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Fertility Patient Relations

44 - Can a RESOLVE Membership Benefit My Clinic? An Interview with Barbara Collura

Getting involved with a nonprofit organization can provide numerous business development benefits to your company or practice. But finding the right organization to get involved with can be a challenge. On this episode of Inside Reproductive Health, Griffin Jones talks to Barbara Collura, President of RESOLVE, the National Infertility Association. They discuss the benefits that RESOLVE can give to a business in the fertility field, but also the major benefits they provide patients seeking fertility treatments.

43 - From Teacher to Stand-Up Comedian: Breaking the IVF Stigma Through Humor, Karen Jeffries

With a journey as emotional as infertility, it can be hard for patients to take a step back and laugh at the process. On this episode of Inside Reproductive Health, Griffin talks to Karen Jeffries (or as you might know her, @hilariously_infertile), a fertility patient trying to help others through their journeys with a little bit of humor. They talk about her fertility journey and how it impacted where she is today. They also discuss how providers can better communicate with their patients and the importance of transparency.

Want more laughs? Karen will be performing a show live in Boston, MA on November 10th. Learn more and purchase tickets here.

40 - Inside the Minds of Two Fertility Marketers, An Interview with Rob Taylor

There are lots of variables that make marketing to your patients a challenge. From age to regional differences, it isn’t an easy task and getting someone who understands both the world of marketing and the world of fertility can be beneficial. On this episode of Inside Reproductive Health, Griffin talks to Rob Taylor, owner of TD Media, another marketing firm helping fertility centers get results. They talk about trends they see in the world of fertility marketing, as well as some strategies that clinics, and physicians, can implement to increase their online presence, in turn, helping them reach their marketing goals.

39 - Can Geographic Location Have An Impact on Fertility Success? An Interview with Dr. Alex Quaas

But think of the differences across the world--it’s hard to fathom! On this episode of Inside Reproductive Health, Griffin Jones and Dr. Alex Quaas give us a glimpse into (literally) the world of fertility. Having practiced in numerous states and countries, Dr. Quaas shares his experiences, diving into the biggest differences in care he witnessed in Europe and here in the USA.

38 - Building Community: The Rise of Instagram Among REIs, Dr. Candice Perfetto

Growing your followers on social media can be challenging, especially when your niche is focused on fertility. On this episode of Inside Reproductive Health, Griffin Jones, founder of Fertility Bridge, talks to Dr. Candice Perfetto, a board-certified REI working in Houston, Texas. Dr. Perfetto has grown her following on Instagram to over 10,000 followers and has seen the effort carry over into her practice. She discusses why she got started on Instagram and how she uses social media to build relationships with other practitioners and patients, both near and far. You can find Candice on Instagram at @candiceperfettomd.

37 - Confessions of an IVF Marketer, An Interview with Griffin Jones

We’ve flipped the script on this episode of Inside Reproductive Health and interviewed our esteemed host, Griffin Jones! Stephanie Linder interviews Griffin, founder of Fertility Bridge, and learns the mission of Fertility Bridge and why he chose to help the field of fertility. Griffin also shares his thoughts on who is doing well and what clinics could be doing to reach more patients and make their mark on the field as a whole.

35 - Gina Bartasi - Can a Direct Service Delivery Model Increase Access to Fertility Care?

Increasing access to care has always been a topic of discussion in the fertility field. On this episode of Inside Reproductive Health, CEO and Founder of Fertility Bridge, Griffin Jones, talks to Gina Bartasi, CEO of Kindbody, a women’s health company working to increase access by sending out mobile clinics to reach patients closer to home. They discuss ways that other clinics can meet their patients’ needs, as well as the importance of giving partners and team members positions that match their personality.

31 - Lindsay Fischer -Transparency Between REIs and Patients: Bridging an Emotional Disconnect

In this episode, Griffin talks with Lindsay Fischer, best-selling author, co-founder of the InfertileAF Summit, and a member of the Trying-To-Conceive Community. Jones and Fischer discuss the importance of honesty and meeting patients emotionally through their individual fertility journeys. Her unique perspective on the patient experience can help practices build stronger relationships and, in turn, the TTC community as a whole.   

30 - Unpacking Diverse Family Building Paths: An Interview with Dr. Mark Leondires

The world of fertility has grown and changed as the needs of families has changed. And now more than ever before, there are different populations seeking fertility care. In this episode, Griffin talks to Dr. Mark Leondires, a board-certified REI and the founder of Gay Parents-to-Be, about the various paths of family-building and how fertility clinics can provide personalized care to those with differing goals and needs. 

