Startups

Inside the pitch deck that won Heartbeat Health’s first investment check

Comment

Heartbeat Health’s founder Dr. Jeff Wessler, and Kindred Ventures’ Kanyi Maqubela
Image Credits: Kindred Ventures / Heartbeat Health

Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the U.S., but the healthcare industry spends more money helping patients after they get sick, instead of keeping them healthy.

To fill this gap, Heartbeat Health, founded by Dr. Jeff Wessler, has raised more than $30 million, developing a digital data layer that uses telemedicine, remote diagnostics and digital heart health programs to give patients and clinicians a more proactive way to stay healthy.

On our last episode of TechCrunch Live, we spoke with Wessler and Kindred Ventures’ Kanyi Maqubela to learn how its first fundraising deal came together and how Heartbeat’s pitch deck helped convince Kindred to invest.

Insight versus experience

“We look for founders who have a combination of domain insight and domain experience,” said Maqubela. “A lot of people who are very experienced in a domain are not totally insightful about it. They know all the reasons why you can never do something in that area. It takes a beginner’s mind, almost a little naivety, to have real insight in some areas.”

Though it’s often seen as an advantage to have experience in the industry you’re trying to solve for, or sell to, that experience must be paired with the insight to see a solution.

Maqubela said Wessler’s optimism about addressing cardiovascular health in a new way, paired with his deep understanding of the existing landscape, was attractive: “What I liked about Jeff was that he was from that world, but he was not of that world,” said Maqubela.

He added that Kindred is more than willing to invest in founders before they have a product or even a prototype, but that there is certain criteria involved. Alongside domain insight, Kindred also looks for personality that people want to partner with. As part of the firm’s investment due diligence in Wessler, Kindred helped recruit technical co-founding partners.

“The theory was that if one of them was ready to quit their ‘insert great job X’ to go work with this cardiologist, that’s actually a really important input that he is CEO material as well as a clinician,” said Maqubela.

TAM

As we dove into the pitch deck, Wessler and Maqubela both highlighted an early slide (pictured below).

We often hear that heart disease is the number-one killer, but the extra context around the problem of heart disease itself was critical in telling the Heartbeat Health story. The slide described cardiovascular disease as a bigger threat than all cancers combined, but is 80% preventable.

“It’s the biggest health issue facing America and has humongous impact,” said Maqubela. “Everyone I’ve spoken to since day one of Heartbeat Health, either in a pitch capacity or a recruitment capacity or from our team, has experience with heart disease, with friends or family or loved ones in one way or another. It’s a problem that gripped you.”

One of the key factors any good venture investor looks for is the size of the market. When you realize that everyone you’ve spoken with is in some way affected by heart disease, it becomes evident that the market is absolutely massive. Heartbeat Health benefited from the fact that heart disease is both an emotional burden for almost everyone, and also ‘an incredibly valuable business problem to solve.’

At the early stage, TAM is often evaluated alongside business model. Though Heartbeat Health’s model has changed significantly since then — from D2C to B2B2C — it still resonated with Kindred.

Heartbeat Health Pitch Deck by Jordan Crook on Scribd

“When I look at a business model, I’m looking for heuristics — that the things you’re going to be able to do on the basis of the team and your product are going to translate closely enough into large amounts of money,” said Maqubela, as he literally waved his hand in the air.

“Close enough is literally hand-wavy, at this stage, because you just don’t know and you’re going to have to figure it out. What I looked at when I saw this was ‘How many patients a month?’ and ‘How much money per patient?’ and ‘How many people have heart disease?’ and ‘How hard is it going to be to do this?’ … Well, suddenly I’m getting the big numbers.”

Heartbeat Health Business Model
Image Credits: Heartbeat Health

The pivot

Venturing away from the deck for a moment, Wessler and Maqubela started to explain the decision to pivot the model from D2C to B2B2C.

Wessler had this to say:

We were building a model around people who wanted to try the new fancy thing, but didn’t really need us at that time, and so we weren’t really making significant changes in their long-term outcomes. So we had a pretty hard decision as a company to take this from a ‘nice-to-have’ to a ‘need-to-have’ for the whole country, and ultimately the world.

If we’re going to do that, then we have to show that Heartbeat can influence these expensive, incredibly dangerous outcomes of heart disease, and that we can reduce the number of heart issues and events that are happening.

To do that, we had to get into the payor world. The payor 101 primer for healthcare is: it’s incredibly hard to break into. In order to do it, you have to invest a lot in proving outcomes and demonstrating that the model, whatever it is, is going to lower the costs of disease state and improve the outcomes with no sacrifice in quality or at a better quality.

