Upload
startup-health
View
2.597
Download
1
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
© 2017 StartUp Health, LLC
A StartUp Health Insights Report Digital Health Funding Rankings
Data through March 31, 2017 Report is inclusive of seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding Sign up to receive weekly funding insights at startuphealth.com
Q1 2017
TM
INCLUDING CAREGIVING FUNDING SPONSORED BY
startuphealth.com/reports
ABOUT STARTUP HEALTH
Pages Topic
2-3 ………………………………………….…………… About StartUp Health
4 ………………………………………….…………… Year End Summary
5-11 ………………………………………….…………… Deals and Funding
12 ………………………………………….…………… Geography
13 ………………………………………….…………… Investors
14-19 ………………………………………….…………… AARP Caregiving Funding
20 ………………………………………….…………… Methodology
Jennifer Hankin
Polina Hanin
Troy Bannister
Mark Liber
Anne Dordai
Nicole Kinsey
Tara Salamone
StartUp Health InsightsTM Contributors
Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
Niharika Gupta
2
John Oro
In 2011, StartUp Health introduced a new model for transforming health by organizing and supporting a global army of entrepreneurs called Health Transformers. With the world’s largest digital health portfolio (nearly 200 companies spanning 5 continents, 18 countries and 60+ cities), StartUp Health is mobilizing this rapidly growing army along with the world’s ‘batteries included’ leaders, innovators and investors, to achieve 10 Health Moonshots, with a 25 year mission to improve the health and wellbeing of everyone in the world.
Learn more about how you can join this movement and support Health Transformers at www.startuphealth.com.
startuphealth.com/reports
1Access to Care Moonshots Delivering quality care to everyone, regardless of location or income
2Cost to Zero Moonshots Radically reducing the cost of care by a factor of a million
3Cure Disease Moonshots Curing disease using data, technologies and personalized medicine
4Cancer Moonshots Ending cancer as we know it
5
Women’s Health Moonshots Prioritizing women’s health, including preventive care and new research
6Children’s Health Moonshots Ensuring every child has access to quality care, particularly in underserved areas
7Nutrition and Fitness Moonshots Providing access to a healthy environment and support an active lifestyle
8Brain Health Moonshots Unlocking the mysteries of the brain to improve health
9Mental Health and Wellbeing Moonshots Destigmatizing mental health and connect mind, body and spirit
10Longevity Moonshots Adding 50 healthy years to every human life
10 HEALTH MOONSHOTS THAT ARE CHANGING THE WORLDOne of the most exciting trends to emerge is an ambitious generation of entrepreneurs, leaders and investors focusing on bold ‘Health Moonshots’. StartUp Health is organizing and supporting its global army of Health Transformers to focus on achieving 10 Health Moonshots with a 25-year mission to improve the wellbeing of everyone in the world. Each Health Moonshot has the potential to help at least a billion people.
3Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
startuphealth.com/reports
DEALS & FUNDING GEOGRAPHY INVESTORS
“Ultimately, this is a
revolution about
individuals and families
taking control of their health”
- Jerry Levin, Executive Chairman of the Board, StartUp Health
2017 Q1 SUMMARYIf the first quarter of 2017 is any indication of what’s to come, 2017 is going to be another important year for digital health funding. Among this quarter’s most notable developments, the population health sector saw a large number of deals, Los Angeles emerged as a hotspot of digital health funding, and cancer detection ‘startup’ GRAIL had a record-breaking Series B further displaying the inevitable trend of ‘digital’ weaving into the fabric of every other health/healthcare sector.
4
At $2.5 billion, Q1 2017 was the biggest first quarter recorded since 2010 due to a record breaking Series B funding round. This was largely responsible for turning what would have otherwise been a modest quarter into a record breaker.
Biggest Q1 Yet*
1
Biggest Deal Yet
GRAIL’s $914 million Series B was the largest digital health deal on record.The investment demonstrates the inevitable growing trend of ‘digital’ cross-pollinating with all sectors of health and healthcare.
2
With 25 deals recorded in Q1 2017, this was a breakout quarter for the population health sector.
Population Health Attracts Capital3
Are Series A’s becoming the new seed? With Series A rounds becoming more robust, seed stage funding is falling as a percentage of total investment.
Seed Deals Slow
4
After a remarkable first quarter, Los Angeles is quickly becoming one of the top destinations for digital health.
LA’s Hot for Digital Health
5
CAREGIVING
Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
*Including GRAIL’s $914M funding round
startuphealth.com/reports
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 YTD
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4
DEALS & FUNDING GEOGRAPHY INVESTORS
158
300
499
668
589
526
606
124
Deal Count
$1.1B$2.0B
$1.5B$629M$572M$391M $192M
$8.2B
$6.0B
$7.1B
$2.9B
$2.4B$2.0B
$1.1B
DIGITAL HEALTH FUNDING SNAPSHOT: YEAR OVER YEAR
5
CAREGIVING
Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
$2.5B
$2.5B
GRAIL’s $914 million Series B may be an outlier and skewed the overall funding numbers this quarter keeping it on track for another strong year overall, and turning an otherwise modest first quarter into a record-breaker.