28 - Can IVF or Egg Freezing Vacations Abroad Reduce Stress or Financial Woes? An Interview with Joseph Davis, MD

In this episode, Griffin hosts Dr. Joseph Davis, a Reproductive Endocrinologist who saw the need for a fertility clinic in the Cayman Islands and brought his years of experience working in US clinics and his passion for global health policy to a country that never before had this field of medicine. Jones and Davis chat about the world of fertility past the borders of the United States, discussing not only the access to care issues in other countries, but also the traveling of patients from the US to other countries to seek more affordable options, find privacy, or simply relax during the process.

Fertility Company Profile: The New Marketplace for IVF Patient Acquisition

By Griffin Jones

Consolidation.

If you had to reduce the water-cooler talk of our field to one topic, it would be exactly this: the consolidation of IVF centers, fertility pharmacies, brokers, genetics companies and others, purchased with private equity money.

I wrote about these players, and the collective unease about them, in 2018. I have talked about it on the IRH podcast with guests such as doctors John Storment and David Sable. I hear the apprehensions and I share some of them.

Are we capable of betraying our patients’ best interest because of obligations to financial stakeholders?

That’s a very sound concern for the delivery of fertility care. Furthermore, it’s very likely that there are examples wherein this concern is justified.

I own Fertility Bridge outright, 100%. I often make decisions based on what I want for the relationships of our clients and employees. If I had to answer to many different shareholders, we would likely do things very differently.

Conversely, I also see examples where this pressure disrupts the status quo and forces innovation and efficiency when we have to compete to earn patients’ selection. Sometimes, the independent centers with the least competition are the least likely to invest in patient experience and team culture.

Either way, I do not see the consolidation of REI practice groups as the single greatest disruption coming to the field. Not by a long shot. In 2018, I also wrote that technological revolution dwarfs any disruption caused by the sale of IVF practice ownership to private equity.

While others are looking to Wall Street, I have my eye on Silicon Valley.

Consider it this way:

The independent REI practice is the local, 100 room hotel.

 

They’re worried about the Marriott building a 1,200 room, mid-rise on the waterfront.

I’m worried about AirBnB.

One view looks at larger and more dominant competitors in the same marketplace. I’m looking at a whole new marketplace.

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The model for the delivery of healthcare, including fertility care, has become too estranged from the conveniences that patients are used to when researching, considering, receiving, purchasing, and evaluating goods and services as consumers.

Our patients under age 30 have conceivably never called by phone to invite a friend over, break up with a significant other, or even order food. Yet, for virtually every fertility center, there is ultimately no other way to schedule a new patient visit.

Please take my next admonition as commentary on the mechanics of patient relations and not on providers’ devotion to service; I know the depth and sincerity of so many practitioners’ vocations.

We’ve been too slow to adapt and have grown out of touch with our patient demographic. For some, it’s already too late.

I don’t envision large fertility groups or boutique REI practices going away, but another class is emerging to capture the middle, the entry, and everything around.

There is a wide opening to provide the user experience of patient acquisition and patient retention that the current demographic demands. With the right application, and/or scaled acquisition strategy, one or two platforms can become the gateway through which patients enter. Many companies are jockeying for that position. Some of them may win, or the winner may not yet be in the marketplace. The extent to which they’re able to scale is the degree of leverage they have over providers.

Put frankly, someone is building a better mouse trap than you have so they can sell (who would have been) your own patients back to you.

Many have tried and not (yet) succeeded, but it would be hubris to think that others won’t.

Here are some of these players now, and what they’re up to.

Important disclaimer: Neither I, nor Fertility Bridge, have a direct commercial relationship with these companies at time of writing, though we certainly may in the future. No information in this article comes from conversations that I have had with the executives of these companies. This profile is not a revelation of insider knowledge. Rather, it is a curated synopsis of public information. My observations and opinions are exactly those, based on information that has been publicly released by these companies or covered in the press.


CONSUMER APPS:


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GLOW

The tech-forward platform for serves fertility patients and connects them with clinics by providing:

  • Glow- Ovulation and fertility tracker

    - Includes:

    • Fertility Calendar

    • Daily health log

    • Health insights

    • App syncs with partners app

  • Glow Community

  • Glow Nurture - Pregnancy app

  • Glow Baby - Baby Tracker

  • Eve by Glow- period tracker and sex tips

Glow Fertility is segmented into a direct-to-consumer programs and a separate employee benefits program.