And that takes years to show. So we ultimately sat down and decided that this is the way we’re going to get to this long-term vision. We’ve got to invest years in it. It’s not going to happen over six months. And we made the decision to lean hard into that.

Now, Heartbeat Health focuses on helping cardiologists and clinicians acquire customers well before they get sick. Between the pre-seed and the Series A, Maqubela realized that there are entire industries, particularly in digital health, where distribution is not a separate part of the business, but rather the product itself.

He explained that heart health itself isn’t a difficult problem to solve. If you check your blood pressure early, eat and sleep well, stop smoking, and maybe take relevant medicines, you’re probably going to be better off.

“But how do you get those things to people when they need them?” he mused. “How do you get those things to people early enough? Actually, distribution is the rub. Distribution isn’t just a tactic that you use to sell your products. Distribution is the product.”

Understanding that distribution was the core problem to solve shifted the way Heartbeat Health did business. The company decided to build a suite of distribution pathways and optimized those pathways, understanding that those channels are as core to the product offering as anything else.

Build it

As we returned to the deck, Maqubela highlighted a slide that I would have never expected him to select.

The slide showed a picture of a landing page. But Maqubela said that seeing that landing page, and noting that it had a real phone number on it, told him something critical: you’re able to build a website. At a very basic level, Maqubela is looking for someone who is willing to take the time and energy to learn to build something.

“One of the things at the seed stage that I’m trying to evaluate is… for every person who can create a deck, you divide that by x to find the number of people who can create a deck and also build the things in that deck,” said Maqubela.

Heartbeat Health
Image Credits: Heartbeat Health

But a website is far from the only thing that Wessler was building.

Early on, Heartbeat had decided to have its own physical footprint in the world: a clinic where it would have its own doctors using its own technology and products to serve patients. Wessler said it was the worst early decision and best long-term decision that the team made. Worst because it took up all of the team’s energy and attention, not only because it is resource-consuming to build a practice, but also because of the responsibility that comes with seeing and caring for patients that is separate from the responsibility of building a tech company.

“In the long run, it gave us a real testing ground for patients and clinicians to see what works with patients, what services can and can’t be delivered virtually, and how we go about testing our hypotheses in real time,” said Wessler.

“Now, a couple of years later, I think that practice gave us a huge leg up, because we’re not building in a vacuum. We sell our products to someone else and because of that practice, we’ve already figured out what works and achieved some degree of product-market fit internally. We have data to back up what works and show our successes.”

I asked Maqubela about the decision to build a practice alongside the tech company, and how he evaluates founders that insist on a physical footprint as part of their business.

“The best founders don’t ever conduct an experiment without a very clear point of view for what they’re trying to prove, and how, based on the evidence, what they’re going to do next,” said Maqubela. “If you want to do brick-and-mortar for psychiatric services because ‘insert hypothesis here,’ and if that hypothesis is really interesting and can be proven in some way, then go put down some brick and go put down some mortar.”

You can check out the full conversation with Wessler and Maqubela below, including their feedback to our TechCrunch Live Pitch-off companies.

More TechCrunch

VC and podcaster David Sacks has revealed a new AI chat app called Glue that fixes “Slack channel fatigue,” he says.

Harness Lab isn’t founder Jyoti Bansal’s first startup. He sold AppDynamics to Cisco for $3.7 billion in 2017, the week it was supposed to go public. His latest venture has…

After surpassing $100M in ARR, Harness Labs grabs a $150M line of credit

The company’s autonomous vehicles have had a number of misadventures lately, involving driving into construction sites.

Waymo’s robotaxis under investigation after crashes and traffic mishaps

Sona, a workforce management platform for frontline employees, has raised $27.5 million in a Series A round of funding. More than two-thirds of the U.S. workforce are reportedly in frontline…

Sona, a frontline workforce management platform, raises $27.5M with eyes on US expansion

Uber Technologies announced Tuesday that it will buy the Taiwan unit of Delivery Hero’s Foodpanda for $950 million in cash. The deal is part of Uber Eats’ strategy to expand…

Uber to acquire Foodpanda’s Taiwan unit from Delivery Hero for $950M in cash 

Paris-based Blisce has become the latest VC firm to launch a fund dedicated to climate tech. It plans to raise as much as €150M (about $162M).

