The most up-to-date, comprehensive, and accurate source of data. Your organization can access profiles of every active provider in the U.S.—over 3.5 million.
See how we’ve helped leading healthcare organizations achieve significant cost savings, improve data accuracy, and enhance patient care. Here, you will find our results, research, reports, and everything else our scientists are testing in the Veda Lab – no lab coat required.
At Veda we understand that every data point is an opportunity to improve the healthcare experience. And we can see the potential when data is no longer a barrier.
5 Vital Lessons for Entrepreneurial Leaders: Strategic Breaks for Success
ENTREPRENEUR – Veda Data’s CEO and CO-Founder Meghan Gaffney talks valuable lessons for entrepreneurial leaders. These lessons include engaging with diverse entrepreneurs, promoting continuous learning, overcoming gender bias, the importance of big thinking, and remembering that leadership requires ongoing strategic thinking. Discover how taking time away enables entrepreneurs to rejuvenate and gain valuable insights that help improve leadership.
Like you, I have big goals for my company and know that getting lost in the minutiae won’t get me there. Taking time away for personal and professional development ensures you remember to look up.
As founders and leaders, if we just keep our heads down and focus solely on getting tasks done, we miss critical opportunities for big thinking. The kind of thinking that leads to growth and transformation. The kind of thinking that can impact the trajectory of a young company. And to be honest, the kind of thinking that is necessary of leaders and founders and those of us responsible for the vision of our companies. Here’s what I learned when I took the time to step away from the day-to-day.
1. Lessons from outside your industry are invaluable
As startups, we are often able to bring an important outside perspective to the industries we operate in. We’re disruptors who think differently and aren’t constrained by legacy norms that can slow down innovation.
But then we grow and there is a shift that happens. Instead of bringing the outside perspective, we sometimes find ourselves needing an outside perspective. That’s why it’s critical to spend time developing important relationships with peers outside of our sector.
Other innovators will look at a problem (and solution) with fresh eyes and help ground us in the innovator role we built our company on. We can learn from the experiences they’ve had, even if we serve different industries. Read the full article from Entrepreneur:5 Vital Lessons for Entrepreneurial Leaders
CEO Meghan Gaffney Selected for EY Entrepreneurial Winning Women™ North America Class of 2023
Veda’s Meghan Gaffney Selected for EY Entrepreneurial Winning Women™ North America Class of 2023
Ernst & Young LLP (EY) is proud to announce that Meghan Gaffney, CEO of Veda, a health technology provider specializing in accurate, curated provider data, is one of the 23 women founders from 20 companies selected for the EY Entrepreneurial Winning Women™ North America (Winning Women) Class of 2023.
Now in its 16th year, the program identifies talented entrepreneurs with scalable companies in the United States and Canada and connects them with the networks and resources they need to accelerate growth and scale their businesses.
Participants receive customized executive education, introductions, and access to the Winning Women community around the world, as well as the entirety of the EY global entrepreneurial ecosystem, including members of the Entrepreneur Of The Year® and EY Entrepreneurs Access Network (EAN) programs.
“Women founders contribute trillions to the US economy, and studies have shown that when women are empowered, the economy grows,” said EY Americas Industry and Solutions Leader Cheryl Grise, who also serves as the EY Entrepreneurial Winning Women North America Program Executive Sponsor. “At EY, we believe that a rising tide lifts all boats, so the success of women impacts the success of every business,” said Grise. “Over the last 16 years, the Winning Women program has intentionally addressed societal gender-based challenges that often confront women entrepreneurs by providing these phenomenally talented businesspeople with greater access, guidance and knowledge, which are the tools they need to continue to break the mold, inspire innovation and be shamelessly ambitious. I welcome these women to the fold and look forward to seeing them do even bigger and greater things.”
Cheryl Grise
Members of the Winning Women Class of 2023 have ambition, creativity and a desire to build a better world in common. They are tackling problems from inclusivity, to offering healthier products and food, to solving for complex health care issues. Others are bringing to the table innovative solutions in supply chain, data management, marketing and more. The founders selected for the program display unparalleled ingenuity, business prowess, ambition in crafting solutions and a formidable can-do attitude that allowed them to break from the pack of their peers to stand out.
