
Medtech Talk (Healthegy)
Explore every episode of Medtech Talk
Pub. Date | Title | Duration | |
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27 Aug 2015 | Makower on Making Medtech Bigger, Stronger, Faster | 00:36:34 | |
For the past two decades, Josh Makower, MD, has sat on the innovator’s side of the table creating innovations and innovators through his work with the Exploramed incu-bator and Stanford Biodesign Program. Now, Makower takes his considerable abilities to New Enterprise Associates, where he’ll invest in medtech companies on behalf of one of the indus-try’s most venerable firms. Hear where he sees opportunity and how Astronaut Steve Austin in-fluenced his career path. | |||
15 Feb 2022 | Episode 166: Nicole Walker on Diversity, Leadership, and Falling in Love with the Deal | 00:56:11 | |
Nicole J. Walker brings far more diversity than just her race and gender to her role as managing partner at Arboretum Ventures. Her background was in operations and engineering, and she knows her perspective has given her valuable insight into the businesses she works with. Walker also credits her team with asking hard questions, applying different experiences, and bringing an historical perspective—together keeping each other disciplined and objective. Walker knows that “fullness of diversity” will be equally successful for the healthcare venture space as a whole. “It’s really important that we keep pushing the envelope on the people around the table,” she says, having honest conversations about who are the decision-makers, how we compensate people for their work, and how our pools and pipelines may be influencing our candidate choice. | |||
22 Mar 2019 | Invus Opportunities Partner Ben Tsai Seeks – and Finds – Success in Medtech Investments | 00:30:12 | |
Benjamin Tsai says his initial plans – or the plans he’d been given – called on him being a doctor. But he quickly saw a greater opportunity working in the life sciences industry. Tsai made a quick run through consulting firms and business school before finding a place at Invus, an investment firm that has operated mostly out of the limelight. In this podcast, Tsai discusses his career, his outlook on Medtech and why Invus – investor in Auris Health and other high-profile deals – is beginning to get out to tell its own story. | |||
29 Mar 2019 | KPV’s Amy Belt Raimundo Landed in VC Just Before the Bottom Fell Out. Hear How She Pivoted, Thrived | 00:41:34 | |
No, Amy Belt Raimundo didn’t blow anything up. But she knew early on in college that her initial career choice of chemistry wasn’t her true path. Instead, she earned an economics degree, and used insights learned to begin a stint in consulting. Those formative years led her to business school and a job at Guidant. In this podcast, Amy Belt Raimundo explains how asking the right questions at Guidant set her internal GPS toward a career in investing for venture firms, corporates, and now the most prominent healthcare system in the country. | |||
05 Apr 2019 | Go Go Go! Scott Huennekens Explains How Strong Bias to Action Defined Leadership at Volcano, Verb | 00:49:32 | |
Anyone who has swapped emails with Scott Huennekens has seen the Go Go Go signature at the bottom. They’re three little words, but they say so much about the special brand of enthusiasm Huennekens brings to leading companies like Digirad, Volcano, and most recently, Verb, the partnership between Google and Johnson & Johnson. In this podcast, Huennekens explains what he learned about maintaining momentum in Medtech. When is grit misplaced? When is hopping on a plane to Europe with no plan in hand a good idea? Huennekens will bring his insights to the Medtech Conference on May 29–30. | |||
12 Apr 2019 | Nuvaira’s Dennis Wahr Gives Presenting Tips, IDs his Role Models, Talks About Possibly Going Public | 00:28:51 | |
You’ll have a hard time finding a more modest man than Dennis Wahr, president and CEO of Nuvaira. But when asked what company he sees as being poised to establish the Interventional Pulmonology industry Wahr says Nuvaira might be the one. Nuvaira’s Targeted Lung Denervation, or TLD, is a non-surgical procedure that interrupts overactive nerve signals and may reduce obstructive airway symptoms, helping you to breathe easier. Could Nuvaira be the company to finally set the cement in the foundation of Interventional Pulmonology? Or will Nuvaira build upon the success of Pulmonx and Inspire, two other respiratory companies making great strides in commercializing new technology. In this podcast, Dennis Wahr discusses Nuvaira’s fund-raising success and what it means for its future (could an IPO be possible?) He also gives tips to other companies presenting at the May 17 Respiratory Innovation Summit in Dallas, another Healthegy-organized event. AttendRIS.com | |||
19 Apr 2022 | Episode: 167 - M&A, IPO or SPAC: CEOs Share Exit Strategies and Lessons Learned Along the Way | 01:01:32 | |
Geoff Pardo and three successful medtech CEOs who exited their companies through a different pathway— M&A, IPO, and SPAC—discuss the pros and cons of each. While market volatility is a given, Bruce Shook, Former President & CEO, Intact Vascular and Vesper Medical; Clint Carnell, Co-Founder & Chairman, OrangeTwist; Former CEO, BeautyHealth; and Leslie Trigg, CEO, Outset Medical agreed that successful CEOs keep their focus on delivering returns for their investors—whether private or public. If your company is solving a really important problem and is creating value for patients, you’ll ultimately succeed, Shook said. From there, Trigg pointed out, exit vehicles are simply different modes of transportation to the same place. HOST: LINKS: | |||
21 Apr 2019 | Shyam Natarajan, CEO and Founder of Avenda Health, Explains How the Start-Up is Gaining Momentum | 00:31:40 | |
In this episode of the MedtechTalk Podcast, we talk with Shyam Natarajan, PhD, founder and CEO of Avenda Health, a company using imaging, AI and focal lasers to create a better treatment for prostate cancer. The company’s original co-founders – Natarajin and Dr. Leonard Marks - started working on the company in earnest five years ago, but recently has begun getting real traction and making big moves. Natarajan talks about the company’s origins, its unusual fundraising path, and its relatively short path to potential FDA Approval. | |||
29 Apr 2019 | Mark Gelfand, Howard Levin Discuss Coridea, Ardian and How They’re Innovating Medtech Innovation | 00:30:26 | |
Over the past decade, no other Medtech start-up has moved markets as much or as quickly as Ardian, the godfather of the renal denervation surge a decade ago. But the gold rush dried up in 2014 when Medtronic delivered disappointing clinical trial news that left many to declare “Renal Denervation is Dead.” Well, if we may borrow from Monty Python, renal denervation is not dead yet. In this two-part podcast, we talk with Mark Gelfand and Howard Levin, the principals of Coridea, who developed Ardian’s approach. We'll talk with them about their path to creating Coridea, the state of innovation, and, of course, how the Ardian “Opera” influenced them going forward. | |||
21 Jun 2022 | Episode: 168 - Alleviant Medical CEO Adam Berman on the No-Implant Device Treating Diastolic Heart Failure | 00:56:32 | |
Host Geoff Pardo talks with Adam Berman, CEO of Alleviant Medical, about the groundbreaking device treating heart failure without hardware or permanent implants. The Alleviant device mitigates shortness of breath in patients with diastolic heart failure by leaving behind a shunt cut from interatrial septum tissue. The shunt moves blood from the left atrium to the right, diminishing pressure on the lungs. Berman speaks about his start in biomedical engineering, gaining invaluable experience in the operating room, developing sales tactics and industry knowledge as a medical device field representative, and switching gears to create novel devices for cardiac care. | |||
06 May 2019 | Gelfand and Levin Share Lessons from Ardian’s Rise and Fall…and Rise Again. Would They Do It Again? | 00:37:55 | |
