Note: The comments on this blog from the alliFirst Team are uniformly - unnervingly - passionate and positive about using the product. See here and here and here. Yup, I was a bit suspicious as you might be too. But the folks at GSK assure me the alliFirst members have not been coached on what to say.
They're getting a good deal: a six-month supply of alli (worth about $300) as well as access to private online support communities.
Along with the chance to get up close and personal with the alli brand team. For anyone trying to lose weight, who wouldn't want to join the alliFirst Team?
I was curious how GSK chose the lucky 411 who got to try alli before it became available to the public this week. (You should be able to find alli on shelves tomorrow.)
The inside story on the alliFirst Team
Here's what I found out:
GSK asked Communispace, which runs private online communities (discussion groups), to send out email invitations to become an alliFirst member. A total of about 2000 email invites were sent out.
463 people qualified to be alliFirst members (i.e. they were at least 15 pounds overweight and willing to commit to a low-fat diet and to an exercise program).
411 of those were selected to join the alliFirst team.
The pool of email invite recipients came from three sources:
- those who had visited QuestionEverything.com and indicated they were interested in learning more about alli
- those who answered the "are you ready?" questions affirmatively on myalli.com
- past members of Partners in Weight Loss (a GSK community for overweight women) who also said they were interested in trying alli when it became available
Typical profile of an alliFirst Team member
A typical member, the GSK folks tell me, is a white woman ages 30 - 39 who wants to lose 16 to 50 pounds. She has attended two to four years of college and her household income is between $50,000 and $100,000.
She has tried other weight loss programs in the past, is highly motivated and has agreed to the alli readiness questions.
Namely, she is willing to do the "hard work" to lose weight gradually, is committed to following a reduced-calorie, low-fat diet with an average of 15 grams of fat per meal AND...
understands that if she takes alli with a meal containing too much fat she may get treatment effects (that's GSK term for side effects) such as gas with oily spotting, loose stools and more frequent stools that may be hard to control.
Yup, these 411 alliFirst members appear to be a hardy group as well as super enthusiastic. Seems like a great marketing move on GSK's part.