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HealthTech Havoc 🔥

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failory.com

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nico@failory.com

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Thu, Mar 7, 2024 02:02 PM

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Analyzing Project Ronin’s $10M failure. ?

Analyzing Project Ronin’s $10M failure.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 [Read Online]( Hospitals Still Make the Worst Customers Analyzing Project Ronin’s $10M failure. [Nicolás Cerdeira]( [fb]( [tw]( [in]( [email](mailto:?subject=Post%20from%20Failory&body=Hospitals%20Still%20Make%20the%20Worst%20Customers%3A%20Analyzing%20Project%20Ronin%E2%80%99s%20%2410M%20failure.%0A%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fnewsletter.failory.com%2Fp%2Fhospitals-still-make-worst-customers) Hey — It’s Nico. Next Thursday, I’m sending a dedicated section with projects and resources from the Failory community. ✅ If you refer 5 subscribers, I'll feature you in this section. Send the newsletter to people who will enjoy it and I'll include your project. Here’s your referral link: You have until Tuesday. Past referrals don’t count. Don’t refer to fake/temp addresses or other emails you have, as I’ll be checking referrals 😉. Today’s edition is brought to you by [Ignite Digital](, Failory’s recommended SEO agency. Here’s what I got today: - An analysis of Larry Ellison’s Project Ronin’s shutdown 🔥 - An opportunity to build a business on top of failed startups 📈 Presented by Ignite Digital There are 8.5 billion searches per day on Google. Are you showing up first? Use SEO to reach red-hot buyers before the competition with [Ignite Digital]( 🔥 There are 8.5 billion searches per day on Google. Are you showing up? If not, then you're losing sales. [Ignite Digital]( are the SEO experts with 13 years of experience. They'll design a custom strategy to help you drive website traffic and online sales. Wanna give them a test drive? Request a FREE competitive analysis, and Ignite Digital will respond on the same day with a sneak peek of your competitor's strategy & how you can defeat them. [Get a 100% FREE Competitive Analysis →]( This Week In Startups 🫡 ICYMI [How VEED gets 400k users/mo]( through the GPT Store. [A guide to Product Market Fit]( using retention rate metrics. 🔗 Resources Founder of sneaker app GOAT [shares their path to PMF](. Why founders need to [rethink the startup MVP concept](. [How beehiiv gets deep work done]( with focus days. Lessons learned after bootstrapping [a SaaS startup to $1M in 24 months](. Y Combinator on [building confidence In yourself and your ideas](. A deep dive on [AI-first service businesses](. 📰 News Frank Slootman, Snowflakes’ CEO, [announces his retirement.]( Waymo can start [charging for rides in LA and on San Francisco]( freeways. AI startup [Groq acquires Definitive Intelligence to scale]( its cloud platform. AI-powered work assistant [Glean raises $200M](. Vertical farming startup [Oishii raises $134m in Series B funding round](. Fan engagement platform [Passes announces $40m Series A](. 😮 Cool Stuff Tally’s bootstrapped [journey to $100K in MRR](. Reddit IPO [S1 breakdown](. Typefully’s [$100K MRR monthly report](. Fail(St)ory Project Ronin: A Familiar Tale Two weeks ago, [I wrote about Astarte Medical’s failure]( and analyzed the difficulties of creating a business in the HealthTech industry. [Project Ronin](, a startup specializing in cancer-related software co-founded by Larry Ellison (founder of Oracle), announced it was shutting down last week. This case gives us new insight into the current state of the HealthTech sector and underscores the formidable challenges startups face in this complex industry. The Product Project Ronin was founded in 2018 with the goal of creating software that would help oncologists access critical data in less time. That same year, [they raised $10M]( in one single round of funding. They developed an app tailored for cancer patients with custom surveys that gave doctors more data on the patient's symptoms. They also developed the Longitudinal Timeline, a dashboard that presented the patient overview comprehensively and in an easily understandable manner. According to [their white paper](, this dashboard helped doctors by reducing the 45-minute task of gathering patient data from different sources, to just 5 minutes. Last year, Ellison said that their systems “reduce hospital admissions and readmissions by 30%”. Moreover, according to their own surveys, around 90% of patients and doctors were satisfied with Project Ronin’s software. So, if customers were satisfied, and using the app actually seems to be helping both hospitals and patients, why are they shutting down? Reasons for Failure None of the founders have discussed the failure thus far, leaving many aspects of the shutdown undisclosed. However, thanks to a [Bloomberg article](, we know that Ronin was “struggling to get paying customers and didn’t have the finances to continue operating”. This is starting to sound familiar. When I analyzed [Astarte Medical’s failure](, I said that the main reason for failure was a lack of product-market fit. Both companies had products that demonstrably helped hospitals and patients, but they both struggled to get hospitals to buy and implement them. This is further evidence