EO StudioEven U.S. presidents failed to fix this, but he's solving it | MedMe Health, Purya Sarmadi
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
MedMe’s pivots turned pharmacies into scalable community healthcare hubs
- MedMe iterated through four pivots, learning that being wrong about the initial product “wedge” doesn’t mean the overall healthcare market thesis is wrong.
- The company’s breakthrough came from identifying an underserved pharmacy workflow where customers would consolidate tools and feel immediate pain if MedMe disappeared.
- COVID validated the thesis that pharmacies could deliver clinical services at scale, driving MedMe’s growth from ~100 to nearly 1,200 pharmacies in about 2.5 months.
- Sarmadi argues pharmacies will thrive by leaning into clinical, relationship-based care that tech can’t replace, while software automates operations and enables new services.
- He highlights co-founder health as existential: defeatist criticism can break trust, while the “candle principle” frames a founder’s job as keeping each other’s motivation lit through volatility.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasDon’t confuse a bad wedge with a bad market.
Sarmadi kept conviction in healthcare while repeatedly changing the entry point (product focus). The pivots weren’t wasted—they created a growing dataset of customer insight that narrowed the best wedge.
A strong wedge is proven by dependency, not compliments.
The signal MedMe looked for was: if the product disappears tomorrow, the customer’s day gets worse. One pharmacy canceling multiple subscriptions to rely solely on MedMe was a decisive validation.
Pharmacies can become clinical hubs because access is already solved.
With most people living near a pharmacy, the bottleneck is not location but capacity and workflow. Software that enables consultative services (vaccines, testing, monitoring) unlocks that latent infrastructure.
Timing plus readiness can create step-function growth.
COVID forced pharmacies to deliver physical clinical services, matching MedMe’s direction and accelerating adoption from ~100 to ~1,200 pharmacies in a short window. The lesson is to build toward a thesis that external shocks can validate.
Compete where technology can’t fully substitute: trusted longitudinal care.
Online pharmacies may win on logistics and unit economics, but relationship-based guidance—knowing a patient’s history, preferences, and context—remains difficult to replace. MedMe positions tech as an enabler of that human advantage.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesIf you have conviction around the market, don't give up on the market.
— Purya Sarmadi
Like, if you're a first-time founder, don't mistake being in the wrong wedge as being in the wrong market.
— Purya Sarmadi
If you were to say, "Hey, we won't exist tomorrow," and they would say, "Well, if you don't exist tomorrow, my life will be worse," then you knew that you have the right wedge.
— Purya Sarmadi
Literally in a two-and-a-half month period, we went from near 100 pharmacies to almost 1,200 pharmacies.
— Purya Sarmadi
As a good co-founder, one of your main responsibilities is to make sure both yours and your co-founder's candle stays alight.
— Purya Sarmadi
High quality AI-generated summary created from speaker-labeled transcript.