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Posted bySkender Daerti

Advisory boards are often treated as a formality in medtech. Many companies create them because they believe they are supposed to, then fill the room with familiar faces who offer affirmation instead of insight. Episode 103 of the Medtech Business Academy was a chance to correct that mindset, because advisory boards, when structured with purpose, can materially change the direction and speed of a commercialization strategy.

The first principle is what I call the snowflake principle. No advisory board should look identical to another. Each product, clinical modality, market segment, or behavior challenge requires a unique configuration of expertise. Some situations call for a master advisory board with sub-groups that focus on specialized areas. Others benefit from short, highly concentrated engagements that last only a few days or a few months. The effectiveness comes from tailoring the board to the problem rather than forcing the problem to fit the board.

Another defining characteristic of high performing advisory boards is their ability to close the circuit. A successful board brings together every persona who touches the product throughout its life cycle. Most leaders naturally think about physicians, nurses, and technicians. Far fewer remember to include EVS, biomed, IT, quality, value analysis, and operational leaders. These individuals often determine whether a product can enter a building, attach to a network, pass a risk review, or progress through a committee. Missing their voices means missing the real world context that decides adoption.

Courage is the third essential element. Companies must be willing to ask difficult questions and advisors must feel comfortable giving difficult answers. The strongest advisory boards push past polite opinions and into the behaviors that actually drive adoption. Questions like “Will you take this to your next value analysis meeting?” or “Will you fight for this when the committee stalls?” matter far more than “Do you like this feature?” Insight only becomes action when it reveals whether a problem carries enough weight to change behavior.

When advisory boards operate with this level of honesty, structure, and representation, they provide one of the most cost effective advantages in all of medtech. They reduce risk, shorten development cycles, refine value propositions, and help companies build products that matter to the people who use them. The lesson is simple. If we want to win in this market, we need to listen, and we need to listen in the right rooms, with the right people, at the right time.