marketing
rapport
Season 3 Episode 17
Inside eHealth’s Brand Transformation with CRO Michelle Barbeau
RESOURCES ❯ The Marketing Rapport Podcast
Episode Summary
In this episode of The Marketing Rapport, host Tim Finnigan sits down with Michelle Barbeau, Chief Revenue Officer at eHealth. They explore the power of authentic brand transformation in a complex and highly regulated industry, focusing on the importance of putting the consumer at the center of every decision.
Michelle shares how eHealth rebuilt its brand by listening to real consumer feedback and moving away from fear-based tactics. She explains the steps the team took to create trust, from casting real people in campaigns to clarifying messaging and embracing transparency. Michelle also details how eHealth uses data and analytics alongside consumer insight to shape everything from audience segmentation to marketing mix modeling.
Throughout the conversation, Michelle stresses the value of genuine connection and continuous optimization. She offers practical advice for marketers on measuring what matters, working across departments, and staying focused on both top and bottom-line results. Her approach highlights how real change happens by marrying data with empathy and always keeping the consumer in the room.
Guest-at-a-Glance

Key Insights
- Authenticity and Transparency Drive Consumer Trust
Building trust with customers starts with honest messaging and real experiences. Consumers can spot insincerity fast, especially in industries like health insurance where fear-based sales tactics have been the norm. Brands that use real people—not actors—and show the true customer journey create stronger connections. Transparency, such as clarifying how a service works or why it’s free, helps overcome skepticism. When customers understand what’s happening and see themselves reflected in a brand’s messaging, trust follows. Trust is not just a marketing tool but a core business principle that fuels growth and loyalty. By putting consumer feedback at the center of every campaign and being clear about intentions, companies can break through market noise and stand out for the right reasons.
- Data and Empathy Must Work Together
Data alone doesn’t create great marketing. The best results come from combining analytics with a deep understanding of people. Marketers need to know their tech stack and use data to guide decisions, but they can’t lose sight of the human on the other end. Every meeting and project should keep a seat open for the consumer—thinking about how each choice impacts real lives. This marriage of data and empathy shapes everything from targeting and messaging to customer service. When brands optimize for both efficiency and personal relevance, they deliver better outcomes for customers and for the business.
- Sales and Marketing Succeed When Aligned
Alignment between sales and marketing is essential for high performance. Teams that work together, share data, and own conversion metrics as a group can solve problems faster and spot new opportunities. Success depends on open communication and a willingness to learn from each other. Marketers benefit from real insights gathered by sales teams on the front lines, while sales can better appreciate the work that drives demand. Daily check-ins and shared objectives across departments lead to stronger campaigns, improved conversion rates, and a full-funnel approach that drives both top and bottom-line results. Collaboration, not competition, unlocks the biggest wins.
Episode Highlights
Building a Brand by Listening to Real Consumers
Timestamp: ~ 00:04:38
A key step in eHealth’s turnaround involved going straight to consumers to understand what wasn’t working in the industry. Instead of copying competitors’ tactics, eHealth listened to the frustrations and confusion that real people faced when searching for health coverage. Their feedback revealed that fear-based ads and celebrity endorsements did little to help. This led to a brand built on clarity, transparency, and unbiased advice, centering the consumer’s needs at every stage. The result was a new strategy that did the opposite of the industry norm—real stories, real people, and a focus on simple, honest guidance. This approach helped eHealth stand out and drive measurable returns.
“And then we went and talked to consumers and heard it directly from them—what’s working and what’s not. And we heard, very loud and clear, that the advertising—specifically the industry—wasn’t helping them. There was a lot of frustration and confusion. When you look at the industry and the landscape, it all feels the same: sort of an older celebrity, often yelling at seniors, telling them, ‘Don’t miss out on this benefit. Your time’s running out.’ Kind of fear-based, scare tactics.”
Bringing Empathy to Digital Interactions
Timestamp: ~ 00:14:10
eHealth is integrating technology without losing the human touch. One example is the use of AI screeners at the start of customer calls. These screeners are designed not just to collect information quickly, but to mirror the caller’s tone and show empathy when it matters most. The AI responds to personal stories and pauses to acknowledge emotion, building trust from the very first interaction. This blend of automation and empathy ensures that technology enhances, rather than replaces, genuine customer care. It’s a model for using digital tools to make service both efficient and personal.