of something we discussed in the Astarte newsletter: hospitals do not have incentives to innovate, so selling to them is a painful process. One might assume that creating a product that undeniably benefits your customers would simplify the selling process. Yet, in certain sectors such as HealthTech, this assumption doesn't always hold true. Therefore, validating your idea and confirming the existence of a market for it becomes especially crucial. Willingness to Pay So, how do you validate that your idea is suitable for the market? Both Project Ronin and Astarte identified a problem in an industry and built a solution that successfully solved the issue. Both were pretty scientific about it, too. They tested and measured their solutions extensively to make sure that they would help the hospitals cut costs and that it would also improve the patient's health. Does this mean that they validated the idea? Unfortunately no. I have written extensively about [MVP validation](, explaining [what PMF is](, [how to measure it](, and [strategies for achieving it](. I do not want to repeat myself, so I will give you the quick explanation: it does not matter if your product solves the customer's problems in the most efficient way. If the customer is not willing to pay then you lack PMF. But, how do we measure this willingness to pay? Well, if you have not built your product yet, then trying to [get pre-sales]( is an amazing way to know if you should invest in developing your idea fully. If you can get people to spend money on your product even before you have built it, then you have one of the strongest indicators that your idea has a solid PMF. In the case of Project Ronin, it would have been a good idea for them to develop an MVP and try to see if any hospitals would be interested in buying in. This approach would have enabled them to discern the lack of interest from hospitals before fully committing to the development of the product. Go Deeper - Read the story of [Astarte Medical’s failure](. - Learn [strategies to pre-sell your idea](. Trend Radar Helping Startups to Shut Down Anyone who reads this newsletter knows that closing a business isn't simple. I've looked into the psychological, legal, and economic sides of shutting down businesses before. I've also spoken with startup founders who've had to close their companies, and they all agree that the process is really tough. Because of this, VCs have been funding new startups that assist businesses in their closure. It might seem ironic that a new industry has emerged from other startups' failures, but it makes perfect sense when you remember that [90% of startups fail](. Failed startups are not a niche market. There are thousands of them every year, so there's a real business opportunity in helping failed companies on their final days. Some Examples - [Sunset]( is a tool that helps you create a personalized plan to shut down your business. Their experts in legal and accounting help ensure that everything is compliant. They also store all of your company records permanently, even after your corporation is gone. They recently raised [$1.45M in funding last month](. - [SimpleClosure]( assists you throughout the entire shutdown process, from initiating closure procedures to resolving remaining obligations to customers or team members and managing the company’s intellectual property and financial commitments. Last week, they [announced a $4M funding round](, bringing their total funding to $5.5M. - Carta Conclusions, a new startup founded by the creators of [Carta](, aims to assist failed founders by guiding them through the shutdown process and handling all administrative tasks, as outlined in their [recent announcement](. Is There an Opportunity? Dori Yona, CEO of SimpleClosure, believes that there is a big opportunity in this sector: “It’s simple. This is a $0 market. The opportunity is so big and there is so much left to solve that it’s impossible to put a dollar figure on it.” I agree. Over the past few years, there have been increasing discussions surrounding startup failure and its prevalence. This shift helps to destigmatize failure and encourages founders to perceive it as a natural aspect of the business journey. Recognizing shutdowns as a part of this journey also means acknowledging the potential to create services and products that support businesses through such challenges. This extends not only to shutdowns but also to assisting businesses in being acquired (or acqui-hired) or to auction their assets. Refer Failory, Get Rewards Share Failory Chances are you have some more friends who would enjoy Failory as much as you do. Share Failory with these friends and cash in on premium resources and swag. You currently have 0 referrals, only 1 away from receiving my Pitch Deck Airtable. [Share Failory →]( Or copy and paste this link to others: Help Me Improve Failory How Was Today's Newsletter? If this issue was a startup, how would you rate it? [🚀 Launches to the moon!]( [🤔 Room for a pivot]( [💀 Crashes and burns]( That's all of this edition. I’m traveling to SF this Saturday. Let me know if you’re interested in grabbing a coffee! Cheers, Nico Update your email preferences or unsubscribe [here]( © 2024 Failory 1309 Coffeen Avenue Ste 1200, Sheridan, Wyoming 82801, United States of America [[beehiiv logo]Powered by beehiiv](

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