Howard Levin and Mark Gelfand, the principals of Coridea, return to the podcast to detail the trials and tribulations of Ardian. Ardian is one of the bigger #medtech #startup stories over the past two decades. In 2011, Medtronic agreed to pay $800 million upfront for this company that pushed the once crazy idea of ablating renal nerves to lower hypertension. Ardian had raised $70 million from a syndicate of blue chip investors after being forged in the Foundry incubator. VCs proudly shared that the earnouts for Ardian would push that price well over $1 billion. This was a HUGE win for Medtech when it desperately needed it. Three years later came the fall. A day before JP Morgan’s Healthcare Meeting in 2014, Medtronic announced early disappointing of SYMPLICITY HTN-3, a third and larger trial of Ardian’s renal denervation. Medtronic revised the trial, running Spryal HTN on patients who didn’t take any medication for their hypertension – a contrast from the Symplicity trial where patients were taking an average of five medications. In these revised trials, renal denervation is performing much better. The new results exonerated Ardian’s early backers – and perhaps Gelfand and Levin, specifically. This was the team, after all, that combed through medical libraries for clues about hacking the human body to beat back hypertension. The research turned up the discovery that surgeons once would treat extremely unresponsive hypertension by severing nerves near the kidney. The procedure worked, but it was dangerous. Levin and Gelfand saw ablating tissue as a safer path. And, after a lot of trudging up and down the Valley, finally found a willing partner in the team at The Foundry. Early clinical success led to a renal denervation gold rush. Nearly every VC and Strategic investor had a bet in this space. The 2014 debacle convinced many to close their programs and companies, but now Renal Denervation is back in favor. How did Howard Levin and Mark Gelfand enjoy the roller coaster ride? In this podcast, we’ll talk about Ardian, TAVR, the challenges facing Medtech VCs and the poor reception many surgeons give new interventional technologies. | |||
23 Aug 2022 | Episode: 169 - Andy Doraiswamy, CEO of Koya Medical, Talks Mountaineering, Meditation, and Management | 00:53:31 | |
Before he began his Ph.D. program in biomedical engineering, Andy Doraiswamy bought a one-way ticket to Southeast Asia to explore and “find himself.” He was successful: discovering a love for mountain climbing’s physical and mental challenges and developing a practice of meditation that has proven helpful in both climbing and commerce. Since leaving academia, he’s been involved in startups at Advanced Vision Science, Oculeve, and now Koya Medical. Doraiswamy has a huge bias and love for eye care, he says, particularly intrigued by its complexity. He and host Geoff Pardo discuss how medical devices fare in academia, letting go of promising technology in an acquisition, and the shifts required when transitioning from COO to CEO. | |||
27 Sep 2022 | Episode: 170 - Stanford Professor Dr. Joshua Makower Talks Multidisciplinary Innovation in the Medical Device and Consumer Product Markets | 01:02:18 | |
Dr. Josh Makower is one of the few multidisciplinary leaders making a tremendous and broad-reaching impact on the medical device and consumer product industries. As an inventor, professor, CEO, and venture capitalist with experiences in medicine, bioengineering, business, and big pharma, Makower has led the charge in creating some of the most unique and practical designs. In this episode, host Geoff Pardo speaks with Makower about his interests in science and technology at an early age, his college transition from music to engineering, and what he believes is the future of biodesign. Makower details the mechanics of his inventions for incontinence, chronic sinusitis, benign prostatic hyperplasia, and women’s health as part of the nine companies he created in the past 25 years. Finally, he speaks about the joy of teaching and offers sage advice to up-and-coming medtech innovators: “My classic piece of advice for anyone getting into any health-related field is you really have to be perseverant. You have to never give up because there are so many reasons to turn away and give up, but if you have a dream and believe in what you’re doing and are willing to listen and adapt, that’s key. I think anyone can win, and it’s just about believing in yourself and your vision.” | |||
18 Oct 2022 | Episode 171: Viz.ai CEO Chris Mansi on Artificial Intelligence and Increasing Patient Access to Life-Saving Treatments | 00:54:36 | |
As a trained neurosurgeon, Dr. Chris Mansi is familiar with the challenges patients face in accessing lifesaving treatments. After earning an MBA from Stanford and enrolling in their Biodesign Medical Innovation track, he learned to develop multifaceted and technology-based solutions to improve healthcare workflows. | |||
17 May 2019 | GE Healthcare’s Agnes Berzsenyi Is Clearly Comfortable with Changing Women’s Healthcare | 00:36:06 | |
In this week’s podcast, Agnes Berzsenyi, president and CEO of Women’s Health at GE Healthcare, explains how her upbringing in Hungary during a time of political upheaval put her in position to succeed in Medtech. The fall of the Berlin Wall – in addition to presenting a valuable life lesson - gave her the chance to study engineering in the US and secure a job at GE, first in the aviation business. But Berzsenyi’s desire to work for a purpose steered her to healthcare where she has overseen projects in ultrasound and mammography, including the release of the Senographe Pristina and Pristina Dueta, the industry’s first wireless remote that allows women to play an active role in their mammogram. Berzenyi says GE is designing with the patient in mind, creating a more comfortable breast screening procedure. She also talks about how her science-heavy upbringing in Hungary compares to the US where young women may not be steered as strongly toward STEM. She’s working to fix that as well. | |||
22 Nov 2022 | Episode 172: Fred Khosravi on Using ‘Forces of Good’ to Transform the Medtech Space | 00:49:40 | |
This month host Geoff Pardo speaks with one of the most prolific entrepreneurs in the medtech industry, Fred Khosravi, chairman and CEO of Imperative Care, about the path that led him to start over 24 healthtech startups. Khosravi recounts leaving Iran at 17 and studying mechanical engineering at Tennessee Tech. He talks about his first experiences with medical device manufacturing and how he designed a fully automated process for making cataract lenses. Khosravi also shares his pioneering work in developing cardiac stents, how serendipity is really “opportunity meets preparedness,” and why every entrepreneur needs a board of directors. He clarifies, “Not your company’s board of directors, but your own personal board of directors: people who care about you to be skeptical about you and tell it to you like it is.” Links from this episode: | |||
24 May 2019 | We Hope to See You Next Week at the Medtech Conference | 00:03:03 | |
Thank you for your support of the MedtechTalk Podcast. We hope to see you at the Medtech Conference next week. We’ll be posting compelling interviews with Medtech’s leaders immediately after the conference. | |||
17 Jan 2023 | Episode: 173 - A Continued Conversation: Fred Khosravi on Transforming a Medical Invention to an Exceptional Innovation | 01:18:44 | |
Fred Khosravi, chairman and CEO of Imperative Care, returns to the podcast for another engaging conversation with host Geoff Pardo about his personal and professional experiences in the medtech space. He speaks about the elements of preparedness that help entrepreneurs seize new opportunities, the importance of maintaining intellectual honesty in one’s work, and why a “market-first” mentality leads to industry success. He says, “It’s not a great medical innovation unless it ends up helping a lot of patients. Otherwise, it’s just a great invention.” Khosravi generously shares three decades worth of entrepreneurial wisdom and recounts stories of the people who profoundly impacted his career. He talks about viewing investors as partners not parents, the attributes that spur venture capitalists to invest in a CEO, the lessons learned from developing the number one intravascular filter in the global market, and his work at Imperative Care—a stand-alone comprehensive stroke and thrombectomy company. He also explains why he believes “freedom and innovation” set the American medtech industry apart and the path forward to make it even better. | |||