“2023 has been filled with many economic ups and downs – from geopolitical unrest, to interrupted supply chains, to inflation – there has been plenty to make consumers tighten their belts” said Maranda Bruckner, EY Entrepreneurial Winning Women North America Program Leader. “I applaud these business leaders for not only surviving these challenges, but exceeding growth and profit expectations when others did not. They are outstanding examples of being unstoppable and shifting entire industries. We are excited to have them in the program, and deeply congratulate them on this recognition.”
The EY Entrepreneurial Winning Women North America program serves women business owners who are founding CEOs of any US or Canadian privately held company. Company revenues typically range from at least $2m to $30m annually. The EY Entrepreneurial Winning Women program participants become part of a global peer community, which includes more than 900 entrepreneurs in 55 countries and on every continent.
“Every year, I am so pleased to welcome the newest class of the EY Entrepreneurial Winning Women North America program, who are not only incredible leaders in their organizations but also in their communities,” said Lee Henderson, Americas EY Private Leader. “It is an honor to provide these best-in-class founders with resources and access to EY’s vast entrepreneurial ecosystem to help them scale, attract talent and disrupt industries. I am always excited to see where these entrepreneurs go next. I already know it’s only up from here.”
The Class of 2023 will be officially recognized in November 2023 at the Strategic Growth Forum®, one of the nation’s most prestigious events for ambitious, high-growth, market-leading business leaders.
About Veda Veda blends science and imagination to solve healthcare’s most complex data issues. Through human-in-the-loop Smart Automation, our solutions dramatically increase productivity, enable compliance, and empower healthcare businesses to focus on delivering care. Veda is simple to use and requires no technical skills or drastic system changes because we envision a future for healthcare where data isn’t a barrier—it’s an opportunity. To learn more about Veda, visit vedadata.com and follow us on LinkedIn.
About EY EY exists to build a better working world, helping create long-term value for clients, people and society and build trust in the capital markets.
Enabled by data and technology, diverse EY teams in over 150 countries provide trust through assurance and help clients grow, transform and operate.
Working across assurance, consulting, law, strategy, tax and transactions, EY teams ask better questions to find new answers for the complex issues facing our world today.
EY refers to the global organization, and may refer to one or more, of the member firms of Ernst & Young Global Limited, each of which is a separate legal entity. Ernst & Young Global Limited, a UK company limited by guarantee, does not provide services to clients. Information about how EY collects and uses personal data and a description of the rights individuals have under data protection legislation are available via ey.com/privacy. EY member firms do not practice law where prohibited by local laws. For more information about our organization, please visit ey.com.
Ernst & Young LLP is a client-serving member firm of Ernst & Young Global Limited operating in the US.
About EY Entrepreneurial Winning Women™ The EY organization is committed to seeing women lead. EY Entrepreneurial Winning Women™ is a global program for successful entrepreneurs whose successful businesses show more potential to scale. Through access to global EY networks throughout the entrepreneurial ecosystem, pioneering founders on every continent secure the resources, advice and connections they need to scale their businesses sustainably. This one-of-a-kind community of founders is rewriting rules and remaking markets. Visit ey.com/us/winningwomen.
About EY Private As Advisors to the ambitious™, EY Private professionals possess the experience and passion to support private businesses and their owners in unlocking the full potential of their ambitions. EY Private teams offer distinct insights born from the long EY history of working with business owners and entrepreneurs. These teams support the full spectrum of private enterprises, including private capital managers and investors and the portfolio businesses they fund, business owners, family businesses, family offices and entrepreneurs. Visit ey.com/us/private.
Entrepreneur: 3 Ways Women Founders Can Leverage Their Value on Women’s Equality Day — and Beyond
Women founders lead in different ways than their male counterparts and data is showing how beneficial that is. This Entrepreneur article by Veda CEO Meghan Gaffney covers three things for women entrepreneurs to keep in mind throughout their journey.
Meghan Gaffney is Co-Founder and CEO of Veda, a company that blends science and imagination to solve healthcare’s most complex data issues with human-in-the-loop Smart Automation. Meghan has over 15 years of experience working with elected officials and impact organizations, as well as consulting on technology opportunities. She is a passionate advocate for artificial intelligence and machine learning and believes these technologies will create unprecedented economic opportunities for the United States and the world.
