
By Stine Jacobsen and Maggie Fick
COPENHAGEN, March 26 (Reuters) - Novo Nordisk has appointed Poul Weihrauch, CEO of U.S. candy giant Mars, as board observer as the drugmaker seeks to strengthen its position in the highly competitive U.S. obesity market.
The maker of weight-loss drug Wegovy announced the appointment at Thursday's annual general meeting, where shareholders also elected pharmaceutical veterans Jan van de Winkel and Ramona Sequeira to the board, along with Helena Saxon, a board member at fashion retailer H&M.
Novo Nordisk and its majority shareholder, the Novo Nordisk Foundation, carried out a leadership shake-up last year, replacing the CEO and restructuring the board. This included the consolidation of Lars Rebien Sorensen's leadership role through his appointment as board chairman in addition to his role of chairman of the foundation.
NOVO AIMS TO BOOST CONSUMER CREDENTIALS
Sorensen has promised to strengthen the board's pharmaceutical and commercial expertise after criticising the previous board for being slow to address U.S. market challenges.
Novo is trying to boost consumer credentials in the U.S. market in a number of ways under its new management. In January it launched its Wegovy pill across multiple cash-pay channels, rather than solely through traditional insurance routes.
The company is leaning into telehealth, retail partnerships and direct-to-consumer access, as well as cutting prices under pressure from the Trump administration and to win cash-pay patients. Novo and chief rival Eli Lilly and Co have said the obesity market is becoming increasingly consumer-driven.
"We need to start to see our community more as customers than as patients," Sorensen told reporters after Thursday's meeting, adding that it was studying consumer behaviour to better understand what drives people to seek treatment, where they prefer to access it and when they are most likely to buy.
Sorensen said that Novo had looked at over-the-counter medicines for insight but added that companies in fast-moving consumer goods may provide a closer comparison because of their expertise in tracking purchasing habits and identifying unmet demand.
Those kinds of consumer insights could improve how Novo addresses the needs of overweight people and identify where GLP-1 drugs or other treatments might fit, Sorensen said.
Asked about the apparent contradictions in the appointment of a confectionery company executive by a manufacturer of obesity drugs, Sorensen said both types of companies are highly sophisticated in understanding customers and their needs.
(Reporting by Stine Jacobsen and Maggie FickEditing by Anna Ringstrom, Barbara Lewis and David Goodman)
latest_posts
- 1
Sunken warship found off Danish coast after 225 years in ‘remarkable’ discovery - 2
Judge sets $60K bond for Florida congresswoman accused of stealing $5M in COVID-19 funds - 3
Building a Maintainable Closet: Individual Excursions in Moral Style - 4
Virtual reality opens doors for older people to build closer connections in real life - 5
Can scientists detect life without knowing what it looks like? Research using machine learning offers a new way
Artemis 2 astronauts are now headed to the moon. Why has it taken humanity so long to go back?
Swap The Amalfi Coast For This Low-Cost Ligurian Seaside Town
Russia accidentally destroys its only way of sending astronauts to space
Choosing Moving Styles for Your Restroom Redesign
Select Your Definitive Pizza Decision
Vote In favor of Feasible Way You Prescribe to Shop for Garments
Key Training: Picking a Significant for Monetary Achievement
What were the little white pills found in Tiger Woods's pocket at the scene of his crash? What to know about hydrocodone.
41 Young Men Die in South Africa After Circumcision Initiation













