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News & Features

Avid Medical gives customers a choice

by Heather B. Hayes
Virginia Business
May 2005

Michael Sahady decided seven years ago that the trouble with the custom-procedure tray industry was that there wasn’t any custom to it.
The $1.5 billion industry provides ready-to-go, sterilized packs of instruments, sutures, gowns, gauze and other necessities for surgeons. In 1998, the few companies in the business worked off of a “self-branded” business model, meaning that they made all of the components in the surgical packs rather than offering other companies’ products. “I believed that there was a true opportunity in offering customers choice,” Sahady says.

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Sahady founded AVID Medical Inc. in 1998, with a clear mission: to put the custom back into the custom tray business. “If a surgeon wants Ethicon sutures in their tray, that’s what we give them,” he says. “If they want one component from Kimberly-Clark and another from Johnson and Johnson, we give them that too.”

The company is shaking up the industry. Currently growing at a rate of 30 to 35 percent each year, AVID Medical had gross revenue of $68 million last year and that number is projected to top $85 million this year. Sahady and Rick Setian, the company’s president and chief operating officer, expect the company to reach $150 million in 24 months. AVID Medical has been profitable for 16 quarters.

One reason for the company’s growth is experience. Sahady owned a highly successful custom-tray company, MedSurg, for 25 years but sold it during a wave of industry consolidation in the early 1990s. Setian has an extensive background in health-care management, and the company’s sales team boasts an average of nearly 17 years experience selling custom trays or operating-room products.

Innovative thinking is another factor that’s providing a competitive edge. AVID Medical, for example, uses electronic data interchange to communicate with customers, check daily consumption rates and build products accordingly. The company has also formed a number of strategic alliances with major surgical supply companies, including Valley Labs, Microtek, Kimberly-Clark, Tyco, ConMed and Medical Action. “It makes our sales force of 40 now a sales force of 500 to 1,000 because we’re working together with them, and our ability to canvass the market is much higher than it would be if we were just on our own,” Setian says.

John Colley, a professor at the Darden Graduate School of Business Administration at the University of Virginia, presents a case study on AVID Medical in his corporate strategy course. The case study examines the company’s ability to manage rapid growth. Colley says that AVID Medical is able “to grow at almost any rate without having to have additional investments of cash” through sophisticated technology, good forecasting, favorable payment terms from suppliers and real-time inventory control.

Moreover, he adds, the company excels in all areas necessary for success in manufacturing. “If you can do it at a cost that no competitor can meet, and you provide a quality that’s better than anybody else, and you deliver them on time, then you’ve got the keys to the kingdom,” Colley says. “And they are the best I have seen.”

AVID Medical sells custom trays for surgical, catheterization and labor-and-delivery procedures to about 800 hospitals, ambulatory surgery centers, government medical facilities, and organ and tissue procurement agencies. Its largest customers include Inova Health System in Northern Virginia, Carilion Health Systems in Roanoke, VCU Medical Center in Richmond, Community Health Care Systems in Indianapolis and Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich.

Sahady and Setian expect AVID Medical to continue to grow at a 30 percent clip. It has 320 employees, including 280 at its 85,000-square-foot facility in Toano, where products are sterilized and assembled. The executives plan to hire another 100 employees this year, including 10 to 12 salespeople, and they propose doubling the size of their facility within the next 24 months. “One of the things we never lose sight of is we know what we’re good at, and we will continue to enhance that and try get away from any shortfalls,” Setian says.


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