Building a successful business doesn’t always go in a straight line. Even in failure, hopefully there are some positive outcomes. Perhaps the best of these are “lessons learned”!
Case in point: A couple of years ago, I wrote an article in Becker’s Hospital Review entitled, “Sometimes You are Ahead of the Curve: 4 lessons from a Failed Price Transparency Venture” that I’d like to expand upon here.
In 2012, I agreed to supply some sweat equity to a venture that provided bundled healthcare pricing. With the increasing consolidation of healthcare, it made perfect sense to gather all of the various elements of a medical procedure together into one package, allowing the consumer to make an informed decision on a hospital and a doctor based upon pricing, hospital reviews and the physician’s experience.
To me, it was a pretty easy concept to understand. Perhaps even a Blue Ocean®! We all know that consumers go online more and more each day for their healthcare needs, researching procedures, medical facilities and physicians. Then they compare pricing and voilà, they’ve decided where and by whom they’re getting their procedure done, without ever setting foot in a hospital or meeting the doctor.
Our bundled concept seemed just the ticket.
In order to become real, great ideas require commitment. Consider the example of Post-it® Notes. 3M believed in their product but it still took 10 years to gain acceptance with consumers. Sometimes great ideas just require a pile of money thrown behind them. In the case of our bundled healthcare pricing concept, it required marketing and sales funding, which didn’t happen.
Again, why did we fail? Perhaps the timing was bad. Perhaps the marketplace was not ready for it. Perhaps massive upheavals in the healthcare sector made it difficult to focus. Perhaps a combination of all three.
But if I am reading the tea leaves correctly, seeing the changes driven by CMS as well as industry consolidation, I would say that we missed our opportunity. The pundits are now predicting bundled pricing over the next half decade. And it is already starting in a big way!
So where did this leave us? In a perfect storm of “no.” NO monies to gain distribution, and certainly NO monies to affect consumer behavior. A real chicken and egg issue. There are very few businesses that you can simply “will” to grow from nothing into something.
I don’t know if ultimately this venture would have been successful but I do know that trying to launch an innovative product without a well-thought-out and well-funded plan is most likely not going to work. Moral of the story: Take my advice and don’t make my mistakes!
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