21 Feb 2023 | Episode: 174 - Lisa Anderson on Paragonix Technologies’ Revolutionary Organ Transplant Preservation and Transport Device | 01:00:44 | |
Growing up in Austria as the daughter of two physicians, Lisa Anderson, co-founder and CEO of Paragonix Technologies, spent many evenings around the dinner table discussing patient care with her parents. After pursuing advanced studies in biomedical sciences and medical genetics, Anderson ventured back into patient care and launched a donor organ preservation and transport company to dramatically improve the standard of care for many donor recipients.
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21 Mar 2023 | Episode: 175 - Marine Raider Turned CEO Leverages Advanced Technology to Design Novel Urological Diagnostic Devices | 00:58:18 | |
Derek Herrera, founder and CEO of Bright Uro, grew up in a military family with a curious mind and a skill for building things. After graduating, he entered the Naval Academy, studied systems engineering and robotics, and became a Special Operations Marine Raider. When an injury left him paralyzed from the waist down, he launched a new career to improve the lives of spinal cord injury patients through medical innovation. | |||
26 Apr 2023 | Episode: 176 - Stacey Pugh Combines Bedside Background with Market Experience to Affect Change for Type 2 Diabetes | 00:56:46 | |
With a background as a trauma nurse and experience running clinical research programs, Stacey Pugh brought quite a bit of patient-focused experience with her when she shifted to industry. After several roles in the neurovascular space, now she’s leading the charge at Endogenix, which is using pulsed electric fields to treat Type 2 Diabetes. She and host, Geoff Pardo, talk about a medical officer’s first experience doing sales, the challenges in affecting change management in primary care, funding businesses with SPACs, and more. | |||
24 May 2023 | Episode: 177 - Launching a New Category of Orthopedics: Moximed’s Journey and Trial Results | 00:57:20 | |
In his early education Anton Clifford was advised against focusing on both science and economics. But he’s put that education to good use in his entrepreneurial career. With a foundation in engineering, Clifford quickly turned to medical devices. First in his native Ireland and later in the US with Abbott Laboratories, Clifford got firsthand experience with device engineering as well as the challenges of launching new products, divisions, and companies. On the journey to his current endeavor, Clifford had narrowed his focus to finding an engineering problem with a mechanical component: a massive unmet need with a surgical solution that was under-adopted. As he considered market opportunities, a friend and mentor, Josh Makower, directed him: You’re not trying to make something work; you’re trying to kill ideas. The last idea standing, so to speak, was an implantable shock absorber, reducing load to the knee joint. After years of development, Moximed has released its FDA study on the most recent product—Misha—with “phenomenal outcomes.” Compared to a surgical alternative, Misha showed superior recovery, pain, function, and no mechanical failures. | |||
17 Jun 2019 | Stryker’s Kevin Lobo Explains Why He Calls Medtech Home, How the “Serial Acquirer” Will Keep Growing | 00:37:04 | |
Growing up in Canada, Kevin Lobo only knew he wanted to be a senior executive at a global company someday. That overriding objective took him through the consumer good and chemical industries before the financial executive found his first job in Medtech. In this interview conducted at the Medtech Conference in Minneapolis, Lobo reveals that while he first was reluctant to take that Medtech job, he’s now grateful to have found a home. “If you’ve only been in Medtech, you do not understand how lucky you are to be in this industry.” Lobo shares insights on how he built a career that positioned him to lead one of Medtech’s giant. He also explains why under his watch Stryker grew to become a “serial acquirer” of that has spent $14 billion to acquire 55 companies during his tenure as CEO. | |||
21 Jun 2023 | Episode: 178 - Doug Godshall’s Business Growth Through Sales Strategies and Leadership | 01:02:13 | |
Doug Godshall, President and CEO of Shockwave Medical, started off selling T-shirts as an engineering student. Today, he leads the most successful high-growth medtech company in the last twenty years. In this episode of Medtech Talk, host Geoff Pardo speaks with Godshall, who discusses his start in medical devices, experiences in a major medtech company, leadership and culture, and what it takes to succeed in the field. Godshall details the strategies behind sales such as understanding your customer’s full needs and why the quality and usefulness of your product is more important than the amount you sell. He also shares his perspective on the type of company culture that creates a comfortable and collaborative environment that paves the way to success. Medtech Talk Links: | |||
18 Jul 2023 | Episode: 179 - Overcoming Valuation Overhang – Implications on Raising Capital and Exits | 00:51:38 | |
How has the bullishness of 2016-2022 impacted public markets and private companies? In this special episode of Medtech Talk, we share Geoff Pardo’s Medtech MVP 2023 panel, featuring Tak G Cheung, Partner at New Enterprise Associates; J.P. Peltier, Managing Director of Global Head, Healthcare Investment Banking at Piper Sandler; Michael Ryan, VP of Venture Capital & Business Development at Boston Scientific Corp; Gwen Watanabe, Managing Director at H.I.G. Capital; and Rob Winklemann, Managing Partner & CEO at Credo 180. The panelists discuss the implications for private companies, particularly those that were financed during the boom times, as well as strategies for keeping private companies financed, and the outlook for liquidity via M&A or IPO. | |||
19 Sep 2023 | Episode: 180 - From Conception to Commercialization, Jane Chao and Ceribell Are Changing Lives With This Neuromonitoring Breakthrough | 00:49:06 | |
Ceribell’s rapid seizure triage product for critical care received FDA’s Breakthrough Designation with an exclusive New Technology Add-on Payment (NTAP) from CMS. Everything about the ClarityPro product—from the innovative EEG headband to the EEG recorder and physician portal has been engineered to enable quick detection and response to non-convulsive seizure in a critical care or ED setting. In this episode of the Medtech Talk podcast, host Geoff Pardo speaks with Jane Chao, CEO of Ceribell, about the path to develop an innovative new product and her personal journey as well. Medtech Talk Links: | |||
31 Oct 2023 | Episode: 181 - Keegan Harper On Overcoming Hardships And Finding Your Talent | 00:58:02 | |
How does one navigate the difficult road of entrepreneurship? How do you find the right industry for you? In this episode of Medtech Talk, host Geoff Pardo speaks with serial founder and med device CEO Keegan Harper, about overcoming the challenges of being your own boss and finding what you’re good at. Harper discusses what inspired him to become an entrepreneur, how he became interested and involved in medtech, and his experiences managing several start-up companies. He also details how he found his knack for choosing technology to invest in and develop, meeting the right people, figuring out the build-to-buy system, and his experiences at multiple companies, including Ablation Frontiers, TheraCardia, Bird Flex, and, now, Bolt Medical.
