WHY? Agents and Consultants Can’t Help With Startup Fundraising

ENTREPRENEURSHIP

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VENTURE CAPITAL: Women’s Health Start-Ups

By Staff Reporters

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Women’s health startups are still closing multi million-dollar funding deals despite a challenging venture capital (VC) landscape in which VC dollars are on track to fall by 73% this year compared to last.

CITE: https://www.r2library.com/Resource

For example, in the last year, virtual maternity care program Pomelo Care raised $33 million in seed and Series A rounds led by Andreessen Horowitz; Caraway Health, a digital mental, physical, and reproductive health services platform, raised almost $17 million in a Series A round led by Maveron and GV (formerly Google Ventures); and Intrinsic, which acquires brands that make women’s health products, announced a $15 million equity fund raise (which is when a company raises money by selling its shares).

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Health Care Entity: Venture Capital Funding

http://www.MARCINKOASSOCIATES.com

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Venture capital funding in the digital health space cooled a bit in 2022 following a red-hot 2021. Overall, digital health companies raised $15.3 billion last year, down from the $29.1 billion raised in 2021—but still above the $14.1 billion raised in 2020, according to Rock Health a seed fund that supports digital health startups.

MORE: https://marcinkoassociates.com/fmv-appraisals/

Nevertheless, analysts predict VC investors and bankers will still put a good amount of money into digital health in 2024 and 2025, especially in alternative care, drug development, health information technology technology, EMRs and software that reduces physician workload.

CITE: https://www.r2library.com/Resource

Of course. an essential first part of attracting VC interest and money is the crafting and presentation of your formal business plan [“elevator pitch”]; as well as the needed technical and managerial experience. This is crucial for success and exactly where we can assist.

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READ MORE: https://marcinkoassociates.com/welcome-medical-colleagues/

CONTACT: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

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Health Care Entity: Venture Capital Funding

http://www.MARCINKOASSOCIATES.com

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Venture capital funding in the digital health space cooled a bit in 2022 following a red-hot 2021. Overall, digital health companies raised $15.3 billion last year, down from the $29.1 billion raised in 2021—but still above the $14.1 billion raised in 2020, according to Rock Health a seed fund that supports digital health startups.

MORE: https://marcinkoassociates.com/fmv-appraisals/

Nevertheless, analysts predict VC investors and bankers will still put a good amount of money into digital health in 2024 and 2025, especially in alternative care, drug development, health information technology technology, EMRs and software that reduces physician workload.

CITE: https://www.r2library.com/Resource

Of course. an essential first part of attracting VC interest and money is the crafting and presentation of your formal business plan [“elevator pitch”]; as well as the needed technical and managerial experience. This is crucial for success and exactly where we can assist.

***

READ MORE: https://marcinkoassociates.com/welcome-medical-colleagues/

CONTACT: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

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HEALTH CARE ENTITY: Venture Capital Funding

http://www.MARCINKOASSOCIATES.com

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Venture capital funding in the digital health space cooled a bit in 2022 following a red-hot 2021. Overall, digital health companies raised $15.3 billion last year, down from the $29.1 billion raised in 2021—but still above the $14.1 billion raised in 2020, according to Rock Health a seed fund that supports digital health startups.

Nevertheless, analysts predict VC investors and bankers will still put a good amount of money into digital health in 2024 and 2025, especially in alternative care, drug development, health information technology technology, EMRs and software that reduces physician workload.

CITE: https://www.r2library.com/Resource

Of course. an essential first part of attracting VC interest and money is the crafting and presentation of your formal business plan [“elevator pitch”]; as well as the needed technical and managerial experience. This is crucial for success and exactly where we can assist.

***

READ MORE: https://marcinkoassociates.com/welcome-medical-colleagues/

CONTACT: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

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VENTURE CAPITAL Funding Hits Two Year Low

By Dan McCarthy

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Like everyone’s desire to work, venture funding sank to a new low during the dog days of summer. In August, global venture funding fell to $25.2 billion, per Crunchbase, less than half of the ~$53 billion invested one year prior, and the lowest monthly venture-funding total in two years. It’s down ~10% from the previous month.

Even so…The ongoing pullback didn’t stop several companies—including Adam Neumann’s, uh, controversial, comeback project Flow—from locking down significant investment rounds in August. Here are three rounds that stood out to us…all of which happen to play in the clean-energy space:

  • Terrapower, a nuclear tech developer founded by Bill Gates, raised $750 million. Gates co-led the round with SK Group, which plowed $250 million into the company. In addition to nuclear power generation, the company is also researching nuclear medicine techniques.
  • Longroad Energy, a renewable energy developer based in Boston, raised $500 million. The company said that the funding would catalyze a shift toward an owned-and-operated business model and enable it to grow the capacity of its wind, solar, and storage assets from 1.5 gigawatts (GW) to 8.5 GW in the next five years.
  • Lunar, a home-electrification startup founded by a former Tesla Energy exec, debuted with $300 million in funding, with residential solar bigwig Sunrun and SK Group (hello again) as investors. Later this year, Lunar plans to begin releasing hardware and software products that make it easier for homes to generate, use, and store carbon-free energy.

Monthly venture funding has been trending down since it hit a record high of $69.4 billion last November, as rising rates, inflation, and general economic uncertainty have turned the investing temperature from “deep summer” to “that first really cold day of winter where you neglect to wear a proper coat.” But it’s time for two of our most common refrains on this subject: 1) $25 billion in monthly VC funding is still a lot of money 2) VCs are sitting on a record high of more than half a trillion dollars in dry powder. Those reserves are unlikely to be emptied in 2022, but there is a lot of committed capital on hand for startups to vie for.

READ: https://www.emergingtechbrew.com/stories/2022/09/09/global-vc-funding-hit-a-two-year-low-in-august?mid=349b552221c994e2540a304649746d7c

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PODCAST: On the Corporate Practice of Medicine Laws

IS PRIVATE EQUITY BUYING DOCTORS ILLEGAL?

By Eric Bricker MD

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PODCAST: On Older Doctors Selling Out to PRIVATE EQUITY

BY ERIC BRICKER MD

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CITE: https://www.r2library.com/Resource/Title/0826102549

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PODCAST: Private Equity Firms Are Making Partial Purchases of Physician Practices.

Older Doctors Sell Out to Private Equity

Private Equity Firms Are Making Partial Purchases of Physician Practices

BY ERIC BRICKER MD

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The Deals Are Frequently Structured as Follows:

–The Private Equity Firm Offers an Up Front Lump Sum of Money and Administrative Services Such as Billing and Collections for the Practice.

–In Return, the Doctors in the Practice Agree to Have 30-40% of All Future Revenue Go to the Private Equity Firm.

The Up Front Lump Sum Can Be Equal to as Much as 10 – 20 Years of Income for a Physician.

The Older Doctors in the Practice Who Are Usually the Partners Frequently Take This Deal, Resulting in the Younger Partners Making Less Take-Home Pay.

Implication for Employers:

Private Equity Firms Create Larger Group Practices to Have Better Negotiating Leverage with Commercial Insurance Carriers and Obtain Higher Fee-for-Service Reimbursement.

Overall Healthcare Costs for Physician Services Go Up, While the Take-Home Pay for Doctors Goes Down… and the Private Equity Firm Keeps the Difference.

NOTE: The Older Doctors Who Are Paid the Lump Sum Are Still Required to Stay at the Practice for a Certain Number of Years After the Transaction.

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