{"id":1126,"date":"2015-10-04T17:37:45","date_gmt":"2015-10-04T21:37:45","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/digital.hbs.edu\/platform-digit\/submission\/teladoc-how-network-effects-are-evolving-in-the-world-of-telemedicine\/"},"modified":"2015-10-04T17:52:56","modified_gmt":"2015-10-04T21:52:56","slug":"teladoc-how-network-effects-are-evolving-in-the-world-of-telemedicine","status":"publish","type":"hck-submission","link":"https:\/\/d3.harvard.edu\/platform-digit\/submission\/teladoc-how-network-effects-are-evolving-in-the-world-of-telemedicine\/","title":{"rendered":"Teladoc: How network effects are evolving in the world of telemedicine"},"content":{"rendered":"
With an IPO in 2015, Teladoc is taking the telemedicine market by storm and is currently the largest competitor in the space with 11.5 million members; but does this momentum ensure long-term success for the company?\u00a0 With weak\u00a0network effects at play in this industry, it\u2019s hard to tell.<\/p>\n
At a very basic level, Teladoc allows patients to find and connect with a medical provider over video conferencing from the comfort of their own home. It\u2019s a simple idea that allows patients to be seen for minor medical issues without having to deal with all the time consuming elements of a traditional doctor\u2019s visit (getting an appointment, waiting, driving to the doctor, more waiting, etc.).<\/p>\n
The Good: First mover in an industry with indirect network effects<\/strong><\/p>\n Given that Teladoc is a marketplace at its core, indirect network effects are clearly at work for this company.\u00a0 Connecting patients with doctors only works if there are enough of both to make it worthwhile for both populations to sign up on the site.\u00a0 The company has done a great job of building up the number and variety (general practitioners, pediatrics, psychologists, etc.) of physicians using the service.\u00a0 This in turn attracts more users to their site since the number of physicians is large enough that patients can be sure they will get fast, quality medical care. \u00a0Which in turn brings more doctors (and so on and so forth).\u00a0 Once this population of physicians was large enough, Teladoc was able to market directly to employers, who now contract directly with Teladoc to allow their employees access to 24\/7 telemedicine care. \u00a0In addition, with an increase of both users and doctors, Teladoc is able to also leverage robust amount of user data to provide analytic reports on the quality of care and ROI to its clients.<\/p>\n Being the first mover in the space allowed Teladoc to leverage the indirect network effects and create a massive user base, but even as it continues to grow, this might not be enough to keep competitors from giving them a run for their money.<\/p>\n The Bad: Multi-homing and lack of differentiation<\/strong><\/p>\n Even as Teladoc grows its client base of employers, it will continue to deal with strong competitive forces.\u00a0 The first major issue with their platform is that both users and doctors can multi-home with other telehealth companies.\u00a0 Physicians find value in using telehealth companies like Teladoc because it fills the time they would otherwise have idol at their office.\u00a0 However, these doctors have little incentives to sick with just one provider.\u00a0 By multi-homing they can quickly connect with a greater population of patients while getting paid the same amount.\u00a0 In addition, users can multi-home as well.\u00a0 It costs nothing to a user to have multiple telehealth accounts, since they are only charged once they use the service.\u00a0 Although employers are signing contracts with Teladoc and other telehealth companies, in a lot of cases users are still forced to use dollars from their HSA to pay for these services, which can be used on any site.<\/p>\n Overall, these telehealth companies have little differentiation.\u00a0 They all cover the same basic medical issues and a majority of competitors charge a common service price of $40. \u00a0Due to this lack of differentiation, competitors like Doctor on Demand, who recently partnered with United Healthcare, are gaining doctors, employers and users fast.\u00a0 Without a way of making users, doctor and employers sticky, the telehealth industry risks going the way of EAP services (Employer Assistance Programs), who are increasingly becoming a commodity where employers often choose the lowest cost provider.<\/p>\n In order to combat these effects, Teladoc will need to find a way to keep users and doctors on their platform.\u00a0 This could be done by offering differentiated services or by creating a platform that doctors and employers have to integrate into their systems.\u00a0 On way of potentially doing this would be to partner with insurance companies instead of going direct to employers, create proprietary software (better video quality or technology) or even partner exclusively with a company like Apple and integrate with Apple\u2019s Health platform.\u00a0 However, if the company doesn\u2019t do something quick, competitors like Doctor on Demand will continue to take more and more market share.<\/p>\n \u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n Sources:<\/strong><\/p>\n http:\/\/www.teladoc.com\/<\/a><\/p>\n http:\/\/ir.teladoc.com\/financial-info\/sec-filings\/default.aspx<\/a><\/p>\n http:\/\/www.wsj.com\/articles\/why-teladoc-needs-medical-attention-1443984154<\/a><\/p>\n