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21 Nov 2023 | Episode: 182 - Justin Klein on Building the Medtech Ecosystem | 00:46:37 | |
How does one decide to invest in the right company? In this episode of Medtech Talk, host Geoff Pardo speaks with Justin Klein, MD, JD, Co-Founder and Managing Partner at Vensana Capital, about how he uses his legal background to determine the best investment strategy, how he found his way into the medtech industry, and which areas of medicine fascinate him the most. He also talks about his experiences and lessons learned during his time as a partner at NEA, as well as his thoughts on what is working in the industry and what challenges obstruct it from its goals. | |||
19 Dec 2023 | Episode:183 - Dr. Nolan Williams on New Approaches to Treating Major Depressive Disorder | 00:58:45 | |
Though the stigma around mental illnesses has lessened, there is an ongoing mental health crisis affecting the country—and the rest of the world. In this episode of Medtech Talk, host Geoff Pardo speaks with Nolan Williams, M.D. Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University, about how electrical signaling abnormalities in the brain could be behind mental illnesses and the different options used to treat these ailments. Dr. Williams also delves into how his background in psychology and neurology helped him better understand patients in crisis, how Magnus Medical’s methods differ from traditional transcranial magnetic stimulation therapy, and the difficult circumstance of the current state of hospitals and inpatient units. Magnus Medical Links: | |||
27 Feb 2024 | Episode: 184 - Amr Salahieh on the Keys to Successful Entrepreneurship | 00:56:28 | |
Starting a company is an intimidating feat. Starting multiple companies is even scarier. In this month’s episode of Medtech Talk, host Geoff Pardo speaks with Amr Salahieh, founder and CEO of Shifamed, about his extensive experiences of entrepreneurship in the medtech ecosystem. As the founder of several companies, including Sadra Medical, Maya Medical, and Apama Medical, Salahieh shares his tips and tactics on finding the right markets, taking care of your investors, and overcoming challenges when a company fails. He also offers his thoughts on the biggest obstacle in the medtech sector today and how Shifamed has remained sustainable compared to other organizations. Shifamed Links:
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27 Mar 2024 | Episode: 185 - Rodney Perkins Discusses Navigating Entrepreneurship and ‘Maintaining the Machine’ | 01:11:07 | |
In this month’s episode of Medtech Talk, host Geoff Pardo speaks with Rodney Perkins, M.D., serial medtech inventor and founder of several companies, including Collagen Corporation and Laserscope. Perkins delves into his extensive history as one of the industry’s most prolific and successful entrepreneurs whose inventions have helped shape many medical specialties. Perkins discusses what drew him to medicine and medtech, how to navigate the challenges of starting new companies, and why being aware of your own skillset is important to the growth of a company. He also offers advice on how to handle the stresses of entrepreneurship, including his own “entrepreneur’s survival kit” of self-care and understanding your limits. | |||
30 Apr 2024 | Episode: 186 - Conor Hanley Discusses Leadership, Assimilating Perspectives, and Raising Capital | 00:47:16 | |
In this episode of Medtech Talk, host Geoff Pardo and Conor Hanley, PhD, CEO of FIRE1, discuss various topics ranging from leadership to entrepreneurship to raising funds. Hanely also talks about lessons learned about raising capital at BiancaMed, how he keeps investors on the same page, how he utilizes his board and partnerships, and how he assimilates other people’s perspectives while taking on a position. He also delves into his viewpoint on patient compliance, what attracted him to healthcare in the first place, and how Ireland transformed from an economic low point to the Celtic Tiger. Medtech Talk boiler: The Medtech Talk Podcast explores the lives and stories of the people behind some of the greatest advancements in healthcare. Gilde Healthcare General Partner and podcast host, Geoff Pardo invites listeners to see themselves in the journeys of the greatest entrepreneurs, investors, and executives changing the landscape of medtech to save patients and innovate healthcare for future generations.