“We’ve built it in a way that’s based on thousands and thousands of conversations and data points. And I can give you examples of where I hear the AI screener—not just doing intake and gathering all the information to make the rest of the call easier and faster—but actually changing the cadence of its speech to match the caller’s. There was also a caller who said, ‘I’m so sorry, I missed an appointment. There was a death in my family.’ And instead of—again, this is not your old-school IVR—just plowing through intake, the AI stopped and responded with empathy: ‘I’m so sorry to hear that.’
Navigating Compliance in Healthcare Marketing
Timestamp: ~ 00:16:54
Working in healthcare marketing means constant navigation of compliance and regulatory hurdles. Every campaign, especially those featuring unscripted content, must be reviewed and approved by multiple partners and government agencies. eHealth has found success by building strong relationships with compliance teams and involving them early—even bringing them to set during the filming of real-customer ads. This proactive, collaborative approach helps avoid costly delays and ensures messaging meets all standards without losing authenticity. The process is demanding, but it’s also necessary for building trust and credibility with both consumers and industry partners.
“We need to—every word that’s used needs to get approved by all of our partners. We work with 50 different carriers on the Medicare side, and then it needs to go to CMS and the government for review. In TV, as an example, they get 45 days for every round of review just with CMS. It can become a daunting process. It is not easy to navigate. I can tell you, boy, that relationship with marketing compliance—we are really tight. We’re great friends. In fact, again, when you’re doing something that’s unscripted, we actually have them join us on the set, right? So that we can be working on this in concert together.”
Rethinking Attribution and the Role of Data
Timestamp: ~ 00:18:50
Understanding what drives results in marketing requires more than tracking clicks or last-touch attribution. eHealth moved beyond basic metrics and built its own marketing mix models to see how different channels work together. The team learned that TV, digital, and search all play a role in a customer’s journey, and attribution models must reflect this complexity. Daily collaboration between sales and marketing teams helps them adjust campaigns in real time and optimize for both immediate and long-term gains. The focus is always on tying marketing spend to actual business outcomes—not just impressions or clicks.
“Again, that was a capability we focused on when I first joined—part of the transformation, the turnaround—making sure we had really strong marketing analytics and built our own right marketing mix model, because it had all been based just on last touch, and we know that’s not real. Again, just go back to how consumers—how we actually work. You see a TV ad. Do I call immediately off of that TV ad? Maybe later it pops up in my social feed, or I just remember it from something else and say, ‘Oh, I really need to get to that later.’ And then I come back and I search. The channels work together, and we know this. We see it right in our online metrics—visit data spikes when TV goes on.”
Top Quotes
[~00:05:49] Michelle Barbeau: “Literally, the words they used were, ‘This is like the light at the end of the tunnel.’ And that just said it all for us. Our brand strategy became about doing the exact opposite of what had been out there—about being your remarkably transparent advisor. We are unbiased advisors and are all paid the same. Like, we’re really here to work for you.”
[~00:14:56] Michelle Barbeau: “We’ve built it in a way that’s based on thousands and thousands of conversations and data points. And I can give you examples of where I hear the AI screener—not just doing intake and gathering all the information to make the rest of the call easier and faster—but actually changing the cadence of their speech to match the cadence of the caller.”
[~00:00:00] Michelle Barbeau: “You need to know your tech stack, how you’re using data to guide your decisions.”
[~00:08:57] Michelle Barbeau: “We also have a spokesperson. We’ve named her Eve, of eHealth. She looks the exact opposite as everything that’s out there in the industry.”
[~00:10:38] Michelle Barbeau: “We were actually organized as two separate marketing departments and had to bring that together, unify, and we were missing that audience strategy and segmentation.”
[~00:25:13] Michelle Barbeau: “You need to have those, but really what does it mean to the bottom line and the ROI?”
[~00:29:43] Michelle Barbeau: “When you unlock and solve the problems of the consumer that drives business growth every single time.”
[~00:01:07] Michelle Barbeau: “Today I’m talking to Michelle, I’m going to be focusing on things like brand transformation, customer experience, and what it takes to build trust in a highly regulated industry.”
[~00:23:50] Michelle Barbeau: “We haven’t even talked about the consumer, like what all this things we’re talking about.”
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