How Ash provides critical health diagnostics in the comfort of home

Dorm Room Fund
3 min readMar 4, 2022
Ash co-founders David Stein (right) and Nick Sempere (left) after a recent health tech happy hour hosted at Ash’s new office space in downtown Manhattan. Courtesy of David Stein.

Co-founders David Stein, Kyle Waters, Mio Akasako, and Nick Sempere met at Cornell Tech’s master's programs to launch a D2C company for at-home sexual health testing focused on the queer and LGTBQ+ communities. They were driven by the personal pain points they’d experienced accessing these services as queer individuals.

But when COVID hit, social distancing regulations led to a lack of demand for many of their initial sexual health products, and also created greater demand for at-home testing as many healthcare professionals were unable to reach their patients face-to-face. Ash pivoted to serve these patients as the at-home diagnostics provider for a range of healthcare needs.

In a lightly edited transcript, we’ll hear the Ash story directly from David.

How did you navigate a pivot early-on in the business?

David: We were competing in a pretty crowded D2C space for at-home testing kits — the top 2 players in the space had raised over $200 million (vs. our $200,000) — and we realized that we didn’t have the same firepower to spend on customer acquisition. We decided to do a one-month test to package our services in a B2B, white-label format. In the first month, we won four pilots, including an academic medical center, a telemedicine company, and others.

This was more success than we’d had in the year prior, and thus thought it was a no-brainer for us to pivot into B2B. In our view, we’d found early signals of product-market fit for a white-label remote diagnostics product.

During our first year in business, the majority of the healthcare organizations we worked with were serving underserved populations — queer health, women’s health, and more — as many of these communities see a dearth of quality, convenient solutions today. In addition, we’ve found a sweet spot around chronic care areas, serving patients who needed regular diagnostics and a kit at their doorstep, as opposed to patients who needed a one-off test.

What does the next year look like for Ash?

David: First and foremost, we want to be the leader in remote diagnostics for the sexual health space. We currently run around 120 different types of tests. Only about a dozen are for sexual health, but the majority of tests we process are still for sexual health. We not only see a large market here, but see an opportunity to help solve an epidemic. In almost every part of America, STIs have gone up for every demographic group during COVID-19 (likely due to lack of testing), and we hope to play a role in bringing those numbers down.

Beyond sexual health, we want to become the go-to for at-home remote diagnostics, where our technology and infrastructure enable a healthcare organization to launch everything from a pilot to a full-scale, 50-state program. Longer-term, we want to become the Stripe or Plaid for all things at-home healthcare, powering the full-suite of backend software and logistics that enable market leaders to provide quality at-home services to their patients.

Written by DRF content associate Kevin Wu. Reach him at kevin.wu@dormroomfund.com More updates on our Twitter, Medium, and newsletter. Founders, apply for an investment from us. 🚀

This article first appeared on the DRF blog.

Sign up to discover human stories that deepen your understanding of the world.

Free

Distraction-free reading. No ads.

Organize your knowledge with lists and highlights.

Tell your story. Find your audience.

Membership

Read member-only stories

Support writers you read most

Earn money for your writing

Listen to audio narrations

Read offline with the Medium app

Dorm Room Fund
Dorm Room Fund

No responses yet

Write a response