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28 May 2024 | Episode: 187 - Lessons From an Early-Stage Medtech Investor | 00:54:11 | |
In this episode of Medtech Talk, host Geoff Pardo speaks with Darshana Zaveri, founder & managing partner of Catalyst Health Ventures, about her entry and journey to medtech and venture capital. Zaveri discusses how she approached her first deal, why treating others with kindness and dignity is the key to good networking, and the qualities she looks for in entrepreneurs, particularly in the early stages of a company’s evolution. She also relays her time as CEO of Lantos Technologies, the hard but valuable lessons she learned, and how she applies those experiences to investing. | |||
25 Jun 2024 | Episode 188 - Interview with Medtech MVP 2024 Award Recipient Raymond W. Cohen | 00:42:43 | |
In this special episode of Medtech Talk, host Geoff Pardo interviews Raymond W. Cohen, CEO of Axonics and winner of the Medtech MVP 2024 Award. The MVP Award recognizes an individual for extraordinary contributions to a medtech company that has successfully advanced an important new product and delivered strong financial returns. This year's award honors Cohen for his visionary leadership and innovative solutions that have propelled Axonics to the forefront of the industry. The pair explore Axonic’s groundbreaking technology, the importance of neuromodulation, and Cohen’s storied career, including focusing on key decisions that led him to become an entrepreneur and ultimately the leader of one of the most successful venture-backed medtech companies of our time. | |||
23 Jul 2024 | Episode: 189 - Liz Kwo on Navigating the Digital Transformation of Healthcare | 01:00:12 | |
In this episode of Medtech Talk, host Geoff Pardo speaks with Dr. Liz Kwo, chief commercial officer at Everly Health, about how she got started in the medtech field, her experience at InfiniteMD, and the lessons learned along the way. They also discuss Dr. Kwo’s new book Digital MD: Revolutionizing the Future of Healthcare, which provides an in-depth look at ROI development, how organizations think, sell, and build partnerships, and more. Dr. Kwo also shares her thoughts on the difference between efficacy and effectiveness, customer profiles, the changing role of the consumer (especially when considering data and AI), and what she anticipates in the next 20 years. | |||
17 Sep 2024 | Episode: 190 - The Evolution of Suki and Bringing Joy Back to Patient Care | 00:49:36 | |
In this episode of Medtech Talk, host Geoff Pardo speaks with Punit Soni, CEO of Suki, about using AI to build better technology in healthcare, the origins of Suki, and how Soni shifted from Google to healthcare. Soni also delves into the difficulties and challenges of healthcare, including handling the regulatory aspects and encouraging doctors to adapt to new tech. He also discusses managing failure—as an individual and a company leader—and where we are in the evolution of what Suki is doing. Special thanks to Silicon Valley Bank for sponsoring this episode.
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04 Sep 2019 | Medtech VCs Klein, Nielsen Explain Why They Decided to Start Up Their Own Venture Firm, Vensana | 00:37:06 | |
Justin Klein and Kirk Nielsen entered venture capital separately 13 years ago, taking roles at two of the top firms in Medtech. Over that time, the two VCs have led investment in more than a dozen Medtech companies that have either gone public or been acquired. Now, the pair have joined forces to create Vensana Capital, a new investor in Medtech. In this episode, you’ll hear why they decided to venture out on their own and where they’ll be investing $225 million in capital from their first fund. | |||
20 Sep 2019 | CEO Kim Rodriguez Says Big Bet on Acessa Is Paying Off for Patients and Investors | 00:32:16 | |
Kim Rodriguez expected to follow her mom’s career in medicine. But she got bit by the Medtech Bug early and enjoyed a string of sales success at companies of nearly every size including Cocentric, Spectranetics, and Guidant. But three years ago she got recruited to be CEO of a company that was rich in promising technologies as well as business challenges. In just three years, Rodriguez and her team at Acessa pulled out of the tail spin, secured FDA approval and a CPT code and now are building a promising women’s health company. In this episode, she’ll share how aspiring execs should ante up. | |||
17 Oct 2019 | Medtech CEO Duke Rohlen Grew Into His Name. Can AJAX Health Do the Same? | 00:42:49 | |
In this episode of Medtech Talk, Duke Rohlen, CEO of AJAX Health, answers several critical questions about the importance of names. What’s his real name? Why is the AJAX name so important to him? And how did he employ “stair stepping” to make a name for himself in Medtech (before founding, funding and exiting several high profile start-ups.) | |||
27 Nov 2019 | How Frank Fischer and Martha Morrell, MD, Launched one of Medtech’s Pioneering Neurostim Companies | 01:03:18 | |
In this interview, Frank Fischer and Martha Morrell, MD, recount the long history of NeuroPace, one of Medtech’s neurostimulation pioneers. | |||
10 Dec 2019 | Where NeuroPace Is Headed Under New CEO Mike Favet | 00:38:34 | |
In this episode, Mike Favet, the new CEO of NeuroPace, shares his personal story into Medtech and reveals his plans for one of Medtech’s pioneers, NeuroPace. What convinced him to become CEO? What changes will he make at NeuroPace? | |||
19 Dec 2019 | Can New CEO Murthy Simhambhatla Help SetPoint Medical Deliver on Bioelectronics’ Promise? | 00:46:06 | |
In this interview, Murthy Simhambhatla, president and CEO of SetPoint Medical, explains why he moved into the Medtech industry and how that path has positioned him to lead SetPoint Medical, one of the industry’s most promising start-ups. | |||
27 Mar 2020 | Episode 145: Medtech Talk Welcomes its New Host | 00:10:34 | |
Medtech Talk welcomes its new host, Geoff Pardo! Geoff is a dynamic partner at Gilde Healthcare who uses his passion for medtech to share stories from industry leaders. | |||
22 Apr 2020 | Episode 146: Vapotherm CEO Joe Army: Wisdom from the Northern Kingdom to the Board Room and Beyond | 00:57:24 | |
Joe Army’s career journey through the medtech industry has been anything but easy, but he does not back down from a challenge, and he’s sharing the greatest lessons that have helped him pave his own way. | |||
29 Feb 2016 | Justin Klein, MD, JD, Partner at New Enterprise Associates | 00:24:08 | |
Justin Klein, MD, JD, sits down with Healthegy TV to provide details on where his firm, New Enterprise Associates, sees the greatest opportunities in Medtech. He also explains how a firm with $3 billion to manage still makes early-stage investments. | |||
08 Mar 2016 | Hykes Recounts Successful Outcomes from Visiogen, Cameron | 00:35:29 | |
As CEO, Kevin Hykes led two companies – Visiogen and Cameron Health – to successful acquisitions by strategic acquirers. In this interview, Hykes shares the lessons learned from leading those companies and explains how he’s adapting to life as CEO of an early-stage company. | |||
07 May 2020 | Episode 147: Leadership and Innovation to Combat a Global Pandemic | 00:49:32 | |
Butterfly Network CEO Laurent Faracci shares his experience leading a company through the Coronavirus outbreak, while producing lifesaving technology to battle the crisis. Laurent joined Butterfly as the Coronavirus spread to a global pandemic level, but he isn’t slowing down. Under his leadership, Butterfly continues to grow as their cutting-edge ultrasound technology proves itself a leading advancement in the fight against the Coronavirus in a time where leadership and innovation are essential to the future of healthcare.
