Sep 25, 2019
There are two things I can say for sure. First, healthcare-associated infections (HAI) cause a lot of suffering and cost a lot of money. Second, it's really hard to sell into healthcare, even when you have an innovative product that attacks a well-known problem in a common-sense way. On this episode, we get to dive into both of those things.
Over the past decade, substantial scientific evidence has accumulated indicating that contamination of environmental surfaces in hospital rooms plays an important role in the transmission of several key HAIs. Environmental surfaces contribute to cross-transmission of pathogens. These surfaces include both nonporous (hard) surfaces and soft surfaces such as bed linens, gown, mattress, etc. The more a patient comes into contact with a surface, the more important it is to keep it clean. Well, what happens if you can't keep your pillows clean? Many standard-issue hospital pillows allow pathogens to enter through sewn seams, vents, and non-barrier covers. Then patients put their heads on them. It's an issue that seems to have a common-sense call-to-action, much like hand-hygiene. But as we've seen, common sense and good products are not all you need to penetrate the healthcare market.
Innovators and entrepreneurs who want to make it in the healthcare business should absolutely focus their efforts on delivering products and services that help patients. That is, after all, the whole point of what we're doing. But if your sales strategy relies on what you've deemed to be "common sense" and "good for the patient" and nothing else, then you're likely to fail.
When David Woolfson and his team at Gabriel Scientific started winning awards for their hermetically sealed pillow with a filter, they thought they had short-circuited the healthcare sales cycle. As we'll hear, it drove some VC attention but did little to open doors at the health systems. David's story is instructive in many ways, but it delivers a truth that many in the startup community won't want to hear: it's going to be a grind and there are no short-cuts.
This episode originally aired on The #HCBiz Show! on May 3rd, 2017.
On this episode, we talk with David Woolfson to learn:
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