Yes, there are Monopolies in Orthopedics, and they are fantastic!
A few savvy orthopedic companies create a new category or new procedure, that result in zero competition. These are real Monopoly businesses and they typically don’t last long. The copy-cats and fast-followers react, or an acquirer buys them and ruins it.
For your career, you want to find a Monopoly early, join them and ride the wave.
The benefits of working in a Monopoly business.
In a Monopoly business, you will be the only solution in your new category.
Surgeons will seek out and find you (pull versus push).
Your Sales/Marketing team will have a tail wind.
Distribution partners will beg to carry your product.
You will dictate pricing (there Is no comparable) without negotiation.
You will have the leverage in all negotiations.
Life is good.
What are some examples of real Monopolies?
Kyphon (kyphoplasty)
MAKO (MAKOplasty, first useable TJR robot)
SpineTech (the first cage)
Ellipse Technologies (remote control implants like MAGEC)
Active Implants (total meniscus replacement to delay TKA)
Trice Medical (dynamic joint diagnosis in Drs office)
Active Protective (Tango, smart airbag belt to prevent hip FXs)
Treace Medical Concepts (brand monopoly in bunions called Lapiplasty)
These guys literally had ZERO competition in the early years.
The pain of working in the non-Monopoly businesss
On the pain side are commodity businesses. Today there are around 250 spine startups. Every single week, a spine startup will die or get acquired, then next week a new spine startup one will be born. The majority of these 250 spine companies are selling “me too” spine devices – pedicle screws, cages, rods, cross-links, plates, etc.
The message here is to avoid commodity markets like “spine hardware” as they have many built-in challenges.
Pricing competition
Thin implant margins
Higher cost of sales
No leverage in contract negotiations
10 sales reps calling on the same spine surgeon selling roughly the same products.
Life is a grind.
In a commodity business there is simply too much selling friction and too much noise to get attention in the marketplace. Look around at NASS. You don’t want to play in a market that is super-competitive. It’s like running one of 250 restaurants in your neighborhood.