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15 Mar 2016 | Trigg: Outset’s Tablo Could Create `Boutique’ Dialysis | 00:19:49 | |
Outset Medical CEO Leslie Trigg brings a career of success in medtech into a new approach to dialysis. Tablo, a sleek device, could enable dialysis companies an easier, cheaper way of providing dialysis to patients. | |||
23 Mar 2016 | How Kerry Pope and the Fogarty Institute Keep Medtech Innovation Alive | 00:21:40 | |
Experienced medtech CEO Kerry Pope explains how the Fogarty Institute is building coalitions of corporations and entrepreneurs to create medtech start-ups. | |||
30 Mar 2016 | HealthQuest’s Kong on teamwork, Medtech, and investing $225 million | 00:26:03 | |
HealthQuest Capital secured a $225 million fund to invest in new health care technologies. Managing Director Garheng Kong, MD, explains the firm’s views on health care, how doctors view new technologies and what competitive volleyball can teach us about venture investing. | |||
07 Apr 2016 | Design Firm Nottingham Spirk has Grand Plans to Bolster Medtech Start-ups | 00:34:38 | |
The Medtech industry earns only passing grades in the category of product design, according to product development group Nottingham Spirk. But the company hopes to leverage its experience and access to capital to help Medtech start-ups get to the head of the class. | |||
14 Apr 2016 | Windham’s Yee on Why She Thinks Medtech’s Renaissance is Drawing Future New Leaders | 00:17:30 | |
Cynthia Yee, a principal at Windham Venture Partners, opened her firm’s office in San Francisco. Yee shares her opinions on many medtech questions including 510(k) versus PMA, the power of payers, and how younger professionals view careers in medtech. | |||
21 Apr 2016 | Thom Gunderson Offers Insights on Innovation, IPOs, and Google from a Long-time Medtech Market Watcher | 00:32:38 | |
Thomas Gunderson watched the Medtech market for over 20 years at Piper Jaffray. Now recently retired, Gunderson explains how innovation in Medtech is changing, what big strategics think, and where Google might fit into the picture. | |||
28 Apr 2016 | Newly Minted VC Stacy Enxing Seng Talks Medtech, Medtronic & Why She Joined Lightstone | 00:25:16 | |
Though initially surprised by Medtronic’s move to buy Covidien, Stacy Enxing Seng says she immediately saw the wisdom of the deal and recognized the opportunity for a fresh start. In an interview, Enxing Seng explains why she left, what she’s been doing, and how her new role at Lightstone Ventures fits her vision for Medtech’s future. | |||
03 May 2016 | How Will Abbott & Auris Deals Impact Early Stage Start-ups? | 00:21:14 | |
Abbott’s move to acquire St. Jude demonstrates how Medtronic’s moves toward “Total Solutions” may change the game in Medtech. We’re going to tackle that topic at the June 1 Medtech Conference. Our conference co-chairs discuss that piece of our upcoming agenda as well as our focus on robotics. | |||
15 May 2016 | Facteau Looks Forward to Day in Court & Eyes Funding for Earlens | 00:15:24 | |
A recent jury decision cleared Vascular Solutions of charges of improper off-label marketing. Former Acclarent CEO Bill Facteau discusses his indictment in a similar case, the coming court case, and the support he has received. | |||
19 May 2016 | MDMA’s Leahey Updates on Device Tax, Reimbursement & What the White House Says About Medtech | 00:17:52 | |
Mark Leahey, CEO and President of MDMA, delivers his “State of the Industry” address on reimbursement, the medical device tax, UnitedHealthcare/Medtronic and a little bit of Presidential Politics. | |||
26 May 2016 | How Vascular Solutions Beat the DOJ & What Medtech Executives Need to Know to Do the Same | 00:34:45 | |
After five years and $25 million, Vascular Solutions CEO Howard Root watched a jury confirm what he knew all along. His company had done nothing wrong. In this interview, Root and Mark Duval, who is advising companies in this area but didn’t work with Vascular Solutions, explain what all this means for Medtech executives. | |||
21 May 2020 | Episode 148: Kaiser Permanente’s Liz Rockett on Her VC Career and Gender Inequality in the Industry | 00:52:57 | |
As an English Major at Princeton, Liz Rockett could not have imagined how her VC career would take off and the places it would take her. She shares her candid career journey, from taking risks, asking questions, and using her voice to empower gender equality in the field. | |||
03 Jun 2016 | Where are we in the Robotics Revolution? | 00:33:30 | |
For years, Intuitive Surgical appeared to be the only company capable of cracking the code for medical robotics. But with companies like Medtronic, Stryker, Johnson & Johnson, Google, and others creating their own efforts the sector appears to be stabilizing. Is there room for early-stage entrepreneurs and VC investors in this capital-intensive sector? | |||
09 Jun 2016 | Medtronic’s Martha Discusses Fear, Transformation & Acquisitions | 00:24:29 | |
Medtronic executive VP Geoff Martha talks with OISTV about how the Medtech giant views robotics, payers, and where health care transformation is the most difficult. The podcast also includes a clip from his keynote interview at the Medtech Conference. | |||
16 Jun 2016 | Sounds from the Stage: Hear "What it Takes to Win in Medtech" from Four Successful CEOs | 00:36:29 | |
The experienced CEOs on this panel have authored some of the greatest stories in Medtech. In this discussion, they delve into their approaches to managing start-ups to multi-million – or billion – dollar acquisitions or IPOs. How do they accurately assess a struggling company and direct a team to turn weakness into strength? | |||
23 Jun 2016 | Allen Partners’ Julie Allen on How New Leaders Can Find Success in Today’s Evolving Medtech Sector | 00:40:35 | |
Julie Allen, principal of Allen Partners, shares insights on how Medtech executives must work to find the right fit and how companies can build their best team. | |||
30 Jun 2016 | Gilde Healthcare’s Geoff Pardo on Why European LPs & VCs See Opportunity in the US Medtech Market | 00:35:43 | |
Gilde Healthcare Partner Geoff Pardo shares how the firm will invest its new $250 million in health care companies, including Medtech. | |||
07 Jul 2016 | How Do You Build a Start-Up into a $600 Million Exit? We Ask Matt Likens, Former CEO of Ulthera | 00:40:05 | |
The board at Ulthera, an aesthetics device company, faced an attractive dilemma. Take the company public? Or accept a lucrative buyout? Hear from the CEO how the company’s culture and approach led to that favorable outcome. | |||