Paris-based VC firm Blisce launches climate tech fund with a target of $160M

Maad, a B2B e-commerce startup based in Senegal, has secured $3.2 million debt-equity funding to bolster its growth in the western Africa country and to explore fresh opportunities in the…

Maad raises $3.2M seed amid B2B e-commerce sector turbulence in Africa

The fresh funds were raised from two investors who transferred the capital into a special purpose vehicle, a legal entity associated with the OpenAI Startup Fund.

OpenAI Startup Fund raises additional $5M

Accel has invested in more than 200 startups in the region to date, making it one of the more prolific VCs in this market.

Accel has a fresh $650M to back European early-stage startups

Kyle Vogt, the former founder and CEO of self-driving car company Cruise, has a new VC-backed robotics startup focused on household chores. Vogt announced Monday that the new startup, called…

Cruise founder Kyle Vogt is back with a robot startup

When Keith Rabois announced he was leaving Founders Fund to return to Khosla Ventures in January, it came as a shock to many in the venture capital ecosystem — and…

From Miles Grimshaw to Eva Ho, venture capitalists continue to play musical chairs

On the heels of OpenAI announcing the latest iteration of its GPT large language model, its biggest rival in generative AI in the U.S. announced an expansion of its own.…

Anthropic is expanding to Europe and raising more money

If you’re looking for a Starliner mission recap, you’ll have to wait a little longer, because the mission has officially been delayed.

TechCrunch Space: You rock(et) my world, moms

Apple devoted a full event to iPad last Tuesday, roughly a month out from WWDC. From the invite artwork to the polarizing ad spot, Apple was clear — the event…

Apple iPad Pro M4 vs. iPad Air M2: Reviewing which is right for most

Terri Burns, a former partner at GV, is venturing into a new chapter of her career by launching her own venture firm called Type Capital. 

GV’s youngest partner has launched her own firm

The decision to go monochrome was probably a smart one, considering the candy-colored alternatives that seem to want to dazzle and comfort you.

ChatGPT’s new face is a black hole

Apple and Google announced on Monday that iPhone and Android users will start seeing alerts when it’s possible that an unknown Bluetooth device is being used to track them. The…

Apple and Google agree on standard to alert people when unknown Bluetooth devices may be tracking them

The company is describing the event as “a chance to demo some ChatGPT and GPT-4 updates.”

OpenAI’s ChatGPT announcement: Watch here

A human safety operator will be behind the wheel during this phase of testing, according to the company.

GM’s Cruise ramps up robotaxi testing in Phoenix

OpenAI announced a new flagship generative AI model on Monday that they call GPT-4o — the “o” stands for “omni,” referring to the model’s ability to handle text, speech, and…

OpenAI debuts GPT-4o ‘omni’ model now powering ChatGPT

Featured Article

The women in AI making a difference

As a part of a multi-part series, TechCrunch is highlighting women innovators — from academics to policymakers —in the field of AI.

20 hours ago
The women in AI making a difference

The expansion of Polar Semiconductor’s facility would enable the company to double its U.S. production capacity of sensor and power chips within two years.

White House proposes up to $120M to help fund Polar Semiconductor’s chip facility expansion

In 2021, Google kicked off work on Project Starline, a corporate-focused teleconferencing platform that uses 3D imaging, cameras and a custom-designed screen to let people converse with someone as if…

Google’s 3D video conferencing platform, Project Starline, is coming in 2025 with help from HP

Over the weekend, Instagram announced that it is expanding its creator marketplace to 10 new countries — this marketplace connects brands with creators to foster collaboration. The new regions include…

Instagram expands its creator marketplace to 10 new countries

You can expect plenty of AI, but probably not a lot of hardware.

Google I/O 2024: What to expect

The keynote kicks off at 10 a.m. PT on Tuesday and will offer glimpses into the latest versions of Android, Wear OS and Android TV.

Google I/O 2024: How to watch

Four-year-old Mexican BNPL startup Aplazo facilitates fractionated payments to offline and online merchants even when the buyer doesn’t have a credit card.

Aplazo is using buy now, pay later as a stepping stone to financial ubiquity in Mexico

We received countless submissions to speak at this year’s Disrupt 2024. After carefully sifting through all the applications, we’ve narrowed it down to 19 session finalists. Now we need your…

Vote for your Disrupt 2024 Audience Choice favs

Co-founder and CEO Bowie Cheung, who previously worked at Uber Eats, said the company now has 200 customers.

Healthy growth helps B2B food e-commerce startup Pepper nab $30 million led by ICONIQ Growth

Booking.com has been designated a gatekeeper under the EU’s DMA, meaning the firm will be regulated under the bloc’s market fairness framework.

Booking.com latest to fall under EU market power rules