Startups

Should startups build or buy telehealth infrastructure?

Comment

Image Credits: Georgijevic (opens in a new window) / Getty Images

Digital health in the U.S. got a huge boost from COVID-19 as more people started consulting physicians and urgent care providers remotely in the midst of lockdowns. So much so that McKinsey estimates that up to $250 billion of the current healthcare expenditure in the U.S. has the potential to be spent virtually. The prominence of digital health is undoubtedly here to stay, but how it looks and feels from provider to provider is still a debate among sector startups.

But for providers who want to deliver care virtually across the country, it’s not as simple as adding a Zoom invite to an annual check-up. The process requires intention every step of the way — right from the clinicians delivering remote care to the choice of payment processor.

Providers and healthcare startups can choose white-label solutions such as publicly listed Teladoc and Truepill, which have been around for a long time and have powered the operations of unicorns like Hims and Hers, Nurx and GoodRx as they look to scale in a compliant but efficient manner.

Turnkey solutions might be tempting to companies looking to take advantage of this opportunity, but startups still have to decide what to outsource and what to build. Should you rely on others for staffing your practice? Do you build your own payment processing service in-house? Do you integrate with Zoom or build your own video-conferencing software? These questions are crucial to think about early on to prepare for future scale regardless of whether a startup is B2B or B2C.

More than just Zoom

SteadyMD, which in March raised a $25 million Series B led by Lux Capital, wants to be the infrastructure layer that makes it easier for other companies to offer telehealth services. It is hoping to address a pain point it ran into years earlier: The complexity of launching compliant telehealth services in all 50 states.

The company launched in 2016 with the intent to provide high-quality, virtual primary care for brick-and-mortar shops. Through that process, SteadyMD built a suite of tools to make it work with EMR integrations, doctor-patient communication channels, digital recruiting and forecasting software, and prescription referrals and operations. The burdensome process struck a chord with the co-founders and they pivoted the company to where it is today: an “AWS for healthcare.”

SteadyMD offers a suite of services to its customers, the least of which, says co-founder Guy Friedman, is its video-conferencing platform.

“It’s not about the technology capacities,” Friedman says. “The very large companies that have a lot of resources are using us to help them increase their capacity as workforce.”

The company also helps providers offer home lab and diagnostics services — a process that requires a clinician ordering for a patient on the back end — as an added competitive advantage.

Long term, SteadyMD could be a place that helps provide primary care practitioners and diagnostic bandwidth to provider networks, giving them the sort of modularity that can make them a one-stop shop regardless of patient issue.

Deena Shakir, a partner at Lux Capital who led SteadyMD’s latest round, says the company provides more than a virtual experience for providers. “In the past, you’re kind of limited by who’s right around you, like I don’t want to drive an hour to go meet the perfect person and they happen to be in San Francisco, but I’m in Palo Alto. Now, it’s the norm to do it virtually and if I find that person that I connect with but they are in a totally different geography, I can do that,” she says.

The long-term question is how many digital health startups will need to use a company like SteadyMD and what that customer segment looks like. “Many ‘competitors’ are actually working with SteadyMD, because they might have a bunch of their own stuff, but they need to offset [the] increased uptick and demand,” Shakir said. “It doesn’t have to be an either or.”

Where the patchworking could stop

Expressable, a speech therapy platform that recently raised a $4.5 million seed round, is an example of what a hybrid approach to building and buying looks like in healthcare.

CEO Nicholas Barbara, who launched the startup with co-founder and spouse Leanne Sherred, said he thinks it’s “a little silly to spend a lot of development and engineering time trying to reinvent the wheel on videoconferencing.” Instead, the company opted for arguably one of the most established videoconferencing players, for stability and compliance: Zoom for Healthcare.

4 strategies for building a digital health unicorn

Beyond Zoom, Expressable’s tech stack includes Twill for logistics, Stripe for payments, AcuityMD for scheduling appointments, and Contentful for content and information delivery. “The most successful digital health startups that are building software aren’t building everything from scratch,” he said.

However, the patchwork stops at Expressable’s core service: speech-language pathologists (SLPs). The startup’s main business is providing virtual speech therapy, which is performed weekly for months and often years. Because of the recurring nature of the service, the founders decided early on that they would hire a base of speech-language pathologists full time instead of turning to one of the many staffing companies out there.

“I’m making the case that Expressable is going to build a care model with the best clinicians in the country, [with] better outcomes at a lower price,” he said. “I can’t outsource my clinicians and make that promise.”

By hiring SLPs, Expressable is able to keep its core differentiation — its diverse, flexible clinician base — on contract and defensible. To date, Expressable has about 50 SLPs on W-2 contracts.

