Tag Archives: business

Why Impactful Storytelling Isn’t Optional in Life Sciences

29 Jul

By Tinotenda Chanakira, CEO of Revnuu | Life Sciences Commercialization Strategist (Special Guest Contributor)

In the life sciences, great science isn’t enough to make it out of the lab. Across biotech, medtech, and diagnostics, many teams are advancing transformative healthcare innovations—but still struggle to secure the funding, partnerships, or clinical traction they need. The culprit is rarely bad research, data or scientific innovation. More often, it’s an unclear or underdeveloped narrative.

Too often, life sciences companies present their breakthroughs in ways that prioritize technical complexity over clarity and resonance —visually and orally. Their decks are filled with mechanism-of-action diagrams, regulatory timelines, and patent claims—but little about real-world human impact. Meanwhile, capital markets are tightening, partner deal cycles are lengthening, and competition for attention has never been fiercer. In this environment, storytelling isn’t a marketing tactic. It’s a core business competency.

The challenge is that life sciences companies must communicate across very different audiences. Technical stakeholders—Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs), regulators, clinical advisors—require precision and depth. Commercial stakeholders—investors, distributors, potential acquirers—want proof of market potential and differentiation. And at the center of it all, patients and physicians seek hope, clarity, and relevance.

When a company’s narrative fractures across these touchpoints, the result is confusion, inconsistency, and distrust. Alignment stalls. Partnerships hesitate. Capital walks. To avoid this, founders and leadership teams must develop a coherent, multi-layered story that is not only technically sound but also emotionally and strategically compelling.

Over time, I’ve found that the most successful companies tend to master four core narratives. While the terms themselves have been shaped by broader industry dialogue—especially the work of Life Science Nation—this is how I’ve seen them come to life across real-world negotiations and commercialization journeys.

1. The Founder’s Core Motivation

Investors fund conviction as much as they fund IP. A founder’s story becomes the emotional and philosophical backbone of the venture. In life sciences, this often stems from a moment of deep personal or clinical proximity to the problem—a diagnostic delay, a therapeutic failure, or the loss of someone close.

The most resonant founder narratives don’t just showcase academic credentials. They surface the “why” behind the work. One oncology startup I advised pivoted its entire strategy when the founder lost a parent to late-stage metastasis. That story reshaped how partners viewed the company—not just as a platform, but as a mission-driven force.

2. From Lab to Life-Changing Impact

In science-based ventures, it’s easy to over-index on technical novelty. But partners don’t invest in “clever.” They invest in outcomes. The core question your technology story must answer is: What becomes possible now that wasn’t before?

In life sciences, this means anchoring your innovation in patient outcomes—not just mechanisms. “Our CRISPR-edited CAR-T therapy reduces relapse rates by 47% in refractory ALL” communicates far more than “novel lipid nanoparticle delivery system.” Precision and proof points win here. In fact, 83% of business development executives cite “clear patient impact language” as the single most missing element in pitch materials (LSN Survey, 2024).

3. When Treatment Becomes Transformation
Human outcomes are more compelling than preclinical data—always. This story focuses on transformation: how lives change because of what your product enables. Whether it’s earlier diagnosis, improved quality of life, or reduced healthcare burden, this is where the emotional gravity sits.

But emotion alone isn’t enough. The most effective patient stories also tie into economic logic. For example: “Maria’s Stage I diagnosis saved $218,000 in late-stage care costs.” That intersection of human and system-level impact is what resonates with both payers and partners.

4. From Validation to Velocity
Finally, partners want to see signals of commercial discipline. This doesn’t mean focusing solely on how much funding you’ve raised. Instead, highlight validation milestones that reduce perceived risk—real-world pilots, clinical endpoints, regulatory wins.

“CE Mark secured with 94% sensitivity in a real-world cohort” tells a far more powerful story than “Closed $20M Series B.” The emphasis should always be on de-risking through traction—not just hype.

These four stories don’t live in a pitch deck—they live across your organization. They must be practiced, refined, and embedded from leadership through to field teams. When aligned, they help companies accelerate partnership timelines, deepen investor conviction, and drive internal cohesion across functions.

If you’re unsure whether your narratives are aligned, ask yourself:

  • Can our team clearly articulate the founder’s “why” without defaulting to credentials?
  • Do our technology explanations compel clinicians to lean in?
  • Do our patient stories move decision-makers beyond the data?
  • Do our commercial milestones give partners confidence in our go-to-market plan?

If the answer to any of these is “no,” then it’s time to sharpen the story. Because in this industry, the science must speak—but the story must win.

About the Author
Tinotenda Chanakira is the founder and CEO of Revnuu, a commercialization strategy firm serving deep tech and life sciences ventures globally. With over 50 clients supported across Europe, North America, and the EMEA regions, Revnuu helps founders turn scientific breakthroughs into scalable, market-ready impact. The firm operates between Barcelona and Basel, guiding companies through the real-world complexities of product, capital, and growth.

Hot Investor Mandate: VC Firm Headquartered in Asia Makes Early- to Expansion-Stage Investments Into Digital Healthcare Companies With Asia Market Potential 

29 Jul

A venture capital investor based in Asia with a presence in the US makes early- to expansion-stage investments across multiple sectors, ranging from smart cities and fintech to healthcare. Investment size is highly variable depending on the company’s stage. The firm invests alongside other venture capital firms in companies located in North America and Europe that have a market expansion strategy into Asia. 