  1. Direct-to-consumer programs:
    Glow predicts ovulation patterns and fertility probability based on user data inputs and supports women with services such as egg freezing and IVF. In addition to helping clients navigate the process of getting pregnant, Glow also facilitates access to healthcare providers (with whom the Glow team negotiates discounts to reduce the financial burden of historically expensive fertility treatments).

  2. Employee benefits program:
    On the employer side, the Glow Fertility Program negotiates contracts between employers and fertility care providers.

Millions of women input data on menstrual periods, doctor visits, sleep habits, sexual activity, and birth control (in addition to over 35 additional basal health data points), and Glow has all of that data.

Although Glow does not publicly share the full details behind it’s business model, the firm charges businesses for the employee benefits program, and is also able to charge a fee for facilitating access to services from preferred healthcare providers. Glow also offers women personalized consultations through its direct-to-consumer channel, offering one free session before converting to a charge for service model.

History and Funding:

  • Launched in 2013 by Max Levchin (co-founder of Paypal)

  • Glow originally spun out of PayPal Co-Founder and CTO Max Levchin’s business incubator, HVF.

  • According to Crunchbase, Glow has raised over $23 million in venture capital, $17 million of which was raised in a 2014 Series B round that included Founders Fund and Andreessen Horowtiz, reports Vox.


EMPLOYEE BENEFITS:


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CARROT

Carrot is a startup out of Y Combinator working with employers to offer fertility care like egg-freezing and in vitro fertilization (IVF) as a workplace benefit.

Provides affordable options for those struggling with infertility by partnering with employers to add coverage for fertility services. They offer customizable plans to employers to include varying levels of fertility coverage at a sliding, per-employee dollar amount.

Founded by:

  • Tammy Sun, CEO

  • Dr. Asima Ahmad, Medicine

  • Juli Insinger, Growth

  • Arun Venkatesan, Engineering

Funding:

  • Total funding: $15.2 million

  • According to CrunchBase, Carrot has raised $15.2 million over four rounds, one angel, two seeds, and a series A. Their lead investors have been UnCork Capital with 3.6 million and CRV with $11.5 million.


 

NU BUNDLE:

A benefit system employers can add to attract top talent.

Also offers services to help members understand their options, with guidance before, during, and after treatment. Services for members include:

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  • Their family planning concierge, which reports to provide members with caring, live guidance, and support at every stage of the journey.

  • Help for members maximize existing benefits.

  • Access to preferred pricing at top clinics and pharmacies.

  • Access to customized fertility payment options.

Nubundle offers its products as a voluntary employee benefit, limiting the costs to employers. Employers pay a flat annual admin fee.

Founders

  • Chris D'Cruz

  • John Ciasulli

Funding

  • Total funding: $1.5 million

  • In a seed round, NuBundle raised $1.5 million from three investors led by Lightbank.


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STORK CLUB

Family/fertility benefit suites for companies.

In 2018, Stork Club expanded their core offering by introducing a comprehensive suite of Flexible Family Benefits that include both Fertility and Parental programs designed for large enterprises.

Stork Club advertises to be the only enterprise-ready family benefits provider designed for self-funded employers. They process claims and pay providers directly, letting your team focus on more important goals.

They have employee-facing web and mobile apps to help employers on-board, manage, and validate new programs with vetted provider partners.

History

  • Founder, CEO: Jeni Mayorskaya

  • Early Stork Club investors and advisers include key employees from LinkedIn, One Medical, and Facebook .

Funding

  • They appear to be funded by slow ventures, but it is unknown how much money they have raised.


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PROGYNY

Right now, Progyny is the fertility benefits company.

They provide fertility solutions for self-insured employers.

Some may remember, Fertility Authority, the consumer facing company and fertility clinic review platform that negotiated reproductive health benefits. The company changed its name to Progyny in 2015 after acquiring, or being acquired by, Menlo Park-based Auxogyn, the inventor of Eeva. They quickly sprinted ahead to lead the race of fertility benefits broker.

In my opinion, this is a one-horse race at the moment, with their young, new competitors looking to be the person who can disrupt their early lead as Lyft did to Uber.

