Doximity, the LinkedIn for doctors, raises $54M
40% of all U.S. physicians now use Doximity
A few years ago, everyone was all about social networks. We need more social networks! But consumers were like, “Why am I making all these damn profiles?” And the proliferation of social networks bottlenecked down to the three biggies: Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. But interestingly, there’s still room for growth among vertical social networks—those that actually cater to a specific group that can’t find that kind of social interaction elsewhere.
One such company, Doximity—which has been called a LinkedIn for doctors—announced Tuesday that it has raised a $54 million Series C round co-led by DFJ and T. Rowe Price, with participation from Morgan Stanley. The new round brings Doximity’s total raised to $81 million.
Launched in 2011, Doximity offers something that physicians literally can’t get elsewhere—a quick, easy second opinion…and third and fourth and fifth opinion. The network allows physicians to share information, ask for thoughts and input. Ultimately, Doximity makes health a collaborative effort rather than one in which the physician works in a lonely vacuum.
The platform has more than doubled its member base in the last year and now a whopping 40% of ALL U.S. physicians use Doximity, totaling 290,000 altogether. That’s more than the American Medical Association’s member base.
Altogether, physicians send 20,000 messages to one another every day via Doximity.
In January 2013, Doximity launched its recruiting tool. Job transitions can be particularly difficult for doctors due to credentialing and licensing issues, so Doximity is creating credential portability tools and recruitment tools to make life easier for doctors who want to change their position. Since the launch of the recruitment tool, doctors have received more than 100,000 job offers via Doximity.
“It has been much easier for Doximity to deliver concrete value to its members at a relatively early stage of its development since members have more similar needs than at broad-based business network where members from different professions often have priorities that are quite different across industries and functions,” said LinkedIn co-founder and Doximity board member Konstantin Guericke, in an email. “Of the vertical networks emerging, I expect to see winners in some areas where groups of professionals don't really fit into broad-based networks. Doctors, for example, don't see themselves as business people and their profiles have many requirements not likely to be addressed by horizontal networks, such as what insurance they take, an eFax number, etc.”
But, Guericke told me, vertical networks where professionals collaborate with others outside of their profession will have a harder time delivering enough value to make it worth a user’s time to join.
“Recruiting is a big area of growth for Doximity this year. We just passed 100,000 job offers to our physician members since the recruiting service launched in January. We're also getting a lot of requests from doctors and hospitals around the world asking Doximity to go international,” Doximity CEO and founder Jeff Tangey told me.
The company is on track to have half of all U.S. physicians on the site by this summer.
Related Companies, Investors, and Entrepreneurs
Doximity
Startup/Business
Joined Vator on
Doximity is the largest and fastest growing verified network for physicians. It’s a secure place for doctors to collaborate with each other and grow their own professional profile. The network currently boasts more than 220,000 members and aspires to fill distinct needs for physicians, providing:
- Powerful networking and professional growth opportunities across specialties and regions
- A place to manage their identity and reputation
- A secure platform for meeting, messaging, sharing information and collaborating on cases
- Technology that goes beyond the fax machine and phone calls
- Continued education opportunities that allow professionals to stay up-to-date on the latest medical news and research