Is 2021 the year of D2C healthcare?
by?Tim Bogdan,?Dr Sven Jungmann?and?Felix Staeritz
Note: This article was originally published on medium
D2C has gained?great momentum in health?and?as a fast-growing industry, it presents many business opportunities especially now in 2021. Therefore this article is a?call to action?to any startups and incumbents to find their white space in D2C health. In order to understand why we believe D2C is one of the hottest topics in healthcare in 2021 we are structuring the article as follows:
1. What is D2C healthcare?
Direct-to-consumer, commonly known as D2C, has been established as a?digital growth model?for many producers in the last years when they started selling directly to end-consumers digitally and thereby cutting out the middleman (i.e. retailer).
And it finally arrived in highly regulated industries like healthcare: Public interest in D2C health?has quadrupled?in the last 5 years! (see visualization 1)
Especially in the US, D2C has already heated up the healthcare landscape and?posing great disruption potential for many incumbents?in 2020. The most prominent example:?Amazon’s move?into online pharmacy business end of last year.
Visualization 1: Public Interest in D2C health —?Source:?cbinsights
But what exactly does D2C mean for healthcare? In this industry’s context, the patient can directly receive health-related offerings and products digitally.
Thereby, D2C is simplifying the often still very complicated and inefficient treatment path to a seamless digitalized patient experience: From online access to doctors, remote diagnosis and treatment options up to online prescription order and final delivery of medical products at home (see visualization 2 as an example of a D2C journey in diagnostics).
Visualization 2: From classic to new D2C digital diagnostics experience —?Source: Own analysis
The range of D2C opportunities in healthcare is huge: Examples span from aforementioned online pharmacy services and diagnostics to fertility services, genomics (DNA testing kits), dental (teeth alignment services), vision (contact lenses and glasses) up to men’s health (e.g. hair loss or erectile dysfunction products).
2. Why is D2C so important in healthcare?
Overall, D2C has proven enormous societal value for healthcare since it?fills many gaps in the existing healthcare system?— e.g. think about underserved patients in some countryside areas who can be now connected digitally. Beyond that it has?many more advantages both for producers and consumers:
Producer perspective:
Consumer perspective:
Visualization 3: Thought experiment: Healthcare expenditures in relation to D2C Health market in US and Germany 2019 —?Source: Own calculation — based on?CMS gov,?Digital Lancet,??rzteblatt
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3. What are the trends pushing D2C healthcare in Germany in 2021?
We identified?7 drivers pushing D2C healthcare in Germany in 2021, acknowledging the existence of many more:
Visualization 4: Health expenditures in Germany 2006–2019 and beyond —?Source:?destatis.de,??rzteblatt
4. Practical considerations and conclusion
Although D2C has proved to be valuable in health, it’s not a panacea. There are many scenarios in which D2C does not make sense yet —?we highlight 4 considerations?to think about:
However, there’s a lot left to build!
If you already have an existing (digital) solution which is not conflicting with the aforementioned considerations, you could also think about?adding D2C components?to it. For example,?Alley, one of our co-created health ventures: Alley is a digital companion app for patients along their arthrosis treatment path and also connected to health providers. As a potential D2C scenario, we could extend the services by providing?orthoses or other arthrosis relevant aids via the platform.
Given D2C’s growing importance in health, the 7 drivers we listed will lead to an even more blossoming market in 2021. For those?D2C players in health?mindful of common pitfalls and cautious about patient safety and clinical effectiveness,?2021 will be a rewarding year.
Many entry barriers have been lowered (especially through higher technology maturity and increased user acceptance) and the aforementioned trends will further accelerate the circumstances. As it matures, D2C healthcare is gaining increasing interest from start-ups, academia, and, of course, big incumbents. Expect to see a?growing number of established and new players entering this space.
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About us
Tim Bogdan?is a digital health entrepreneur and senior venture developer at FoundersLane. His passion and focus are on building digital ventures in the health space — for example,?alley.de. Furthermore, he is a co-founder of the elderly care startup MehrPflegegeld.de, simplifying access to care services. In his previous roles, he was working in digital innovation as a strategy consultant, chief of staff to the management board of a global professional services firm and project lead in an innovation lab.
Dr Sven Jungmann?is a doctor-turned-entrepreneur. He is a partner at FoundersLane and an advisor to health start-ups and investors. Handelsblatt listed him among Germany’s smartest innovators. Sven has consulted Wellster Healthtech, the D2C health success case in Germany and continues doing so via an advisory board role. Wellster Healthtech has been promoting D2C in health early on.
Felix Staeritz?is a serial entrepreneur, investor, founder and CEO of the corporate venture builder FoundersLane, member of the Board of Digital Leaders of the World Economic Forum and book author and is one of the internationally recognised experts on entrepreneurship and digital transformation. Driven by the firm conviction to sustainably improve the world through digital innovations, he has been in close dialogue with the global business and scientific elite in relevant international bodies for around 20 years.
FoundersLane, the leading Corporate Venture Builder for climate and health, was founded in 2016 by Felix Staeritz, Andreas von Oettingen, and Michael Stephanblome. The team develops digital business models in the health and climate sector by combining the agility and the mindset of technology entrepreneurs with the strength of corporations. FoundersLane draws on more than 20 years of experience by the founders in building up new companies.
FoundersLane creates new, fast-growing digital companies in categories that are highly topical and current. FoundersLane counts more than 100 founders, experts and entrepreneurs with great expertise in the fields of medicine, health, climate, disruptive technologies such as IoT connectivity, AI, and machine learning. Clients and partners include SMEs and corporations as well as more than 30 Forbes listed companies, such as Trumpf, Vattenfall, Henkel and Baloise. FoundersLane is active in Europe, MENA and Asia with offices in Berlin, Cologne, Vienna and London.
Thx for a great piece Tim Bogdan ! Applying a “Scandinavian perspective” where we have indeed seen many of the forces you mention in motion for some time now - a key barrier to even faster growth was historically the simple fact that every new digital health company had to recruit their own tech team in order to build their own (non-differentiated) telemedicine app in order to enable the D2C interaction resulting in 100s of almost identical versions of these types of apps. A more rational approach for a much quicker GTM would of course be to license a SaaS telemedicine platform - just like a Shopify for e-commerce. Such platforms did not exist 5 y ago in eg Scandinavia, but now when they do - would you say Germany could “leapfrog” D2C digital healthcare offerings thanks to readily available SaaS telemedicine platforms + e-commerce platforms?
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