History:

  • Founded in 2008 as Fertility Authority, became Progyny in 2015

  • CEO: David Schlanger

  • Headquarters are located in New York, New York

Funding:

  • Total funding: $99.5 million in ten rounds from six investors, as documented by CrunchBase,

    • Who led the rounds has not been released.

    • Though we do know they raised $15 million in a new round in 2016.


THE FINANCIERS


Now this group is different. They’re not a new wave of tech companies launched from or by Silicon Valley serial entrepreneurs. However, by default, they do serve as lead generation and another entry point for patient acquisition from which they can bring new patients to fertility centers.

Also, I speculate a potential scenario in which one or more of these companies are acquired for easier, quicker, and more expansive entry into the fertility field.

Think about it. Many of these companies have an outdated user experience and some of the founders may be ready to cash out of the game rather than reinvest and overhaul. Again, this is Griffin Jones putting his Jim Kramer hat on and being purely speculative.


 

WIN Fertility:

Maybe they belong in the employer benefit group, but a few things set them apart:

They have been in the field for two decades.

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WIN offers benefits through employers and affordable options for treatment through practices for those without insurance or for those who have exhausted their insurance benefits.

WIN integrates with national and regional insurance carriers, as well as the nation’s largest pharmacy benefit managers to procure fertility services. WIN patients are qualified prior to fertility treatment.

Available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, WIN’s Nurse Care Managers guide patients through every step of their fertility journey.

History

  • Originally founded as an independent women’s health management company

  • Founded in 2000

  • President and CEO: Roger Shedlin


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Attain Fertility

ATTAIN FERTILITY:

Attain makes themselves known for being the original multi-cycle plan provider. They offer bundled IVF cycle plans, called Multi-Cycle Discount Programs, that include multiple IVF cycles for a one-time, discounted fixed fee.

Being owned by IntegraMed they are affiliated with 40 practices, 130 locations, and more than 180 Reproductive Endocrinologists in their US wide network.

How it works:

  • Some patients qualify for their Multi-Cycle Discount Program + REFUND. This offers patients who meet certain criteria the potential of getting a refund if their IVF cycles are unsuccessful.

Estimated revenue:

  • $15.4 million

History

  • Founded by Pam Schuman


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ARC Fertility

ARC says they are the access point to the “nation’s largest network” of fertility professionals and offer innovative financing options.

More specifically, ARC offers fertility treatment packages, refund guarantees, and finance options to people living with infertility.

Value proposition to clinics and/or patients:

  • Largest network

  • Most trusted

  • Doesn’t own/operate clinics -> looking out of patients best interest

ARC’s fertility care packages can be bundled with medication and genetic testing services and bundle the cost of services into one monthly payment.

History:

  • ARC was founded by David Adamson, MD.


THE WILDCARD


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Fertility IQ

The most comprehensive review platform for fertility specialists and fertility clinics.

With FertilityIQ, prospective patients search by location or by a specific doctor or clinic name. Doctor profiles are detailed with aggregated metrics including communication quality, degree of individual attention, responsiveness, and overall recommendation. Patients’ summarize their experiences with doctors and clinics -- from the doctor’s approach to diagnosis and treatment protocols, to the nursing staff’s level of organization, to the competence of the clinic billing department.

History and Funding:

  • The founders of Fertility IQ, Jake and Deborah Anderson-Bialis, say they will never take marketing dollars from clinics. Rather than seek capital from outside investors, the couple decided early on to self-fund FertilityIQ.

  • Founded in 2015, went live in 2016

One of my clients once told me that they were weary of Fertility IQ because they thought they were building a mousetrap and they didn’t know what it was. I’m not weary because I believe Jake and Deborah have built their platform from an authentic ethos and are serving the market in a genuine and desperately needed way. Where the mousetrap will lead, I have no idea but it’s already a darn good one. Fertility IQ offers the best user experience for fertility clinic selection and has some of the best consumer generated data in the field.


Conclusion:

Up to now, I have presented private equity backed consolidation and venture capital backed innovation as two separate phenomena, though they certainly don’t have to be. What will happen when the largest fertility networks, their parent companies, or private equity firms, acquire the largest scale platforms for patient acquisition, financing, distribution etc? Vise versa?

