Building Trust in Healthcare Technology: Communication Strategies for Startups

Mar 19, 2025

In healthcare technology, trust isn’t just a marketing goal—it’s the foundation of success. While established healthcare brands leverage decades of reputation, startups face the unique challenge of building credibility from scratch in a sector where mistakes can have serious consequences.

Leveraging Expertise Strategically

Your team’s credentials and experience are your first trust-building assets. However, many health tech startups underutilize these valuable proof points. Beyond simple bio pages, consider developing thought leadership content that showcases your team’s deep understanding of healthcare challenges and solutions. Regular blog posts, whitepapers, and speaking engagements help position your experts as reliable voices in the field.

Data-Driven Credibility

Original research and survey data are powerful trust-building tools. Consider conducting annual industry surveys that explore healthcare technology trends, challenges, and adoption patterns. This primary research can fuel an integrated content strategy:

  • Transform survey insights into comprehensive ebooks and whitepapers
  • Create press releases highlighting key findings for media coverage
  • Develop social media campaigns featuring data points and infographics
  • Gate premium content to capture leads while building authority
  • Use data points in media pitches to secure coverage and commentary opportunities

This approach positions your startup as a knowledge leader while generating valuable marketing and PR opportunities. Media particularly value exclusive data, making your startup a go-to source for industry insights.

Establishing Partnerships

Strategic partnerships with established healthcare institutions can significantly accelerate trust-building. Whether it’s pilot programs with hospitals, research collaborations with medical schools, or integration partnerships with established health tech platforms, these relationships signal credibility to your target market.

Many successful health tech startups begin by focusing on a single respected partner, perfecting their solution in a real world environment before expanding. This approach provides valuable case studies and testimonials—essential tools for building broader market trust.

Demonstrating Compliance and Security

In healthcare, compliance isn’t just about checking boxes—it’s about protecting patients. Clear communication about your regulatory compliance status, security measures, and data protection protocols is crucial. Consider creating dedicated security and compliance content hubs that explain complex requirements in accessible terms.

Be transparent about your current stage and future roadmap. If you’re still working toward certain certifications, communicate your progress and commitment to meeting industry standards.

Creating Evidence-Based Content

Healthcare decisions require solid evidence. Develop content that demonstrates both your solution’s effectiveness and your understanding of healthcare’s complexities. This might include:

  • Detailed case studies with measurable outcomes
  • Research collaborations and clinical validation studies
  • Regular analysis of healthcare trends and challenges
  • Clear explanations of your technology’s scientific foundation

Building Media Relationships

Focus on building relationships with healthcare technology journalists and influencers before you need coverage. Provide them with genuine insights, exclusive data, and expertise, not just company news. When you do have news to share, these established relationships will help ensure more informed, credible coverage.

Leveraging Agency Expertise

For many health tech startups, partnering with an experienced communications agency can accelerate trust-building efforts. The right agency brings established media relationships, content development expertise, and integrated campaign experience. They can coordinate media and analyst relations while developing compelling content that showcases your expertise.

However, success requires more than just hiring an agency. Designate a dedicated in-house resource to serve as the primary liaison. This person should facilitate content approvals, coordinate subject matter expert interviews, and monitor industry developments that could fuel new content or media opportunities. This partnership approach ensures your agency can execute effectively while maintaining alignment with your company’s goals and expertise.

The Long Game

Trust in healthcare technology isn’t built overnight. A consistent, multi-channel approach focused on expertise, evidence, and transparency will gradually establish your startup as a credible player in the healthcare ecosystem. Remember, in healthcare technology, trust isn’t just about marketing—it’s about demonstrating your commitment to improving patient outcomes and advancing healthcare delivery through validated, data-driven approaches.

Grant Evans

Grant Evans brings more than 30 years of diversified technology content marketing, public relations, and editorial management to his role at Amendola Communications. He is a results-focused brand journalist and content marketing professional with broad experience developing, executing, and measuring strategic marketing and corporate communications programs for companies in the healthcare IT, enterprise software/services, life sciences, and venture capital/private equity markets. Most recently, he served as senior editor of content operations and marketing communications with Change Healthcare (formerly McKesson Health Solutions), where he developed news releases, paid and organic social media, advertising copy, white papers, case studies, static and interactive web content, bylined articles, podcasts, video scripts, enterprise-wide research programs, and the corporate blog in support of the company’s solutions for providers and payers. Before joining McKesson, he served for more than a decade as vice president of Garfield Group Public Relations, a technology-focused communications agency where he led editorial/content development services, serving as chief strategist and copywriter of contributed articles, white papers, newsletters, news releases, media pitches, corporate blogs, web copy, awards submissions, and annual reports. He has held senior marketing and media/analyst relations roles with Unisys Corp. and AT&T Network Systems. He began his career as a trade journalist, first as a news editor covering the IBM S/3X and RS6000 markets for MIDRANGE Systems, and then as managing editor for HP Professional, the leading monthly serving the Hewlett Packard commercial computing market. Grant earned his bachelor’s degree in English, with a minor in Journalism, from Hartwick College. In his spare time, he is an avid SCUBA diver and wreck explorer.