While Q1 2017 had the lowest deal volume since 2011 - with only 124 deals this quarter - we’re seeing more and more $500-900M deals. What do less deals and more money mean? Even though VCs are betting less, they’re betting bigger. Also, the lines are blurring quickly as expected between “digital” and all other categories of health and healthcare.
“AI, virtual reality, mobile connectivity, genomics, and analytics are coming to
change healthcare, and that is creating a wave of innovation like we’ve never seen.”
-Unity Stoakes, President, StartUp Health
startuphealth.com/reports
DEALS & FUNDING
$0B
$0.233B
$0.467B
$0.7B
$0.933B
$1.167B
$1.4B
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
$320M Series B
$150M Series C
$37.5M Venture
$37.9M Venture
$394M Venture
$33M Series B
$31M Series A
$400M Series C
$130M Series B
$500M Series C
R2 = 0.5564
$400M Venture $220M Series A
Good Doctor
$500M Venture
DIGITAL HEALTH FUNDING SNAPSHOT: MONTH OVER MONTH
GEOGRAPHY INVESTORS
6
$500M Series A
Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
CAREGIVING
$914M Series B
The first three months of 2017 continue a varied, yet trending pattern with a positive regression value, serving as an indicator of a continuously growing industry. March of 2017 has proven to be the largest month on record.
startuphealth.com/reports
DEALS & FUNDING
$0B
$0.23B
$0.47B
$0.7B
$0.93B
$1.17B
$1.4B
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 YTD
DIGITAL HEALTH FUNDING SNAPSHOT: MONTH OVER MONTH
GEOGRAPHY INVESTORS
7Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
CAREGIVING
It’s interesting to watch the evolution in funding year-over-year on a monthly basis as some months demonstrate consistency, others show wild variety and others prove to be big months for investors. We expect funding in the next three months to be on the rise.
March funding including GRAIL’s $900M Funding Round
startuphealth.com/reports
Company $ Invested Subsector Notable Investor
1 $914M Big Data/Analytics
2 $115M Population Health
3 $100M Patient/Consumer Experience
4 $90M Big Data/Analytics
5 $85M EHR
6 $65M Research
7 $55M E-Commerce
8 $52M Population Health
9 $50M Medical Device
10 $41M Research
DEALS & FUNDING
THE TOP 10 LARGEST DEALS OF 2017
GEOGRAPHY INVESTORS
8
Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
CAREGIVING
The top 10 deals of Q1 2017 included companies working in sectors in which big deals have been rare. What does this suggest? 2017 might be a breakout year in terms of funding for solutions focusing on population health, EHR innovation, and e-commerce.
startuphealth.com/reports
DEALS & FUNDING
Subsector Total Raised YTD Deal Count Avg. Deal Size
1 Population Health $392M 25 $15.7M
2 Patient/Consumer Experience $226M 21 $10.7M
3 Research $184M 9 $20.4M
4 Medical Device $175M 16 $10.9M
5 Big Data/Analytics $170M 11 $15.5M
6 EHR $115M 2 $57.5M
7 Workflow $92M 18 $5.1M
8 E-Commerce $77M 3 $25.7M
9 Personalized Health/Quantified-Self $65M 9 $7.2M
10 Wellness $35M 4 $8.75M
THE TOP 10 MOST ACTIVE MARKETS OF Q1 2017
GEOGRAPHY INVESTORS
9Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
*Big Data/Analytics excludes GRAIL’s $900M funding round
CAREGIVING
In the first quarter of 2017, the population health sector took off, with 23 deals and almost double the year-to-date funding of any other sector.
Without a way to organize patient populations by risk, it becomes difficult for providers to triage patients, engage in prevention, and provide personalized care. Over the last year, a number of providers have adopted population health platforms, viewing them as a means of segmenting patient populations, as well as a foundation on which to build more advanced solutions.
“We have the opportunity to change our mindset to think about how we do things proactively.”
- Gil Peri, Chief Strategy Officer, Children’s Hospital Colorado
startuphealth.com/reports
DEALS & FUNDING
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017 YTD
0% 25% 50% 75% 100%
Seed Series A Series B Series C Series D Series E Series F + G + H
26% 33% 13%25% 4%
*Deal count only includes Seed though Series F+ rounds. Does not include venture rounds or growth equity.