Resilient businesses survive revolution and later thrive because they adapt to capitalize from these disruptive forces rather than be replaced by them. There is more opportunity for the independent REI practice than there has ever been before, but it isn’t coming from doing business the same old way. It requires new strategy, paying close attention to the new players in the market, and using them for their benefit.

If you would like help in adapting to these forces and benefiting from the disruption rather than being pained by it, learn more about how to implement the Fertility Marketing System.

24 - Defined Expectations: Are They Key to a 5-Star Experience for REI Patients? An Interview with Lisa Duran

In this episode, host Griffin Jones chats with Lisa Duran, the Chief Experience Officer for the Inception Fertility Network. Duran’s extensive experience in team-focused patient experience programs has led her to help clinics implement programs that impact the way patients and staff alike respond to the clinic. Jones and Duran discuss the changes in the field and how clinics can differentiate by creating a truly customized experience for patients.

22 - Benefits and Barriers of International Fertility Care. An Interview with Lori Whalen, R.N.

In this episode, host Griffin Jones speaks to Lori Whalen, a RN who currently works at HRC in Southern California as the international IVF coordinator. Whalen speaks across the country about topics such as compassion fatigue, so Jones invited her to discuss the intricacies related to international IVF as well as the ways to combat the compassion fatigue that often accompanies this high-pressure field.

Stand Up for People on Mother's Day

“Everyone you meet is fighting a battle you know nothing about.”

I believe this maxim is empirically true, though I see two very different ways of internalizing it. This principle of empathy is no small part of what drew me to the infertility community, years ago. I was touched by this large group of people who felt left out, misunderstood, unjustly embarrassed, and isolated.

Mother’s Day is a particularly focused moment in which we see this axiom of others’ battles manifests in at least two very distinct ways.

21 - Should All Women in their 20s Consider Egg Freezing and Is It Attainable? An Interview with Valerie Landis

In this episode, host Griffin Jones talks to Valerie Landis, a proponent and advocate for egg freezing who has not only documented her own journey of freezing her eggs, but works actively to educate young women about the advantages of freezing their eggs in their 20s. Jones and Landis had a spirited discussion about the pros and cons of egg freezing.

20 - Breaking the Stigma of Infertility through Film: Maya Grobel, Infertility Advocate

In this episode, host Griffin Jones spoke to Maya Grobel, a licensed social worker and psychotherapist who focuses on working with people experiencing infertility; additionally, Grobel and her husband, Noah Moskin, created a feature-length documentary about their own infertility journey titled One More Shot. Jones and Grobel discuss her own personal journey as well as the need for education about embryo donation.

19 - The Impact of Culture in the Fertility Community: Caroline Harries, Infertility Advocate

In this episode, host Griffin Jones speaks to Caroline Harries, author and influencer in the infertility community. Harries’ blog In Due Time as well as her book of the same title reaches out to people who need encouragement during tough seasons of their life, and her support group, Moms in the Making, specifically reaches out to women at different stages of the infertility journey who are seeking support and encouragement. Jones and Harries discuss the place that Harries has carved out in the infertility community for people of faith as well as the importance of creating a continuously positive space within the community.

18 - How Physician Fertility Can Impact Patients: Dr. Nichole Barker and Stephanie Fattal

This week, host Griffin Jones speaks to a provider and their patient to get a perspective on the fertility journey from both sides. Dr. Nichole Barker, a board certified REI practicing in Tacoma, Washington, is joined by her patient, Stephanie Fattal. Dr. Barker speaks about her own infertility journey and how that changed the way she practices medicine, and Fattal discusses how it felt to work with a REI that truly understood the patient’s point of view.

17 - Life Beyond a Baby: An Interview with Tia Gendusa

On this episode, host Griffin Jones talks to infertility influencer and advocate Tia Gendusa, the co-founder of the upcoming Infertile AF Summit on Saturday, April 27, 2019 in Rosemont, IL. Jones and Gendusa discussed the value of the infertility community on social media and in the blogosphere as well as the importance of recognizing that there is success to be found after infertility.

15 - Are Millennials Ruining the Field of Fertility? An Interview with Hannah Johnson

In this episode, Griffin speaks to Hannah Johnson, Director of Operations for Vios Fertility Institute, which has branches in Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Louis. With a deep background in practice management, Hannah’s the ideal candidate to discuss the joys and challenges that come with working with millennials, as employees and as patients. Hannah appreciates their passionate approach to their work and recognizes that whether we like it or not, practices have to adapt their processes to suit millennials.