14 Jul 2016 | Perfecting the Fast-Follower Strategy – How Blue Belt Built and Sold a Successful Robotics Business | 00:29:14 | |
Eric Timko, the former CEO of Blue Belt, shares how the company used MAKO’s wake to build a market for its surgical robot and sell the business to Smith & Nephew. Timko explains the company’s fast-follower strategy and shares what he’s looking to do next. | |||
21 Jul 2016 | Cartiva’s FDA Win for Approval of First Synthetic Cartilage Signals Change for Orthopedics | 00:33:48 | |
Cartiva secured an historic win when the FDA approved its synthetic cartilage. CEO Tim Patrick explains what it took to get the approval and how the company will sell going forward. | |||
27 Jul 2016 | From an "Ah, Ha!" Moment to Restoring Sight – Innovator Mark Humayun, MD, on What Drives Innovation | 00:24:24 | |
Over two decades ago, Mark Humayun – who will co-chair our upcoming OIS@ASRS meeting in San Francisco – helped launch a “moonshot” that would eventually restore vision for retinitis pigmentosa patients. In this podcast we discuss what drives him and what’s next for ophthalmology. | |||
05 Jun 2020 | Episode 149: Ethical Leadership, Corporate Responsibility, and the Transformative Power of Yoga | 00:54:27 | |
Mike Huggins is a leader in the medtech world whose journey from Synthes, USA COO to an indictment and prison sentence has run parallel to his discovery of yoga, mindfulness, and meditation, weaving together these experiences that have developed his passion for ethical leadership, corporate responsibility, prison reform, and the practices that have helped him along the way. | |||
04 Aug 2016 | What Will Carl Zeiss Meditec’s New Ophthalmology Unit Look Like? We Ask Jim Mazzo. | 00:25:25 | |
Meet the newest Master of the Industry. Jim Mazzo, who has led divisions, spin-outs, and start-ups, now leads what looks to be a new leader in ophthalmology. Hear how Mazzo views this new opportunity for Zeiss and himself. | |||
11 Aug 2016 | ReVision CEO John Kilcoyne Says the Company is Ready to Build a New Medtech Market in Ophthalmology | 00:27:34 | |
ReVision Optics built it – a corneal inlay capable of correcting presbyopia. The FDA approved it sooner than expected. Now the company needs to build it into a successful private-pay business. | |||
19 Aug 2016 | Where Are Series A Dollars Coming From? What Areas Are Ripe for M&A? You May Be Surprised | 00:17:48 | |
Data guru Jon Norris, managing director at Silicon Valley Bank, reviews his first-half numbers for ophthalmology and life sciences. Norris’ first-half numbers for Medtech start-ups show some surprising sources of strength for the sector. | |||
26 Aug 2016 | Everything Medtech Companies Need to Know About Making Friends (& Closing Deals) in China | 00:30:56 | |
Chen Yu, MD, managing director of Vivo Capital, has built a career finding the right deals at the right time in the US and China. Hear what US companies can do to take advantage of potential Pan Pacific opportunities. | |||
08 Sep 2016 | A MedtechTalk Mea Culpa | 00:01:41 | |
16 Sep 2016 | From the Fundraising Front: How Rox Medical Made the Move to Hypertension and Raised $40m | 00:35:44 | |
Rox Medical CEO Rodney Brenneman says he’s never had a tougher time raising capital. But the deed is done, and Rox is ready to move forward into the promising hypertension area. | |||
21 Sep 2016 | Medtech M&A: McEvoy on Where Will AMO Fit into J&J & What the Deal Means for Eye Care | 00:11:18 | |
Ashley McEvoy, Company Group Chairman, Johnson & Johnson Vision Care and Johnson & Johnson Diabetes Care Companies, says the new force could pursue M&A in future expansion. Hear the details of the deal. | |||
30 Sep 2016 | BrainScope Scores FDA approval for Concussion Dx Device, Moves into Commercialization | 00:26:46 | |
Backed by nearly $30 million from the Department of Defense, BrainScope created a device to make concussion diagnosis more certain. Hear what’s next for the Medtech start-up. | |||
06 Oct 2016 | Can Robot-Assisted Surgery Carve a Niche in Ophthalmology? | 00:30:29 | |
Last month, a surgeon performed ophthalmology’s first robot-assisted surgery – a membrane peel. Marc de Smet, chief medical officer of Preceyes, a Dutch start-up, shares the company’s history and plans for the future. | |||
09 Jul 2020 | Episode 150: Edwards' Katie Szyman on Medtech's Accelerating Changes, Leadership Development and Having Fun | 00:55:59 | |
Katie Szyman is an accomplished global operating executive in the medical device industry with a passion for building high performing teams and helping innovative healthcare companies grow so patients can gain access to better therapies and outcomes. Here she shares how Edwards, critical care, and the medtech industry is adapting to COVID19, her leadership role models, and tips for expanding diversity on leadership teams and executive boards. | |||
13 Jan 2017 | Metavention’s Kevin Hykes Explains How Past Success Can Guide Medtech's Future | 00:22:43 | |
Medtech Conference co-chair Kevin Hykes revisits his days at Visiogen and Cameron Health, explaining how those successful outcomes help guide his hand on Metavention’s tiller. | |||
20 Jan 2017 | Lightstone’s Enxing Seng Brings Multiple Perspectives to Finding Solutions for Medtech Start-ups | 00:27:26 | |
Medtech Conference co-chair Stacy Enxing Seng, after succeeding at both start-ups and corporates, shares her enthusiasm for her new role as venture partner at Lightstone Ventures. | |||
27 Jan 2017 | A Little Bit Wall Street, A Little Bit Rock ’n’ Roll: Red Crow’s Co-founders Help Start-ups Find $$ | 00:37:01 | |
Jerry Harrison, rock star turned investor, joined with former Wall Streeter Brian A. Smith to create Red Crow to build a platform for healthcare start-ups to tap the “crowd” as a new source of capital. | |||
05 Feb 2017 | Optum’s Clark Says Medtechs Need to Craft Effective Message to Win Support from Payers and Providers | 00:17:06 | |
Steve Clark, senior vice president at Optum Life Sciences, says healthcare rests in the “nascent” stages of questioning effectiveness of medical tech. Successful start-ups will find the right answers to those questions. | |||
14 Feb 2017 | FDA Building Effective Fast Track for US Medtechs While Other Countries Starting to Show Delays | 00:15:30 | |
Lisa Wipperman Heine, COO of Mitralign, says the FDA is making quicker work of review times. But the same might not be said for other countries where Medtechs once had a faster time to market. In this interview at the offices of Fox Rothschild in Minneapolis, the Medtech veteran lays out Mitralign’s success with the agency’s Early Feasibility program. | |||
