Lean LaunchPad for Life Sciences – Revenue Streams

We’re teaching a Lean LaunchPad class for Life Sciences and Health Care (therapeutics, diagnostics, devices and digital health) at UCSF with a team of veteran venture capitalists. The class has talked to 2,056 customers to date.



Part 1:  issues in the therapeutics drug discovery pipeline
Part 2:  medical devices and digital health
Part 3: described what we’re going to do about it.
Part 4: a snapshot of what our teams found outside the building.
Part 5: Value proposition and customer segments in Life Sciences
Part 6: Distribution channels in Life Sciences

This post is an update of what we learned about life science revenue models.


Life Science/Health Care revenue streams differ by Category

For commercialization, the business model (Customers, Channel, Revenue Model, etc.) for therapeutics, diagnostics, devices, bioinformatics and digital health have very little in common.


This weeks topic was revenue streams – how much cash the company can generate from each customer segment. Revenue streams have two parts: the revenue strategy and the pricing tactics.


Figuring out revenue strategy starts by gaining a deep understanding of the target customer(s). Setting a revenue strategy starts with understanding the basics about the customer segments:



who’s the user, the recommender, buyer, and payer
How the target customer currently purchases goods and services and how much they currently pay for equivalent products
Their willingness to pay for value versus lowest cost?
How much budget they have for your type of product?

Revenue strategy asks questions like, “Should we offer cost-based or value-based pricing.  How about demand-based pricing? Freemium? Do we price based on hardware sales or do we offer hardware plus consumables (parts that need to be disposed or replaced regularly)? Do we sell a single software package or a subscription?  These strategy hypotheses are tested against the target customer segment(s).


Once you’ve established a revenue strategy the pricing tactics follow. Pricing is simply “how much can I charge for the product using the selected revenue strategy?”  Pricing may be as simple as setting a dollar value for hardware or software, or as complicated as setting a high price and skimming the market or setting a low price as a loss leader.


You can get a feel for how each of the cohorts address the Revenue Streams by looking at the Revenue lectures below – covering the therapeutics, diagnostics, devices and digital health cohorts.


At the end of the lectures you can see a “compare and contrast” video and a summary of the differences in distribution channels.


Diagnostics

Week 5 Todd Morrill Instructor 



If you can’t see the presentation above click here


Digital Health

Week 5 Abhas Gupta Instructor 



If you can’t see the presentation above click here


Devices

Week 5 Allan May Instructor 



If you can’t see the presentation above click here


Therapeutics

Week 5 Karl Handelsman Instructor 



If you can’t see the presentation above click here


Life Science and Health Care Differences in Revenue Streams
”

This weeks lecture and panel was on Revenue; how much cash the company can generate from each customer segment – and the strategy and tactics to do so. Therapeutics, diagnostics, devices and digital health use different Revenue Strategies and Pricing Tactics, in the video and the summary that follows the instructors compare and contrast how they differ.



If you can’t see the video above click here


Therapeutics (Starting at 0:30)



Therapeutics revenue is from drug companies not end users
18 months to first revenue from a deal
Predicated on delivering quality data to a company
Deal can be front-end or back-end loaded
Quality of the data has to be extremely high for a deal

Diagnostics (Starting at 4:10)



Diagnostic revenue is from end users: a hospital or clinical lab
You need to figure out value of your product but…
Pricing is capped by your reimbursement (CPT) code limits
Reimbursement strategy is paramount, design to good codes avoid bad ones
Find a reimbursement code consultant
Don’t do cost-based pricing… go for value-based pricing

Medical Devices (Starting at 8:23)



There really is no such thing as a perfect First Generation Medical Device

So Medical Device companies often start with a Volkswagen product and then build to the Ferrari product


Revenue models are typically direct product sales
Don’t do cost-based pricing… go for value-based pricing, especially where your device lowers the treatment costs of the patient
In most cases, pricing is capped by your reimbursement (CPT) code limits


Or pricing can be capped by what competitors offer, unless you can demonstrate superior cost savings
In a new market there is no reimbursement code but if you show high cost-savings you can get a high reimbursement rate


A risk in device hardware is getting trapped in low-volume manufacturing with low margins and run out of cash

Digital Health (Starting at 10:35)



Digital Health revenue models are often subscription models to a company per month across a large number of users

Intermediation fees – where you broker a transaction – are another source of revenue (i.e. HealthTap)
Advertising is another digital health revenue model, but requires at least 10 million users to have a meaningful model, but can be lower if you have higher value uses like specialist physicians because  you can charge dollars not cents


Don’t do cost-based pricing… go for value-based pricing

Value-based pricing is based on the needs you’ve learned from the customer segment and the strength of your product/market fit

the sum of customer needs + product/market fit = the pricing you can achieve





Lessons Learned




Each of these Life Science domains has a unique revenue strategy and pricing tactic
In therapeutics revenue comes in lump milestone payments from drug companies based on quality data
Diagnostics revenue comes value pricing to hospital or clinical lab

capped by reimbursement (CPT) code limits


Device pricing starts by offering an initial value-priced base product and then following up with a fully featured product

capped by reimbursement (CPT) code limits


Digital health products use subscription value pricing. Alternatively may use advertising revenue model


Filed under: Life Sciences, National Science Foundation, Teaching
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Published on November 18, 2013 06:00
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