A Healthcare Innovator's Guide to Value in the Employer Marketplace
Ron Leopold, MD, MBA, MPH
High-Cost Medical & Rx Claims Consulting for Employers / Brokers
“Is this something employers will buy?” I get asked this all the time by healthcare innovators and venture capital investors.
In the self-insured marketplace the employer is the payer.
Although self-insured employers work with insurance companies (ASO, or Administrative Services Only) or Third-Party Administrators (TPAs). But have no doubt about this, the employer is the payer. They pay for the medical plan, determine what services are covered and identify additional third-party Point Solutions for their covered members.
If you’re thinking that the healthcare innovation that you’re building (or investing in) might be successful in the employer market, ask yourself these buyer questions about your solution:
And if you’re thinking “this is a lot more complex and nuanced than we realized” – welcome to the self-funded employer marketplace. Let’s look at some of the value drivers for success with self-funded employers.
ROI / VOI: What’s it Worth?
Proving your worth means proving your return on investment (ROI) or value on investment (VOI). Employer decision-makers must easily believe in the return or value that a solution delivers. In the end, there are five dimensions of value to consider:
Lower medical costs: Cost is king, but lowering medical costs is tricky business. Your approach to demonstrating cost savings should never be at the expense of clinical outcomes. It is important to provide the same rigor to demonstrating the health economics outcome of your solution that you would provide an insurance company or provider organization.
“We have a digital therapeutics solution that reduces morbidity of Inflammatory Bowel Disease and reduces spending on costly specialty medicines like Humira and Entyvio for those conditions.”
Better outcomes: For many healthcare innovations (think digital health or virtual care) the ability to significantly extend medical feedback and intervention provides a compelling health outcomes story.
“Our diabetes management program both delays progression of disease and slows progression of treatment options for Type 2 Diabetic program participants (when compared to a control cohort of Type 2 Diabetics).”
Improved performance and productivity: Direct costs for lost productivity focus on lost workdays. If there is a way to credibly demonstrate how your innovation can do this- it’s worth pursuing. It is also fair game to cite indirect costs for lost productivity- presenteeism and reduced engagement or performance. Impact on indirect costs of productivity is helpful to build the case for your solution.
领英推荐
“Our Back and Neck Virtual Care and Digital Health Solution reduces lost workdays and improves on the job performance for blue collar workers with medium and heavy job requirements.”
Employee loyalty and retention: Does your healthcare solution go above and beyond what an employee would expect for themselves and their family? Is this something that “no one else who works and gets benefits” can get? Does your innovation break through the noise and make employees appreciate that they work for an employer who cares about them?
“Our family support benefit provides employees and their family members concierge-level services when a family member is in the hospital for an extended period of time.”
Employee attraction: Does this healthcare innovation have enough allure to use as a reason why a prospective employee might come to work for this company?
“Our fertility benefits solution for your plan members is a great way to show prospective technical and professional talent that yours is a great company to work for.”
Playing in the Sandbox
Healthcare Innovators need to show that they understand their customer. It is critical that you can demonstrate how your solution addresses each of the following:
Member experience: Employer decision-makers will be looking for a customer-focused, seamless member experience. Folks in HR are always happy to get rave reviews. They hate complaints and fire drills. You need to show them that you understand that and that you can deliver on your promises for service.
Employer experience: What does your account management look like? Who will be servicing the employer’s account? What kind of reporting can you provide? Be valuable and accessible.
Coordination: There has been a proliferation of third-party vendors, point solutions and carve-outs in this space and self-funded employers manage an ecosphere of third-party vendors. There are minimum administrative requirements your solution must be able to demonstrate. Employees and their families that make up an employer’s membership are the customers, here. Good service is table stakes.
Integration: In some cases, an employer will be looking for how you can integrate with what the carrier is doing, what the treating provider is doing, or what some of the other third-party vendors (i.e., member navigation, patient advocacy) are doing.
Bottom line
This is an enormous and potentially lucrative market that many healthcare innovators should consider. It has its rules and priorities. Understanding how your solution fits into the needs of key stakeholders and decision-makers in this market will help the chances of success.
Ron Leopold, MD, MBA, MPH
Physician Consultant and Advisor
Product Development / Business Development / Advisory Services
CEO at Parallel Profile, Named Top 10 Most Innovative Healthcare Companies by Employer Health Innovation Roundtable (EHIR) and Forbes Top 52 Female Led Startups
2 年Agree 100%! AND I would add addresses racial health equity. That’s a key part of our mission.