30 Jul 2020 | Episode 151: Breaking Through at CVRx | 01:06:52 | |
From senior leadership positions at GE Healthcare and Medtronic to board chairman at MDIC and AdvaMed, Nadim is a seasoned medtech executive who is passionate about the industry. Now at the helm of CVRx, a company developing a pioneering technology for treating high blood pressure and heart failure, Nadim shares his experience navigating the FDA’s first Breakthrough Device Designation, working with CMS on reimbursement coding, and building CVRx’s strong leadership team | |||
17 Feb 2017 | SetPoint CEO Arnold Recalls Path to Medtech, Progress in Using Neuromod to Alleviate Inflammation | 00:31:19 | |
Long ago, Tony Arnold wondered how he might find an opening in Medtech. Today, he’s leading one of the sector’s most novel start-ups, SetPoint Medical, which is using the nervous system to ease inflammation. | |||
24 Feb 2017 | FundRx Finding the Formula to Bring LPs, VCs, Individuals to Fund Promising Medtech Start-Ups | 00:34:03 | |
Zeshan Muhammedi thinks he and his co-founders of FundRx have identified some “misalignments” in funding Medtechs. The solution may be FundRx, a new breed of venture capital firm bringing LPs, KOLs, and entrepreneurs on the same page. | |||
03 Mar 2017 | Amphora's Tom Ressemann Looks Back On A Start-Up Life, Answers The Question: What Makes a Good CEO | 00:39:01 | |
You can’t be involved in as many successful start-ups as Tom Ressemann and not walk away with great lessons and valuable experiences. The former Entellus founder and CEO examines the wins and challenges and explains how they’re guiding his hand at Amphora Medical. | |||
10 Mar 2017 | Trod Medical Focused on Developing RF Ablative Tools to Perform Precise Surgery on Soft Tissue | 00:21:23 | |
Trod Founder and CEO Andre Faure tells the tale of Trod, a low-capital-burning start-up focused on introducing a next-generation of ablation tools to treat the prostate and other soft tissue. | |||
17 Mar 2017 | Managing Director Kirk Nielsen Talks Origins, Medtech, and Versant Ventures’ new $400 Million Fund | 00:29:21 | |
Kirk Nielsen’s path to Versant passed through thoughts of medical school, a short stint in the NHL, and a span at Medtronic. Today, Nielsen represents the global VC’s interests in Medtech, serving as part of a new generation of partners taking over from the VC giant’s founders. | |||
24 Mar 2017 | Egeland’s Experience, Curiosity, and Roots Lead Him to Building Out a B&D Career at Medtronic | 00:33:21 | |
Ryan Egeland, senior director, business development & licensing at Medtronic, is searching for tech and start-ups that bolster the Medtech giant’s surgical innovations group. | |||
30 Mar 2017 | Former VC Nim Shah Dishes on JP Morgan, the Four Horsemen, and What It’s Like Joining a Start-Up | 00:47:12 | |
Nim Shah left Domain Associates to take on the chief business officer role at hot Start-Up Fractyl Laboratories. Hear why he made the change, what he feels went wrong for Medtech, and what’s next for Fractyl. | |||
06 Apr 2017 | Advice of the Valkyrie – GE Venture’s Lisa Suennen Explains How Medtechers Can Find Their Voice | 00:39:14 | |
For more than a decade, Lisa Suennen, Senior Managing Director, healthcare at GE Ventures and Managing Partner at Venture Valkyrie, LLC, has blogged and opined on the healthcare industry. In this podcast she reveals what first led her to speak up and shares how Medtech execs can find their own voices. She also talks about CSweetner.org, a not-for-profit she created to help women executives rise to the C-suite. | |||
13 Apr 2017 | Stanford’s Blumenkranz Delivers His State of Innovation Address. Spoiler: It Includes Lasers | 00:27:57 | |
Serial innovator Mark Blumenkranz, MD, who last year moved into an emeritus position at Stanford, shares his enthusiasm and concerns for the future of innovation in the US. | |||
20 Apr 2017 | Randall Recaps Journey from Teaching in High School Classroom to Leading Medtechs as a CEO | 00:41:04 | |
Rick Randall landed his first job in Medtech on a bet. Today, he’s one of the sector’s most experienced CEOs. In the first part of a two-part interview with Medtech Talk, Randall, the CEO of OMNIlife science, the robotic-assisted surgery company, explains how serendipity has helped guide his path into the sector. | |||
28 Apr 2017 | CEO Randall Recalls the Tale of Trans1 and Explains Why Omnilife Will Make Its Mark in Orthopedics | 00:39:18 | |
Rick Randall’s initial foray into leading a Medtech company represented a bit of a fairy tale. But his next chapter – starting and leading spine company Trans1 – serves as a bit of a Medtech nightmare. | |||
03 May 2017 | Stanford’s Yock Talks Medtech Costs, Biodesign’s Birthday, and How He Feels about Apple and Google | 00:25:57 | |
Paul Yock, MD, started Stanford’s Byers Center for Biodesign to help teach innovation. While the idea didn’t excite everyone, the center has emerged as the hub of entrepreneurial excellence. Dr. Yock speaks to the role of innovation and how it impacts Medtech. | |||
12 May 2017 | A Little Bit Medtech, A Little Bit Tech: Murj CEO Butka Explains How Murj Combines Best of Both | 00:37:54 | |
Todd Butka, the CEO and founder of Murj, personifies the much ballyhooed crossover between Medtech and Tech. The start-up is developing a software application that enables providers to efficiently manage data from implantable cardiac devices. | |||
19 May 2017 | Outset CEO Trigg Talks Dialysis, Fundraising, and What Makes a Medtech Career Matter | 00:46:36 | |
Outset CEO Leslie Trigg updates Medtech Talk listeners on her company’s bid to bring disruption to dialysis. She also shares some sage advice about what matters most in a career. | |||
27 Aug 2020 | Episode 152: Stomping out Diabetic Foot Ulcers at Podimetrics | 01:04:52 | |
Jon Bloom admits that his path to becoming a CEO was anything but linear. Originally a percussionist, Jon then found a calling for medicine and became a board-certified physician before pivoting once more to entrepreneurship. Now holding the reigns at Podimetrics, a company developing an early warning system for diabetic foot ulcers, Jon shares not only his unique career progression, but the story of how a hackathon led to the company’s inception, when to commercialize a new technology, tips for working the VA, and the revolution of telehealth during this current time. |