Deal Count*
124
234
297
441
388
297
350
DEAL ACTIVITY BY STAGE
GEOGRAPHY INVESTORS
10Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
70
CAREGIVING
As a percentage of total deals, seed stage investment has steadily decreased since 2015, dropping from a third of all deals to a quarter. Compared to Q1 2016, funding dollars to seed stage companies have also dropped, down by nearly 50%. So where is the money flowing? Series A deals have become the most funded round, pulling in just over a quarter billion dollars.
startuphealth.com/reports
47%
Workflow
Big Data/Analytics
Research
Patient/Consumer Experience
Medical Devices
E-Commerce
Diagnostics
5 3 2 1 03 8 3 2 1
4 5 2 1 0
2 4 4 0 0
1 1 3 2 1
3 1 1 2 0
2 1 1 1 0
1 1 1 0 0
0 0 1 0 1
0 0 0 1 0
0 1 0 0 0
0 1 0 0 0
Population Health
Personalized Health/Quantified Self
Wellness
Education/Training
Clinical Decision Support
Seed Series A Series B Series C Series D
DEALS & FUNDING
MARKET MATURITY MAP 2017
GEOGRAPHY INVESTORS
More funding activity Less funding activity
11Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
CAREGIVING
At 26 deals, Series A rounds were the most active stage of investment in the first quarter of 2017. By sector, population health and patient/consumer experience had the highest deal counts.
startuphealth.com/reports
INVESTORS
Region Ranking by Deal Count
1 SF Bay
2 New York City
3 Boston
4 Los Angeles
5 Washington, DC
6 Chicago
7 Charlotte
8 Denver
9 Seattle
10 San Diego
$23M$48M
$181M
$10M
$408M
San Francisco Bay Area*
Denver Metro
San Diego Metro
New York City Metro
Boston Metro
$54M
Chicago Metro
$14M
Seattle Metro
$14MCharlotte
Metro
(2 Deals)
(2 Deals)
(24 Deals)
(2 Deals)(3 Deals)
(3 Deals)
(8 Deals)
(6 Deals)
Los Angeles Metro
$120M(5 Deals)
Washington, DC Metro
$40M
(4 Deals)
DEALS & FUNDING GEOGRAPHY
THE MOST ACTIVE US METRO AREAS OF 2017
12Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
CAREGIVING
*Excludes GRAIL’s $900M Funding Round
With five deals totaling $120 million in the first quarter of this year, Los Angeles continues to grow as a hotspot for digital health funding and is beginning to catch up to hubs like Boston and New York.
startuphealth.com/reports
Firm 2017 YTD Deals 2016 Q1 Deals StageEarly Mid Late
1 4 1
2 3 -
2 3 3
DEALS & FUNDING
THE TOP INVESTORS OF 2017
INVESTORSGEOGRAPHY
13Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
CAREGIVING
Venrock leads the pack with four deals this quarter and many investors following suit with 2-3 deals - an increase from their previous Q1 deals.
22 other organizations invested in 2 deals this quarter*
*Excluding Pre-Seed and Accelerator Rounds
A Spotlight on Caregiving sponsored by
*Data sourced and provided by:
* Data in following section is separate from StartUp Health Insights.
DEALS & FUNDING INVESTORSGEOGRAPHY
Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
CAREGIVING
14startuphealth.com/reports
By 2020, 117 million Americans are expected to need assistance of some kind, yet the overall number of unpaid caregivers is only expected to reach 45 million. Technology holds great promise for helping to reduce the complexities, stress, and sheer hard work of these caregivers. Companies from established multinationals to startups, mass-market firms to niche players, are recognizing this caregiving market opportunity that’s expected to reach $72 billion in 2020 alone.
15
DEALS & FUNDING INVESTORSGEOGRAPHY
Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
CAREGIVING
CAREGIVING INVESTMENT LANDSCAPE
startuphealth.com/reports
There continues to be a focus on funding technologies that make daily essential activities easier, including transportation, food delivery and other services that provide value to everyday tasks and errands. Instacart led the pack this quarter with a substantial half-billion dollar raise. Interestingly, Health & safety awareness led with most deals, albeit in much earlier stages.
47%
45%
26%
Category Raised YTD Deal Count Average Deal Size Notable Deal
1 Daily Essential Activities $497M 15 $33.1M
2 Care Coordination $172M 14 $12.3M
3 Health & Safety Awareness $130M 20 $6.5M
4 Social Well-being $119M 5 $24M
5 Transition Support $22M 7 $3.1M
6 Caregiver Quality of Life $8M 6 $1.3M
* Includes company funding in multiple categories
16
DEALS & FUNDING INVESTORSGEOGRAPHY
Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
CAREGIVING
startuphealth.com/reports
CAREGIVING MARKET INVESTMENTS OF Q1 2017
47%
45%
26%
Notable Deal Total Raised YTD Notable Investor Category
1 $400M Daily Essential Activities
2 $115M Care Coordination
3 $100M Social Well-being
4 $35M Daily Essential Activities
5 $30M Health & Safety Awareness
6 $21M Care Coordination
7 $17M Health & Safety Awareness
8 $15M Daily Essential Activities
8 $15M Transition Support
8 $15M Health & Safety Awareness
While not counted in StartUp Health’s data as a digital health deal, Instacart’s half-billion dollar raise signaled a resurgence in home food delivery with a a personalized spin.
