Top 42 Digital Health Platforms: The Year’s Most Dominant Network Effects Businesses
The Top 42 Digital Health Platforms is Summit Health Advisors’ inaugural, annual ranking of the most promising network effects-driven companies in healthcare. These companies are forging new connections, efficiencies and trust across the healthcare system, helping to solve some of healthcare’s most deeply rooted challenges and usher in the healthcare of tomorrow.
How Apple, Salesforce, Walmart and Other Industry Titans Launched Multi-Sided Platforms to Dominate their Markets
How Apple, Salesforce, Walmart and Other Industry Titans Launched Multi-Sided Platforms to Dominate their Markets
Trust and Community: The Bedrock of a Thriving Platform Business in Healthcare
Trust and Community: The Bedrock of a Platform Business in Healthcare
A Conversation with Teresa Lee: The Power of Platforms to Revolutionize Healthcare
This interview is the third in a series of conversations with leading digital health platform CEOs and investors. These conversations dive into the various challenges and successes faced in growing a network effects business in healthcare.
A Conversation with Anurati Mathur: Leveraging Platform Thinking to Make Healthcare More Affordable
This interview is the second in a series of conversations with leading digital health platform CEOs and investors. These conversations dive into the various challenges and successes faced in growing a network effects business in healthcare.
A Conversation with GoodRx’s Doug Hirsch: Empowering Healthcare Consumers through Platform Business Strategy
This long-form interview is the first in a series of conversations with leading digital health platform CEOs and investors. These conversations dive into the various challenges and successes faced in growing a network effects business in healthcare.
How to Grow and Measure Network Effects in Healthcare
How to Grow and Measure Network Effects in Healthcare
New Research Dispels Network Effects Myth about High Platform Failure Rates
Contrary to the long standing belief that platform businesses fail at higher rates than non-platform businesses, recent analysis of nearly 5,000 digital health companies reveals that platforms successfully raise subsequent funding rounds and exit at higher rates than non-platforms.