based software
- LivePerson digital engagement solution
- LiveEngage platform
Implementation Scale
- Enterprise-wide Deployment
Impact Metrics
- Revenue Growth
- Customer Satisfaction
Technology Category
- Platform as a Service (PaaS) - Data Management Platforms
- Application Infrastructure & Middleware - Data Exchange & Integration
Applicable Industries
- Healthcare & Hospitals
- Life Sciences
Applicable Functions
- Sales & Marketing
- Business Operation
Services
- Cloud Planning, Design & Implementation Services
About The Customer
Founded in 2002, GenoLogics is a laboratory information management system (LIMS) provider that offers specialized, cloud-based software for proteomics and genomics laboratories. The company's software is very important in a regulated environment to track every little thing that’s done so that you can provide a detailed report at the end or track the history of a particular sample. GenoLogics' website contains extensive technical documentation of the company’s complex product offerings. While website visitors find the detailed information very helpful, they often want to avoid spending hours wading through many pages of material to find the answer to a single question.
The Challenge
GenoLogics, a Canadian laboratory information management systems vendor, wanted to provide a channel where prospects could quickly get answers to questions about the company’s highly technical product offerings. The company had previously conducted a brief trial of a rudimentary live chat solution, but found it wanting. Despite this setback, GenoLogics CEO Michael Ball believed that live chat could still bring value to the company. The challenge was to find a better live chat solution that could engage website visitors and answer their questions, thereby keeping them on the website longer.
The Solution
GenoLogics deployed a LivePerson digital engagement solution that includes proactive chat invitations extended to visitors who spend significant time on particular Web pages. The LivePerson solution is cloud-based, which makes it easy to deploy, very flexible, and easy to customize. The company's inside sales team fields live chat requests in between their other duties. The team’s shifts are spread out so that coverage is available for most of the business day in North America, Europe, and Asia. Among the agents’ favorite LiveEngage features are push pages and the ability to see a visitor’s navigation history.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
Case Study missing?
Start adding your own!
Register with your work email and create a new case study profile for your business.
Related Case Studies.
Case Study
Hospital Inventory Management
The hospital supply chain team is responsible for ensuring that the right medical supplies are readily available to clinicians when and where needed, and to do so in the most efficient manner possible. However, many of the systems and processes in use at the cancer center for supply chain management were not best suited to support these goals. Barcoding technology, a commonly used method for inventory management of medical supplies, is labor intensive, time consuming, does not provide real-time visibility into inventory levels and can be prone to error. Consequently, the lack of accurate and real-time visibility into inventory levels across multiple supply rooms in multiple hospital facilities creates additional inefficiency in the system causing over-ordering, hoarding, and wasted supplies. Other sources of waste and cost were also identified as candidates for improvement. Existing systems and processes did not provide adequate security for high-cost inventory within the hospital, which was another driver of cost. A lack of visibility into expiration dates for supplies resulted in supplies being wasted due to past expiry dates. Storage of supplies was also a key consideration given the location of the cancer center’s facilities in a dense urban setting, where space is always at a premium. In order to address the challenges outlined above, the hospital sought a solution that would provide real-time inventory information with high levels of accuracy, reduce the level of manual effort required and enable data driven decision making to ensure that the right supplies were readily available to clinicians in the right location at the right time.
Case Study
Gas Pipeline Monitoring System for Hospitals
This system integrator focuses on providing centralized gas pipeline monitoring systems for hospitals. The service they provide makes it possible for hospitals to reduce both maintenance and labor costs. Since hospitals may not have an existing network suitable for this type of system, GPRS communication provides an easy and ready-to-use solution for remote, distributed monitoring systems System Requirements - GPRS communication - Seamless connection with SCADA software - Simple, front-end control capability - Expandable I/O channels - Combine AI, DI, and DO channels
Case Study
Driving Digital Transformations for Vitro Diagnostic Medical Devices
Diagnostic devices play a vital role in helping to improve healthcare delivery. In fact, an estimated 60 percent of the world’s medical decisions are made with support from in vitrodiagnostics (IVD) solutions, such as those provided by Roche Diagnostics, an industry leader. As the demand for medical diagnostic services grows rapidly in hospitals and clinics across China, so does the market for IVD solutions. In addition, the typically high cost of these diagnostic devices means that comprehensive post-sales services are needed. Wanteed to improve three portions of thr IVD:1. Remotely monitor and manage IVD devices as fixed assets.2. Optimizing device availability with predictive maintenance.3. Recommending the best IVD solution for a customer’s needs.
Case Study
HaemoCloud Global Blood Management System
1) Deliver a connected digital product system to protect and increase the differentiated value of Haemonetics blood and plasma solutions. 2) Improve patient outcomes by increasing the efficiency of blood supply flows. 3) Navigate and satisfy a complex web of global regulatory compliance requirements. 4) Reduce costly and labor-intensive maintenance procedures.
Case Study
Harnessing real-time data to give a holistic picture of patient health
Every day, vast quantities of data are collected about patients as they pass through health service organizations—from operational data such as treatment history and medications to physiological data captured by medical devices. The insights hidden within this treasure trove of data can be used to support more personalized treatments, more accurate diagnosis and more advanced preparative care. But since the information is generated faster than most organizations can consume it, unlocking the power of this big data can be a struggle. This type of predictive approach not only improves patient care—it also helps to reduce costs, because in the healthcare industry, prevention is almost always more cost-effective than treatment. However, collecting, analyzing and presenting these data-streams in a way that clinicians can easily understand can pose a significant technical challenge.