17
DEALS & FUNDING INVESTORSGEOGRAPHY
Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
CAREGIVING
startuphealth.com/reports
CAREGIVING MARKET TOP DEALS OF Q1 2017
CAREGIVING MARKET MATURITY MAP OF Q1 2017
47%
Care coordination demonstrated highly active early-stage investments this quarter whereas daily essential activities received more late-stage funding.
3 5 2 1 0
1 2 6 0 1
0 4 2 1 2
4 0 1 0 0
2 0 3 1 0
0 2 0 0 0
Seed/Angel Series A Series B Series C Series D
Care Coordination
Caregiver Quality of Life
Health & Safety Awareness
Social Wellbeing
* Includes company funding in multiple categories
Daily Essential Activities
Transition Support
18
DEALS & FUNDING INVESTORSGEOGRAPHY
Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
CAREGIVING
startuphealth.com/reports
Firm 2016 YTD Deals Notable Deal StageEarly Mid Late
1 3
2 2
2 2
2 2
2 2
2 2
2 22 22 22 2
19
DEALS & FUNDING INVESTORSGEOGRAPHY
Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
CAREGIVING
startuphealth.com/reports
CAREGIVING MARKET VENTURE INVESTORS OF 2017 Q1Health Enterprise Partners was the most active firm with three deals in Q1 2017. Many other VCs invested in two deals, including participation in the large Instacart deal by Kleiner Perkins, Y Combinator and Funders Club.
startuphealth.com/reports1
Sectors: • We have a broad view of digital health and believe that the current trend is a
cross-pollination of technology and data with all aspects of health and healthcare. StartUp Health InsightsTM tracks companies that enable health, wellness and the delivery of care through data / analytics, sensors, mobile, internet-of-things, 3D printing and genomics and personalized medicine.
• StartUp Health tracks companies based on their sectors, subsectors and specialties. Investments in subsectors and specialties are not mutually exclusive, as deals are tagged with multiple subsectors and specialties based on the company’s focus.
• 2015 brought with it an extensive database quality assessment. A new system was implemented allowing StartUp Health to track innovation with enhanced granularity. Additionally, gaps in funding data were researched and added into our database enabling us to identify fundings previously unaccounted for in previous reports.
Stages of Funding: • StartUp Health InsightsTM records only publicly available data on cash for equity
investments as the cash is actually received by the company. StartUp Health InsightsTM is inclusive of accelerator, pre-seed, seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding.
• Early stage: The company has raised a Seed or Series A round • Mid stage: The company has raised a Series B or Series C round • Late stage: The company has raised a Series D or other growth equity round • StartUp Health also tracks incubator rounds and other financings into privately-
held entities (e.g. “unnamed” venture rounds, strategic investments, growth equity and private equity).
• In tabulating deal activity by stage we excluded rounds not clearly associated with a specific stage.
Sources: • Funding data is from StartUp Health InsightsTM, the most comprehensive
funding database for digital health, and managed by the StartUp Health team. Information, data and figures represent only publicly available data.
• Data for acquisitions slide was provided by a range of sources including StartUp Health InsightsTM, CrunchBase, AngelList and news reports.
• StartUp Health works to ensure that the information contained in the StartUp Health InsightsTM Report has been obtained from reliable sources. However, StartUp Health cannot warrant the ultimate validity of the data obtained in this manner. All data is subject to verification with the venture capital firms and/or the investee companies. Results are updated periodically. Therefore, all data is subject to change at any time.
• If you find an error, please let us know so we can correct it.
This report is provided for informational purposes and was prepared in good faith on the basis of public information available at the time of publication without independent verification. StartUp Health does not guarantee or warrant the reliability or completeness of the data nor its usefulness in achieving any particular purposes. StartUp Health shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense incurred by reason of any persons use or reliance on this report. This report is a proprietary aggregation of publicly available data and shall not be forwarded or reproduced without the written consent of StartUp Health.
METHODOLOGIES
20Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC
startuphealth.com/reports
STARTUP HEALTH’S GROWING ARMY
21Source: StartUp Health Insights | startuphealth.com/insights Note: Report based on public data on seed, venture, corporate venture and private equity funding only. © 2017 StartUp Health LLC