Thank you so much for joining us in this interview series! Can you tell us a story about what brought you to this specific career path?
I stumbled into this career after having built a first career for myself in politics and policy. I worked in D.C. around the time the Affordable Care Act was being legislated, and that was actually what inspired me to focus specifically on healthcare. I kept hearing about all the administrative waste in the industry and the lack of solutions to address it–and I knew this was going to become my mission.
Can you tell us a story about the hard times that you faced when you first started your journey?
When I was working to take Veda from an idea to a reality, it was one of the most challenging periods of my life. As a woman in a male-dominated space, who had never worked directly in the actual industry I was trying to disrupt, it took a long time to feel the confidence I projected outwardly during all those early business pitches.
I immediately felt a sense of imposter syndrome when Veda landed its first customer, and I began our investor search.
Where did you get the drive to continue even though things were so hard?
When I was navigating the healthcare industry as a single mom, I was frustrated by the amount of time I put into things I felt should be simple–like finding an in-network doctor for my son. Not to mention how much time I spent in waiting rooms filling out paperwork instead of being with my kids. I took that frustration and turned it into a conviction to develop technology that could give people back their time and allow them to turn their attention to the things they care about. That applies as much to mothers and fathers as it does to providers and insurers.
So, how are things going today? How did grit and resilience lead to your eventual success?
Things are going exceedingly well. It’s been an exciting time, particularly since the pandemic, which accelerated our business but, of course, took a lot of grit and resilience. One step I took was focusing on building a strong executive team. This allowed me to have my role shift from exclusively driving to also listening, learning, and taking in the skills and lessons that my executive team has to offer. I’m always learning, and it makes my job exciting because I’m seeing how to elevate the company by listening to people who have done this before. Grit doesn’t just have to come from within–I’ve learned it’s ok, it’s actually beneficial, to lean on others.
Can you share a story about the funniest mistake you made when you were first starting? Can you tell us what lesson you learned from that?
If I think back to the early days, there are many I could mention. One that will always stand out came about when we were ready to sign one of our first big potential contracts with a large national health plan. We were excited about finalizing the contract, but we quickly realized that our business couldn’t operate out of my co-founder’s basement! We needed an actual business address to execute this contract and everyone after that. There were so many logistical things we hadn’t dealt with yet because our business was growing so quickly. Of course, with this contract, we quickly secured office space and a secure network, and that really elevated our team’s morale, in addition to the practical aspects!
What do you think makes your company stand out? Can you share a story?
One of the things that has remained consistent within our company from the very first day until today is that while we have a very technical product, when it comes to our culture, we have kept the focus on our people. One of the first examples I think of is earlier on, during the COVID-19 pandemic, I realized that we wouldn’t be seeing our colleagues in the office any time soon. So, I drove to every one of our employees’ houses and took a walk with them, just to check in with everyone and ensure we continued to build our relationships. Whether it’s virtual or in-person lunches with teams across the company or going for a walk, we are still doing that today and I believe it’s key to making our business thrive.
Which tips would you recommend to your colleagues in your industry to help them to thrive and not “burn out”?
The biggest piece that has been so helpful for me is building a team that is full of smart, hardworking, and trustworthy people. When you have a great team, you’re able to take a step back when you need to. It’s so reassuring to know that when you take a vacation, you have a team you fully trust, and that business will continue as usual. In fact, I think the test for any new founder is if they able to take a vacation. That’s how you know you’re doing things right!
None of us are able to achieve success without some help along the way. Is there a particular person who you are grateful towards who helped get you to where you are? Can you share a story?
I will always be so grateful to my co-founder and partner, Dr. Bob Lindner. We met in 2015 through a mutual friend and connected over our shared vision of creating real impact for people. He was an astrophysicist who agreed to come along on this wild ride of transforming healthcare with me, and he’s supported me in my founder’s journey from the beginning. After a pitch presentation that truly knocked down my confidence, Bob took me aside and said to me, “I see you.” He meant that he could see how much of myself I’d poured into Veda and how hard I’d worked. “I see you” became a mantra for me, that reminded me that I was enough, and I could build this company, whenever I started to falter.
