Maria Shepherd, President and Founder, Medi-Vantage02.23.17
MassMEDIC and AdvaMed are two trade associations that lead the effort to advance medical technology around the world. These organizations act as a common voice for medical device, orthopedics, diagnostics, and health information technology companies. MassMEDIC is the largest regional medical device association in the United States, and AdvaMed has a national and global presence in regions including Europe, India, China, Brazil, and Japan. Both organizations have member companies that range from the largest to the smallest medical technology innovators. The AdvaMed annual meeting (recently renamed “The MedTech Conference”) and the MassMEDIC Medtech Showcase, both held in the fall every year, are two medical meetings with agendas completely dedicated to the medical device industry.
Why This Is Important
The work AdvaMed and MassMEDIC do on behalf of the medtech industry and the statistics they provide are valuable indicators explaining how to plan and prepare strategies to sustain growth in the industry. At AdvaMed 2016, data were presented that made it clear that the medical device start-up ecosystem, critical to the health and the growth of medtech innovation, is at risk.
Medtech Innovation Is at Risk
According to statistics presented at AdvaMed 2016, U.S. venture capital investment has been declining since the early 1990s. Medtech venture capital activity remains robust, but predominately in later stage start-ups. This means that the investment community is reducing its risk by capitalizing more in the segment of mature start-ups, usually those that have established a sales trajectory. The high cost of medtech marketing and sales present a challenge for early stage entrepreneurs, who struggle to find funding to establish the sales curve desirable to risk-averse investors.
An Alarming Trend
In Chart 1, investment in medtech, other biosciences, and information/communications technology (ICT) is reported. ICT start-ups have grown the most over the period between 1978 and 2012. Data presented at AdvaMed 2016 reported that the number of new medtech firms created each year has declined from 1,500 annually in the late 1970s/early 1980s to approximately 600 in 2012 (Chart 2).
This trend is important because it has grown increasingly difficult to innovate at big medtech companies. The core of new innovation in medtech comes from start-ups. At a recent industry event, panelists spoke about this problem. “Large companies are very, very risk averse,” said a panelist from Bard Access Systems (a division of CR Bard). “…innovation, at least new concepts, take money and time, and usually that doesn’t float well when you look at it from a management perspective.”
An Orthopedic Company Won the MedTech Innovator Grand Prize
At the MassMEDIC Showcase 2016 meeting, 21 medtech entrepreneurs presented innovative new technologies for surgery, digital health, diagnostics, imaging, implantables, injectables, and orthopedics. At AdvaMed 2016, the MedTech Innovator global virtual accelerator showcased 20 semi-finalists. Green Sun Medical won the $200,000 grand prize, with the development of a novel spinal brace for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis patients that allows the patient to move and generate the constant corrective forces necessary to reverse the condition. This investment engine is a significant boost to the industry since the other critical funding source, the initial public offering, has also declined in medtech over the past 15 years (Chart 3).
Get Involved in Innovation
U.S. medtech start-up leadership is still undisputed, but the global decline in medtech entrepreneurship continues. Along with calls for better reimbursement processes, the warning call delivered at AdvaMed 2016 cautioned how medtech innovation is at risk, and that, ultimately, will lead to all of us suffering the consequences.
References
Maria Shepherd has more than 20 years of leadership experience in medical device/life-science marketing in small start-ups and top-tier companies. After her industry career, including her role as vice president of marketing for Oridion Medical, where she boosted the company valuation prior to its acquisition by Covidien/Medtronic, director of marketing for Philips Medical and senior management roles at Boston Scientific Corp., she founded Medi-Vantage. Medi-Vantage provides marketing and business strategy and innovation research for the medical device industry. The firm quantitatively and qualitatively sizes and segments opportunities, evaluates new technologies, provides marketing services and assesses prospective acquisitions. Shepherd has taught marketing and product development courses, and is a member of the Aligo Medtech Investment Committee (www.msbiv.com). She can be reached at 855-343-3100 ext. 102 or at mshepherd@medi-vantage. Visit her website at www.medi-vantage.com.
Why This Is Important
The work AdvaMed and MassMEDIC do on behalf of the medtech industry and the statistics they provide are valuable indicators explaining how to plan and prepare strategies to sustain growth in the industry. At AdvaMed 2016, data were presented that made it clear that the medical device start-up ecosystem, critical to the health and the growth of medtech innovation, is at risk.
Medtech Innovation Is at Risk
According to statistics presented at AdvaMed 2016, U.S. venture capital investment has been declining since the early 1990s. Medtech venture capital activity remains robust, but predominately in later stage start-ups. This means that the investment community is reducing its risk by capitalizing more in the segment of mature start-ups, usually those that have established a sales trajectory. The high cost of medtech marketing and sales present a challenge for early stage entrepreneurs, who struggle to find funding to establish the sales curve desirable to risk-averse investors.
An Alarming Trend
In Chart 1, investment in medtech, other biosciences, and information/communications technology (ICT) is reported. ICT start-ups have grown the most over the period between 1978 and 2012. Data presented at AdvaMed 2016 reported that the number of new medtech firms created each year has declined from 1,500 annually in the late 1970s/early 1980s to approximately 600 in 2012 (Chart 2).
This trend is important because it has grown increasingly difficult to innovate at big medtech companies. The core of new innovation in medtech comes from start-ups. At a recent industry event, panelists spoke about this problem. “Large companies are very, very risk averse,” said a panelist from Bard Access Systems (a division of CR Bard). “…innovation, at least new concepts, take money and time, and usually that doesn’t float well when you look at it from a management perspective.”
An Orthopedic Company Won the MedTech Innovator Grand Prize
At the MassMEDIC Showcase 2016 meeting, 21 medtech entrepreneurs presented innovative new technologies for surgery, digital health, diagnostics, imaging, implantables, injectables, and orthopedics. At AdvaMed 2016, the MedTech Innovator global virtual accelerator showcased 20 semi-finalists. Green Sun Medical won the $200,000 grand prize, with the development of a novel spinal brace for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis patients that allows the patient to move and generate the constant corrective forces necessary to reverse the condition. This investment engine is a significant boost to the industry since the other critical funding source, the initial public offering, has also declined in medtech over the past 15 years (Chart 3).
Get Involved in Innovation
U.S. medtech start-up leadership is still undisputed, but the global decline in medtech entrepreneurship continues. Along with calls for better reimbursement processes, the warning call delivered at AdvaMed 2016 cautioned how medtech innovation is at risk, and that, ultimately, will lead to all of us suffering the consequences.
References
Maria Shepherd has more than 20 years of leadership experience in medical device/life-science marketing in small start-ups and top-tier companies. After her industry career, including her role as vice president of marketing for Oridion Medical, where she boosted the company valuation prior to its acquisition by Covidien/Medtronic, director of marketing for Philips Medical and senior management roles at Boston Scientific Corp., she founded Medi-Vantage. Medi-Vantage provides marketing and business strategy and innovation research for the medical device industry. The firm quantitatively and qualitatively sizes and segments opportunities, evaluates new technologies, provides marketing services and assesses prospective acquisitions. Shepherd has taught marketing and product development courses, and is a member of the Aligo Medtech Investment Committee (www.msbiv.com). She can be reached at 855-343-3100 ext. 102 or at mshepherd@medi-vantage. Visit her website at www.medi-vantage.com.