Building in regulated industries adds a huge hurdle to the already difficult journey of building a startup. And this week on Build Mode, Startup Battlefield editor Isabelle Johannessen spoke with two founders who are working to make headway in industries ripe for disruption despite regulatory headaches that might have deterred many other people.
In this episode, we talk about life and death and how regulatory permission doesn’t have to hinder innovation, but will lengthen timelines and require careful planning from the jump.
Isabelle was joined for the first time by Gabriel Sanchez, its CEO and co-founder Enspectra Health. The company has built a device that aims to eliminate the need for skin biopsies by dermatologists. Sanchez breaks down the decade-long journey to get FDA clearance. Throughout the interview, Sanchez offers regular advice to anyone in the midst of a lengthy regulatory process and explains how he’s kept his company afloat and his team motivated despite the uncertainties.
Isabelle then talks to Tom Harries, its co-founder Funeral of the Earthan end-of-life startup that has developed a new process that turns human remains into soil. Harris hasn’t had to take his team through a lengthy FDA approval process (because the FDA mostly deals with the living), but his company has faced its own legislative challenges. Earth Funeral started at a time when its alternative procedure was legal in only one state. And while its path to expansion does not depend on accreditation or approval from a government agency, it does depend on lawmakers and voters who may be uncomfortable with a new way to lay a loved one to rest.
New episodes of Build Mode drop every Thursday. Subscribe to the podcast or watch YouTube. Isabelle Johannessen is our host. Build Mode is produced and edited by Maggie Nye. Head of Audience Development is Morgan Little. And a special thanks to the Foundry and Cheddar video teams.
