Even
as the health care industry has stepped up with an unprecedented
response to the Covid-19 pandemic, health care companies are being
undermined by a loss of revenue, splintering of their clinical
workforces, and the disintegration of normal as we know it. For
health-related entrepreneurs and startups, this means the rules of
engagement with their stakeholders, including venture investors, are
also changing. The emergence of a new abnormal will depend on several
factors.
Is money available?
The message from the venture capital community is that it’s open for business. Firms say they are being more cautious but are still willing to invest. A few venture outfits have even closed new funds within the last weeks.
The truth for entrepreneurs and
venture-backed health care companies, however, is more nuanced.
Investors are always open to hearing about new deals and looking for
ways to shore up current portfolio companies. The pipeline development
analysts cannot afford to sit twiddling their thumbs. But new deals are
exceedingly rare right now, and industry pundits say that the deals that
do get done are on far less frothy, or certainly more realistic, terms — approximately 30% lower valuations and falling — than before Covid-19.
The word on the street is that venture
capital firms are looking for a two-year runway, a difficult measure to
assess in times of extreme uncertainty. And with most health care
companies facing potentially dramatic negative impacts to sales, staff,
and supply chains, that projection becomes even cloudier.
Investor as therapist
Sharing resources and best practices among
portfolio companies has been a long-stated objective for many venture
firms. Funders have even tried to provide centralized platforms and
programs across their investments, ranging from annual summits or small
CEO peer-mentoring groups to recommended consultants that can help save
on fees. But a sense of competition between founders, limited bandwidth
to meaningfully engage, and a desire for entrepreneurs to not show
weakness in front of investors have probably all contributed to the
historically spotty uptake of these services.
In the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic,
venture capital firms have renewed their commitment to provide these
types of shared resources for portfolio health care companies. These
programs have popped up seemingly overnight and are diverse in nature.
They can include office hours with fund partners or group conference calls between CEOs who share an industry, sometimes facilitated by a fund partner and other times left unchaperoned for “real talk.”
Websites and tools aggregating best practices in response to Covid-19
are continuously being updated by venture fund staff or portfolio
company leaders. Topics and perspectives can include how to humanely
conduct a layoff, manage cash runway in times of uncertainty, or deal
with the sudden, acute stress and mental health implications of leading
companies and families through this crisis.
I’ve been seeing more founders take up such
offers than in the past. Some no doubt are in desperate need of
support, while others might just be feeling physically isolated and cut
off while maneuvering their companies from a home office, a guest room,
or even the kitchen table. The big question is whether this trend of
resource sharing will extend into the future and if these deeper
interconnections, including more frequent, honest, and vulnerable
dialogues between investors and portfolio companies, will have
meaningful implications for future financial returns for venture capital
companies or for the quality and richness of entrepreneurial
ecosystems.
A Covid sure thing?
The reality of venture investing is that some
startups will fail while others succeed. The difference now is that some
are failing more rapidly than in “precedented” times. Most firms have
an investment thesis and abide by it, but personal networks and gut
instinct no doubt play a role — especially now when no single investor
or entrepreneur has a clearer crystal ball than others.
When looking at the next round of
investment in health care companies, it’s fair to say that Covid-19 is
creating a market for telehealth and other virtual health-related
platforms. But beyond that, a lack of clarity on the future will no
doubt contribute to at least a short-term wait-and-see attitude.
Still, many companies have wasted little
time pivoting from their original business models to embracing clear
emerging needs like production of personal protective equipment,
infection prevention methods, or remote or virtual engagement for
distanced selling and staff training, all while investing cycles into
the next big ideas birthed by the pandemic — moves that will eventually
entice investors to once again eagerly place their bets.
Those bets will surely come with more risk.
For example, when evaluating companies that serve hospitals, how can
one reasonably predict what the hospital of the future will look like,
or when hospitals will have the time or financial resources to embrace
the new or innovative?
The duration of the Covid-19 outbreak will
dictate how and when we treat routine and elective procedures like knee
replacements and cataract extraction — first with trepidation and
eventually at the levels seen in January. But patients’ fear of hospitals
could affect the volume of procedures long after the pandemic subsides.
And uncertainty as to whether elective procedures will return in full
force ahead of the release of a vaccine (which even the most aggressive
predictions pin at 12 to 18 months out) raises even further question
about already shaky ground.
Practitioner skepticism over whether
employers hold their best interests at heart or have been adequately
protecting their efforts on the frontlines will figure into inevitable
changes to hospital infrastructure and care standards. It is reasonable
to expect that what we previously called “patient and practitioner
experience” will transition to become “patient and practitioner demands”
in the post-Covid-19 era. The definitions of “nice to have” and “need
to have” as defined by patients and their caregivers will become
increasingly polarized, with both patients and practitioners defining
what they will require before returning to the hospital. These demands
could ultimately become the lens through which health systems and
leaders make future decisions about innovations and investments.
Market demand
Ultimately, investors will continue to play a
critical role in how the health care industry rebuilds itself. The
demand for venture funding will almost certainly increase as new
business models and concepts emerge from the melee and the faltering
foundation of health care delivery caused by Covid-19. Entrepreneurs
will rush to fill gaps such as higher thresholds for infection
prevention, social distancing within hospitals, relaxation of HIPAA
standards, or even remote clinical consultations that have already been
highlighted as fresh opportunities for change.
With debt markets completely locked up,
health care companies in the commercialization phase will also be forced
to approach venture funds for both their dollars and their therapeutic
counsel. Yet it is uncertain at this point in the crisis if venture
investors will be responsive.
Fortunately, venture capital firms in the health care space do not necessarily mean vulture capital. Many funds
are committed to advancing meaningful solutions in the industry and
supporting the needs of underserved populations and the greater good.
What’s next?
Venture capital has been and will remain an
integral part of the health care innovation ecosystem. But some of these
companies might be better equipped to help the sector reach its new
normal than others. Just as this global crisis is separating the
survivors from the victims in the hospital market and across our
populations, so too will it accelerate the success or the demise of
venture funds.
Investors who rose through the ranks as
former entrepreneurs and business operators and those who prioritize
their existing portfolio companies over new investments might be better
positioned to see long-term returns — both financial and in terms of
loyalty. Conversely, investors who exclusively chase the shiny new
object may have near-term returns but will lose the trust and confidence
of the entrepreneurial community.
Just as investors should focus on long-term
outcomes, health care innovators must also take the long view. This
(hopefully) once-in-a-lifetime upheaval is an opportunity for
transformation and reimagining standards, perceptions, and practices.
The sacred cows of health care are no longer looking so sacred, and the
right health care companies and venture investors will recognize this
opportunity and maximize their ability to do well by doing good.
Eric M. Stone is a health care
entrepreneur, patient advocate, chronic disease sufferer, adviser to
several health care startups, and co-founder and chief executive officer
of Velano Vascular.
Covid-19 is changing the game for health care companies and investors
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.