The company faces a challenge, though: It has to hire each pathologist individually in order to scale, which comes with operational friction. Most digital health interactions need a licensed clinician in a specific state to administer a visit.

While it has ambitions to become a national practice, Expressable currently operates in 15 states and has to employ SLPs that are licensed in all the states it operates in. If a competitor were to come along, outsource staffing and become national overnight, Expressable could be edged out of a market simply by footprint size (even if depth is a value proposition on its own).

“At the end of the day, I think it’s all about how much control you feel like you want to have over the quality and workflows of your clinicians,” Barbara says.

He added that a safe way to test new business lines for a startup would be to experiment by outsourcing clinicians in the beginning. For example, if a digital health company wants to offer a quick service that doesn’t have variance between doctor to doctor, like a prescription for anxiety, it might be okay to turn to a startup that helps with staffing. Barbara argues that the less transactional a relationship is, the more it makes sense to own the provider-patient relationship for long-term scale.

One size doesn’t fit all

Melody Koh, partner at NextView Ventures, which led Expressable’s last round, thinks founders should know that one size doesn’t fit all when it comes to building versus buying. “If I can spend more of my time focusing on what is truly going to be the differentiator from a digital product experience or technology perspective, I’d rather let other people do the more commoditized part of the stacks,” she says.

Koh likened the entrepreneurial energy around the healthcare infrastructure to the early days of e-commerce a decade ago. “In the early days of e-commerce, you had relatively less mature stacks. Shopify wasn’t nearly as robust and there were fewer subscription products, coupon engines, or APIs for logistics and payments, so founders in commerce [had] to build a lot of that stuff in-house.”

In today’s world, building an e-commerce company feels entirely reinvented — it’s sometimes as simple as opening a Shopify storefront. And a digital health startup can work with a white-label provider to increase its footprint without friction in the same way that an e-commerce startup might work with a logistics company to offer fast shipping that competes with Amazon.

Ultimately, the success of digital health stack startups will depend on the success and long tail of the general ecosystem. Shopify is a giant company because there are long-tail merchants and an ecosystem big enough to support it as a business. But what about healthcare?

“I don’t think there will be 30 company winners,” in the white-labeling space, Koh said. “But there might be a payment winner, there might be an EMR winner, and there might be a pricing and analytics winner.”

Ultimately, the debate comes down to a startup’s core value proposition, and what it chooses to outsource versus build in-house should help one identify what that is. The advent of a new digital-health tech stack is simply indicative that consumer-focused health, from both the patient and provider sides, has serious tailwinds.

8 VCs agree: Behavioral support and remote visits make digital health a strong bet for 2021

More TechCrunch

Jasper Health, a cancer care platform startup, laid off a substantial part of its workforce, TechCrunch has learned.

General Catalyst-backed Jasper Health lays off staff

Live Nation says its Ticketmaster subsidiary was hacked. A hacker claims to be selling 560 million customer records.

Live Nation confirms Ticketmaster was hacked, says personal information stolen in data breach

Featured Article

Inside EV startup Fisker’s collapse: how the company crumbled under its founders’ whims

An autonomous pod. A solid-state battery-powered sports car. An electric pickup truck. A convertible grand tourer EV with up to 600 miles of range. A “fully connected mobility device” for young urban innovators to be built by Foxconn and priced under $30,000. The next Popemobile. Over the past eight years, famed vehicle designer Henrik Fisker…

3 hours ago
Inside EV startup Fisker’s collapse: how the company crumbled under its founders’ whims

Late Friday afternoon, a time window companies usually reserve for unflattering disclosures, AI startup Hugging Face said that its security team earlier this week detected “unauthorized access” to Spaces, Hugging…

Hugging Face says it detected ‘unauthorized access’ to its AI model hosting platform

Featured Article

Hacked, leaked, exposed: Why you should never use stalkerware apps

Using stalkerware is creepy, unethical, potentially illegal, and puts your data and that of your loved ones in danger.

4 hours ago
Hacked, leaked, exposed: Why you should never use stalkerware apps

The design brief was simple: each grind and dry cycle had to be completed before breakfast. Here’s how Mill made it happen.