How have you used your success to bring goodness to the world?
Most of the technological solutions being built today in healthcare are focused on improving the patient experience — which is a dire need. But the industry can’t fully deliver on the promise of patient-centered care until all the problems and inefficiencies within its infrastructure are addressed, like its estimated $1 trillion in administrative spend. In 2021, we saved health plans thousands of hours of processing time and countless dollars, and those insurers gained time and resources to focus where they are passionate — keeping members healthy.
What are your “5 things I wish someone told me before I started leading my company” and why. Please share a story or example for each.
Be Ready For Your Moment to Accelerate. For many of you, at some point in your journey, outside forces in the universe will align to create an opportunity for accelerated growth. When that happens, you need to be open and ready to take on these new challenges and see the opening for your business. For example, during the pandemic, my company had to evolve our business strategy, and make much more solid cases to our potential customers, not to mention our investors. But as a result of our hard work, and our laser focus on solving our customers’ problems, which changed a bit due to this global crisis, we were very successful. And we felt good about it, because we were able to help keep the healthcare system going at a critical time.
Every “no” gets you closer to a “yes”. I got this advice from my dad, who taught us as kids to always get up and keep going after getting knocked down. I’ve needed to remind myself to keep going even as people challenged me with questions like “. Can I run this company while also raising young kids?” That’s an actual question asked of me by an investor! To me, I took this as a sign that those weren’t the people who were the right partners for me. And that’s just one example of many “punches” I took on this founder path. But I was patient, and when the right people came along that truly saw our vision and wanted to see me and our company succeed, I welcomed them with open arms.
Integrate points of view and expertise from outside your industry. Me and many of my colleagues at Veda come from non-traditional, non-healthcare backgrounds. While we may not have all taken the traditional industry path, when we combine our areas of expertise, we see that we’re actually able to make a huge positive impact on people’s health. We were able to look at problems many had deemed unsolvable and find solutions, because we brought scientific, policy, and a host of other areas of expertise. And then, of course, we also made sure we studied the healthcare industry and that we made strategic hires with deep expertise in health.
Building the right C-suite and full team will take time–but it’s worth the wait. There’s no rulebook for how to build your C-suite, your larger team, and your company culture. My advice is to hire people who will challenge you, push your boundaries on innovation, and share different perspectives, particularly in your C-suite. Once you have the right team backing you, your business will truly take off. As an example, our Chief People Officer actually comes from the hospitality industry, and I knew when we met her that she had that inquisitive mind that we value at Veda. Her dominating skill was challenging people to reach to achieve and build a business to accelerate their success. She challenges me and offers different viewpoints and makes sure that ALL of our people are fulfilled.
It’s never too early to protect any IP your company creates. We started filing for patents right away at my company–our initial investors actually thought we were nuts! But I argue that this is a strategy every tech company should follow. Why? Because it takes a really long time to go through the process–from application to securing patents, we were looking at years, not months or weeks. It’s really important when you’re fully confident in what you have built, that you start ensuring it’s protected. That’s not just important for you–it’s crucial for your customers. A strong IP portfolio is an outstanding competitive differentiator, certainly in health tech and absolutely in the broader tech industry as well.
Can you share a few ideas or stories from your experience about how to successfully ride the emotional highs & lows of being a founder”?
It’s amazing to be a woman representing other women in health tech, but it’s not always easy, especially when running your own company. I’ve found the highs are just as impactful as the lows and I’ve carried resilience and confidence with me through my entire founder’s journey. I love mentoring and speaking to other women about how to have confidence and pursue their dreams. I know I’m privileged in my position, and I do my best to share lessons learned and kick a hole through every glass ceiling.
You are a person of great influence. If you could start a movement that would bring the most amount of good to the most amount of people, what would that be? You never know what your idea can trigger. 🙂
I spend a lot of time thinking about how to create a technology community? that reflects the communities we serve. Oftentimes, the people who have the greatest experience with the healthcare challenges that technology should be solving face barriers from becoming the innovators to address them.
How can our readers further follow your work online?
Veda’s provider data solutions help healthcare organizations reduce manual work, meet compliance requirements, and improve member experience through accurate provider directories. Select your path to accurate data.
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