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Evaluate a Company’s Regulatory and Quality ‘Health’ Before Investing

When asked whether he hires consultants to help him make investment decisions in the medtech space, an angel investor friend of mine once told me,  “spending $5,000–$10,000 on somebody to give me a thumbs up for a $50,000 financial commitment seems like a waste of money.” He elaborated, “If I have to spend 10–20% of the prospective investment on finding out if I should make that investment, I’m not moving forward.” Within a seed round, angels and early-stage investors will often evaluate companies based on their own experiences and expertise while leveraging internal networks to help guide them as needed. In this context, my friend’s advice makes sense.

However, what happens when the stakes are quite a bit higher?

In the medtech and  biotech space, organic expansion is dwindling, and acquisition is the preferred growth mechanism. More and more large organizations are scooping up nascent companies in order to expand existing portfolios or enter new markets. Most of these buys are happening when a start-up is no longer a start-up but a viable, post-revenue generating company with meaningful valuation and actual, realized value.

This type of opportunity makes investors—private, VCs and corporate strategics alike—salivate and eager to get their hands on these “shiny, new toys.” For the most part, these acquisitions are preceded by deep due diligence that involves vetting the founders and the team, product, market, advisors, and strategic decisions as well as a thorough review of the financials. As some investors say, “We see them in their underwear.”

However, the due diligence often fails to adequately assess a company’s regulatory and quality “health”, which leads to more painful and expensive navigation of FDA and EU submissions downstream. This failure, along with inadequate quality management system readiness, sometimes leads to a company requiring more capital than previously anticipated or worse, results in expensive regulatory actions.

Here are some tips to ensure that your investment in a company isn’t derailed by regulatory or quality unpreparedness:

Regulatory and quality obstacles can present huge hurdles for medtech companies seeking to go to or remain in the market. Investors can reap significant rewards by investing in the right companies, but distinguishing the right company from a lost cause involves a lot more due diligence on the regulatory front than most groups are performing. Invest in respected consultants on the front-end to save yourself from the trouble on the back end.

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