Don’t Celebrate Theranos’ Troubles: Learn from Holmes’ Vision

Don’t Celebrate Theranos’ Troubles: Learn from Holmes’ Vision

Recent articles in the Wall Street Journal have cast significant doubt on Theranos’ underlying technology and regulatory adherence, and also its ability to scale its business. These are appropriate concerns, and the pieces contain serious allegations about whether or not Theranos is following the appropriate regulations around the reliability of its testing results.

That said, the customer experience that underpins what Theranos aims to achieve remains strong. True enough, falling back on traditional methods of drawing blood, rather than the use of tiny vials of blood from finger pricks, does weaken its customer value proposition (especially for those, like Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes, who have a phobia of needles). But, as I wrote in a post last year, other aspects of the customer experience are quite compelling. These include:

  • Easy access for customers, via “Wellness Centers,” within five miles of their home, early, late, or during the weekend—a system that leverages existing pharmacy infrastructure and staff to bring healthcare into lower cost settings
  • Automation and standardization, combined with the ability for repeat testing, to eliminate the need and inconvenience of repeat sample donation
  • Same-day turnaround time, sample to result
  • Easy access to, and interpretation of, test data with longitudinal trends to provide actionable information for patient and physician
  • Transparent, low, and uniform pricing, whether a customer is insured or not

Taken together, these make up the value proposition to customers. Whether Theranos makes extensive use of proprietary “Edison” instrumentation, or is doing the bulk of its testing with instruments bought from Siemens AG, is not that important to its customers. If this approach allows Theranos to deliver on its customer value proposition and allows the company to scale profitability, then customers will not care and the business case remains viable.

However, customer and partner trust in the brand, along with adherence to the appropriate regulations, are also critical to success. If Theranos is discovered to have betrayed this trust or its interpretation of the regulations is deemed to be inappropriate or illegal, then we potentially have another “VW” in the making.

It will be easy for companies in the sector, whose current businesses are threatened by Theranos, to celebrate and congratulate themselves that they knew something was amiss. Better to take Theranos’ customer experience as a yardstick for their own offerings and to strive for continued improvement in experience for their own customers—any patient who has gone through the usual testing process knows the industry needs it.

This original version of this blog was published here.

Mike Dunkley

EVP & President, North America @ Cambridge Consultants | Deep Tech development and Strategic Advisory

9 年

Margery, thanks for your comment. I do believe the regulators have an important role to play in what is a challenging industry. I also hope that people look at what Theranos is trying to do to improve the customer experience. To see Theranos fail and not learn from its vision would be an opportunity missed.

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Margery Rothenberg

Strategic planning, product management, AI, marketing and communications leader with experience in the healthcare and technology fields. Ad agency and consulting experience: consumer/patient/provider/business

9 年

The VW analogy is what came to mind for me, too. Falsifying data destined for regulatory agencies is a serious issue. Sample dilution (after claiming that their system only requires minimal blood sample), misrepresentation, false advertising... I hope they clean up their act. In fact, I hope CMS/CLIA comes in and audits.

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