The firm takes an opportunistic approach to digital healthcare companies, particularly those leveraging AI and bioinformatics to accelerate the drug discovery process. 

The firm seeks entrepreneurs who are passionate, driven, and enthusiastic, with sustainable business models and globally scalable ideas. 

If you are interested in more information about this investor and other investors tracked by LSN, please email salescore@lifesciencenation.com

Hot Investor Mandate: Venture Arm of Investment Bank Seek Therapeutics and Medtech Companies in CNS, Oncology, and More, Focusing on US Based Opportunities

29 Jul

An investment bank headquartered in the US  does not act as a traditional investment bank, as the firm participates in venture capital, investing in and working with early-stage technology and life science companies with the main goal of taking the companies to public markets. The firm has also spun out and out-licensed technologies from universities and has capabilities to help with company formation, business strategy, IP, and early IPOs. The firm utilizes a sister company to further analyze company technologies and IPs. The firm can fund from $5-12M USD from Seed to Series A rounds with preference in US-based companies, though the firm is open to global companies. 
 
The firm is looking at biotech, medical devices, and diagnostics companies and is technology-agnostic. The firm generally does not look at digital health. There has been strong interest in immuno-oncology, neurology, and CNS. 
 

The firm works closely with companies and founders and will lead investment rounds. The firm typically requires taking a board or observer seat while deciding strategy, and once the company goes public, the firm will bring in a board member with expertise in the field. 

If you are interested in more information about this investor and other investors tracked by LSN, please email salescore@lifesciencenation.com

Hot Investor Mandate: VC Firm Focuses on Global Early-Stage Medical Device Investments, With Strong Interest in Companies Developing Class III Devices

29 Jul

A venture capital firm, founded in 2019, is a global venture capital investor. The firm specializes in early-stage medical device companies and actively leverages expertise and industry resources to support portfolio companies. The firm prefers taking a leading role in investment rounds and may seek board seats in such cases. 

The firm focuses on medical devices and is open to all subsectors and indications. The firm seeks innovative technologies, primarily investing in Class III devices, and occasionally considers Class II devices if they demonstrate significant innovation. The firm is open to working with companies at all stages, including those in the early idea phase. 

The firm prefers founding teams with strong scientific expertise and comprehensive knowledge of their respective fields. 

If you are interested in more information about this investor and other investors tracked by LSN, please email salescore@lifesciencenation.com

Hot Investor Mandate: USA-Based Early-Stage Venture Fund Invests in Seed Stage Companies With Opportunistic Interests Across Life Sciences

29 Jul

An early-stage venture capital firm, headquartered in the U.S., allocates roughly 40% of its investments to life sciences. The firm primarily invests from the Seed stage, with the ability to provide follow-on capital. Check sizes are flexible, typically reaching up to mid-6 figures. The firm is open to evaluating opportunities from global companies. 

The firm has broad interests in life sciences and healthcare sectors and considers all types of innovative technologies and indication/disease areas.  
 
The firm does not impose specific requirements on company structure or management teams. 

If you are interested in more information about this investor and other investors tracked by LSN, please email salescore@lifesciencenation.com

Hot Investor Mandate: Investing Holding Company Backed by Leading European Institutions Seeks Europe and US-Based Companies in All Life Science Sectors 

22 Jul

An investment holding company founded by leading European institutions has raised over €100 million from a base of more than 200 institutional and private shareholders. The firm invests from Seed to Series B stages, with a strong preference for early-stage companies and potential for follow-on funding. Check sizes can reach up to $2 million per company, with flexibility based on the stage of development. The firm is open to both leading and co-investing, and while it is primarily Europe-focused, it is increasingly pursuing U.S. opportunities. 

The firm invests across biotech, MedTech (including therapeutics, medical devices, and diagnostics), and digital health. It remains modality- and indication-agnostic, seeking opportunities with strong growth potential and technological innovation. 

There are no specific requirements for company founding teams, and the firm works closely with its portfolio companies to support their development. 

If you are interested in more information about this investor and other investors tracked by LSN, please email salescore@lifesciencenation.com

Hot Investor Mandate: Global Manufacturing Company Seeks Strategic Partnerships With Early-Stage Medical Device and Digital Health Companies Across the Globe  

22 Jul

A global manufacturing company, with over a century of history, is a leader in advanced materials and pressure-sensitive adhesive technologies. With a strong presence in the U.S. for many decades, it has built a reputation for innovation across industries including aerospace, electronics, healthcare, automotive, housing/construction, environmental applications, and general industry. 

In healthcare, the firm is actively seeking strategic partnerships with early-stage companies that complement its product lines. While it is open to meeting startups at the Series A stage, its focus is more on the development stage of technologies rather than funding rounds. The company has a global outlook and welcomes partnerships worldwide. 
 
The company is particularly interested in medical devices and digital health solutions. Priority technologies include sensors for applications such as injury prevention, rehabilitation for musculoskeletal disorders, stroke recovery, and neurological conditions. The company favors startups with prototypes and looks for technologies aligned with its existing products, such as flexible or stress sensors. 

If you are interested in more information about this investor and other investors tracked by LSN, please email salescore@lifesciencenation.com