Mill’s redesigned food waste bin really is faster and quieter than before

Google is embarrassed about its AI Overviews, too. After a deluge of dunks and memes over the past week, which cracked on the poor quality and outright misinformation that arose…

Google admits its AI Overviews need work, but we’re all helping it beta test

Welcome to Startups Weekly — Haje‘s weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Sign up here to get it in your inbox every Friday. In…

Startups Weekly: Musk raises $6B for AI and the fintech dominoes are falling

The product, which ZeroMark calls a “fire control system,” has two components: a small computer that has sensors, like lidar and electro-optical, and a motorized buttstock.

a16z-backed ZeroMark wants to give soldiers guns that don’t miss against drones

The RAW Dating App aims to shake up the dating scheme by shedding the fake, TikTok-ified, heavily filtered photos and replacing them with a more genuine, unvarnished experience. The app…

Pitch Deck Teardown: RAW Dating App’s $3M angel deck

Yes, we’re calling it “ThreadsDeck” now. At least that’s the tag many are using to describe the new user interface for Instagram’s X competitor, Threads, which resembles the column-based format…

‘ThreadsDeck’ arrived just in time for the Trump verdict

Japanese crypto exchange DMM Bitcoin confirmed on Friday that it had been the victim of a hack resulting in the theft of 4,502.9 bitcoin, or about $305 million.  According to…

Hackers steal $305M from DMM Bitcoin crypto exchange

This is not a drill! Today marks the final day to secure your early-bird tickets for TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 at a significantly reduced rate. At midnight tonight, May 31, ticket…

Disrupt 2024 early-bird prices end at midnight

Instagram is testing a way for creators to experiment with reels without committing to having them displayed on their profiles, giving the social network a possible edge over TikTok and…

Instagram tests ‘trial reels’ that don’t display to a creator’s followers

U.S. federal regulators have requested more information from Zoox, Amazon’s self-driving unit, as part of an investigation into rear-end crash risks posed by unexpected braking. The National Highway Traffic Safety…

Feds tell Zoox to send more info about autonomous vehicles suddenly braking

You thought the hottest rap battle of the summer was between Kendrick Lamar and Drake. You were wrong. It’s between Canva and an enterprise CIO. At its Canva Create event…

Canva’s rap battle is part of a long legacy of Silicon Valley cringe

Voice cloning startup ElevenLabs introduced a new tool for users to generate sound effects through prompts today after announcing the project back in February.

ElevenLabs debuts AI-powered tool to generate sound effects

We caught up with Antler founder and CEO Magnus Grimeland about the startup scene in Asia, the current tech startup trends in the region and investment approaches during the rise…

VC firm Antler’s CEO says Asia presents ‘biggest opportunity’ in the world for growth

Temu is to face Europe’s strictest rules after being designated as a “very large online platform” under the Digital Services Act (DSA).

Chinese e-commerce marketplace Temu faces stricter EU rules as a ‘very large online platform’

Meta has been banned from launching features on Facebook and Instagram that would have collected data on voters in Spain using the social networks ahead of next month’s European Elections.…

Spain bans Meta from launching election features on Facebook, Instagram over privacy fears

Stripe, the world’s most valuable fintech startup, said on Friday that it will temporarily move to an invite-only model for new account sign-ups in India, calling the move “a tough…

Stripe curbs its India ambitions over regulatory situation

The 2024 election is likely to be the first in which faked audio and video of candidates is a serious factor. As campaigns warm up, voters should be aware: voice…

Voice cloning of political figures is still easy as pie

When Alex Ewing was a kid growing up in Purcell, Oklahoma, he knew how close he was to home based on which billboards he could see out the car window.…

OneScreen.ai brings startup ads to billboards and NYC’s subway

SpaceX’s massive Starship rocket could take to the skies for the fourth time on June 5, with the primary objective of evaluating the second stage’s reusable heat shield as the…

SpaceX sent Starship to orbit — the next launch will try to bring it back

Eric Lefkofsky knows the public listing rodeo well and is about to enter it for a fourth time. The serial entrepreneur, whose net worth is estimated at nearly $4 billion,…

Billionaire Groupon founder Eric Lefkofsky is back with another IPO: AI health tech Tempus

TechCrunch Disrupt showcases cutting-edge technology and innovation, and this year’s edition will not disappoint. Among thousands of insightful breakout session submissions for this year’s Audience Choice program, five breakout sessions…

You’ve spoken! Meet the Disrupt 2024 breakout session audience choice winners

Check Point is the latest security vendor to fix a vulnerability in its technology, which it sells to companies to protect their networks.

Zero-day flaw in Check Point VPNs is ‘extremely easy’ to exploit

Though Spotify never shared official numbers, it’s likely that Car Thing underperformed or was just not worth continued investment in today’s tighter economic market.

Spotify offers Car Thing refunds as it faces lawsuit over bricking the streaming device

The studies, by researchers at MIT, Ben-Gurion University, Cambridge and Northeastern, were independently conducted but complement each other well.

Misinformation works, and a handful of social ‘supersharers’ sent 80% of it in 2020

Welcome back to TechCrunch Mobility — your central hub for news and insights on the future of transportation. Sign up here for free — just click TechCrunch Mobility! Okay, okay…

Tesla shareholder sweepstakes and EV layoffs hit Lucid and Fisker