We are fixing US healthcare by building an AI-native physical care platform, starting with home health.
Home health is a $140B industry with less than $10B in EBITDA — 40% of revenue is spent on pure administrative waste. We automate this work with AI, creating a fundamentally different cost structure compared to incumbents. This lets us rapidly take market share by serving the 30% of patients who go untreated today.
By reshaping the cost structure of this industry, we unlock its growth.
We’ve built one of the best AI teams in the world (from Character AI, Scale, Palantir, Citadel, Jane Street) and paired them with a team of healthcare veterans and ex-MBB strategists to build a new type of healthcare company: one that delivers care at the speed of an AI company.
Our physical care platform already operates with 30pp higher gross margins than traditional home health providers. With our AI advantage, we pay nurses more, remove their admin burden, and unlock the scale economics that have been missing from this fragmented industry. If we served this entire $140B market, instead of $10B in EBITDA, we’d drive $60B.
We're starting with home health, then expanding to all delivered care. Our mission is “any care, any where”.
Fundamentally, our incentives are aligned with America. Every dollar in revenue we make is two dollars taken out of the healthcare system. If we succeed, so does US healthcare.
We're building an AI operating system that automates the entire back office of home health—collapsing 20+ traditional roles into 2. To win, we need someone who owns the operational stack: the complex, high-leverage workflows where automation meets the real world of patient care.
You will own critical operational domains end-to-end, get deep into the workflows that drive care delivery and revenue, and work directly with product and engineering to ensure we build the right solutions. Think of it as a blend of:
Operational strategy (decide which workflows to optimize and in what sequence—these choices determine how fast we scale and which patients we can serve)
Workflow mastery (map real processes step-by-step, find the leverage points where better systems change the economics of care delivery)
Cross-functional translation (bridge the gap between operators, clinicians, and engineers—turn messy real-world complexity into crisp requirements that ship)
You'll be one of the earliest operational leaders at the company, working directly with the founders, engineering, and operations to build the systems that power care delivery across the USA. This role is an operations track that also supports people still figuring out what they want to grow into—strategic finance, product leadership, P&L ownership, or a COO-style path depending on where you spike.
This role is designed for you if you have a low ego, love solving problems that matter, and are ready to build an industry-changing company.
You'll own high-impact, ambiguous problems end-to-end, such as:
1. Own operational domains and drive cross-functional initiatives
Own end-to-end planning and execution for one or more operational areas: Intake (referral processing, eligibility, scheduling), Clinical operations (documentation workflows, QA), RCM (prior auth, collections, billing), or growth and partnerships
Scope, plan, and deliver strategic initiatives that integrate software solutions and operational improvements—you're the connective tissue between what operators need and what engineering builds
Build new teams and departments as the company scales—you'll be at the forefront of standing up the functions that don't exist yet
Oversee and develop a team of operators, setting priorities, removing blockers, and raising the bar on execution quality
2. Get deep into the workflows you're improving
Spend time with operators and clinicians to map processes step-by-step: inputs, outputs, handoffs, exceptions, failure modes
Identify the bottlenecks that matter—where time, cost, or errors concentrate—and prioritize ruthlessly
Own real-world care and financial outcomes for your domains
3. Turn complex problems into crisp specs and recommendations
Break down ambiguous operational problems into clear requirements, user stories, and acceptance criteria that engineering can build against
Use analytical rigor—qualitative user insights and quantitative modeling—to drive decisions and prioritize investments
Provide strategic recommendations on business-critical decisions: pricing, deployment strategy, product expansion, operational scaling
4. Build and lead your team
Hire, onboard, and manage operators who run the day-to-day workflows in your domain—you own the talent pipeline for your function
Set clear expectations, run regular feedback cycles, and create an environment where operators do the best work of their careers
Design team structures and roles that scale with the business—today's scrappy squad becomes tomorrow's department
5. Define the metrics that move the business
Identify the KPIs that matter for your operational domains and the business
Build dashboards and tracking that make your domain's impact legible to the whole company
Know the perverse incentives your metrics might create and design around them
2–4 years in management consulting, investment banking/private equity, product operations, or similar analytically rigorous environments (e.g., MBB, high-velocity startups, complex operational systems, workflow automation companies)
Proven track record of owning and executing complex projects involving multiple stakeholders and workstreams—you can articulate the load-bearing decisions and why they mattered
Analytical depth: comfort with Claude Code, SQL, Excel modeling, and self-serving data analysis to guide decisions
Exceptional written and verbal communication—able to synthesize complex topics clearly and concisely
Owner mindset: you want to be accountable for outcomes end-to-end—you unblock yourself, escalate when necessary, and iterate quickly
Operationally curious: you love getting into the weeds of how work actually happens—you ask about exceptions, handoffs, and failure modes
Team builder: you attract talent, develop people, and create high-performing teams—you take as much pride in your team's growth as your own
Versatile generalist: you spike in at least one of workflow/system design, financial analysis, relationship management, or product thinking—and you pick up the rest fast
Clear communicator: you have precise, succinct written communication that moves people to action
Comfort with ambiguity: you can operate from zero-to-one and thrive in environments where the playbook doesn't exist yet
Low ego: this is a startup—you want to get scrappy
Experience in healthcare operations or technology—intake, clinical documentation, revenue cycle management
Experience leading initiatives involving operationally complex workflows (e.g., call centers, service delivery, logistics)
Background building or optimizing labor-intensive, process-driven systems where automation and human expertise work side by side
Technical fluency: you can confidently engage with engineers and understand concepts like APIs, schemas, latency, and security
Healthcare experience (we'll support your learning curve, but you must be an autodidact who will quickly familiarize yourself with the details of the industry)
A Special Projects Lead can expect to make a competitive base + equity, with strong upside given performance and our expansion
Comprehensive benefits including medical, dental, and 401(k) matching
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