Strategy engagement · adversarially verified · 3 rounds

Five Strategies: From −$16M to Break-Even to +$20M

Eighteen strategies entered. Five survived. None of them lied.

The mandate: find five distinct paths from a −$16M/yr operating loss to break-even and on toward +$20M — spanning the full option space from DTC telehealth to acute + hospice + oncology + ambulatory. Nine strategy archetypes were built by independent teams, then attacked by a three-lens investment panel (financial realism, market/competitive response, regulatory/execution). Eight of nine failed round one. Survivors were repaired against the specific objections or replaced — across three rounds — until five stood. What survived is honest: no plan that claims +$20M fast survived review.

Baseline: client-stated −$16M/yr (public IRS-990 FY2024 showed −$8.6M; planned to the harder number). Full 25,000-word engagement: Five_Strategies_Breakeven_to_20M.md on Downloads.

1The honest numbers

FY2029
base-case break-even (P50: FY2030) — the funded portfolio
+$8–12M
operating income by FY2031–33 — top-quartile (2–3%) for a community hospital
+$20M
real but conditional: needs 2 of 3 gated engines to pay; FY2034–36 at ~35–50% probability
~$40–45M
external capital over 4 yrs, each source counted once — the balance sheet funds nothing
The central finding The five strategies are not five choices — they are one turnaround counted five times, one Arrowhead deal structured three ways, one senior-risk option designed twice, and one externalization idea in two vehicles, all bidding for the same three capital sources and the same four-workstream management ceiling. The portfolio job is deduplication, not selection: fund one ops engine (RedlandsOS), one physician chassis (friendly-PC/MSO/CIN), one ambulatory engine (buy-don't-build recaps), and carry two options at zero (PHN senior risk, playbook externalization).
Why no strategy "just gets" +$20M A +$36M swing is ~5 points of margin on $407M revenue — top-decile for any community hospital in America. The panel killed every version that pretended otherwise (the "Glass Hospital" surgical-destination play died three times). The strategies that survived either state a lower honest ceiling, or gate their +$20M on named, priced options with explicit probabilities. That is what makes this plan bankable rather than aspirational.

2The five strategies

Ranked by the managing partner (best risk-adjusted path first). Panel scores show each lens: Financial / Market / Execution — a strategy passed with the financial lens viable plus 2-of-3 overall.

Rank 1 · consumer sleeve + physician alliance B−

Terracina, Priced to Contract — + The Independent Alliance

The escalation-layer consumer product (telehealth that can actually admit you) at honest scale, moved as one board motion with its real engine: the SB351-protected alliance of the corridor's independent physicians (CIN/MSO + PHN's ~54k lives + ASC JV + Pass corridor).

Break-even
FY2029 (Yr 3)
+$20M
FY2033–34, success case (~40–50%); base plateaus +$8–10M
Steady margin
~4.5% success case
Capital
$14–16M staged (venture sleeve only $2M, contract-gated)
Financial ✓60Market ✗62Execution ✓60 — the only strategy whose base and success cases live in the same decade as the mandate.
Rank 2 · ambulatory platform, re-underwritten B

Mothership & Fleet 3.0 — Turnaround First, Buy Don't Build

Commit the ~$20M-swing core turnaround as the base case, and buy — never build — minority stakes in the surgeons' own existing ASCs (the panel-verified fact: Arrowhead already owns its surgery center). Every market failure mode degrades to a still-breakeven fallback.

Break-even
Yr 4 (FY2030), with one CMIR delay already priced in
+$20M
Ceiling below +$20M in any bankable window; committed plan +$1–2M by Yr 7
Steady margin
~0.4% consolidated (equity-method JV income)
Capital
$55–60M program; RCH cash $24–27M phased
Financial ✓60Market ✓70Execution ✓62 — highest panel confidence in the set; the only arithmetically clean bridge in its family.
Rank 3 · the mandatory base layer B (as infrastructure)

RedlandsOS — The AI-Native Lean Hospital

Rebuild revenue cycle, patient flow, staffing, back office, and supply chain AI-first — a ~$19M gross swing on the $415M cost base without touching the bedside — then license the audited playbook to America's 400+ money-losing independent hospitals (Ensemble precedent: $1.2B for 51%).

Break-even
FY2029–30 (−$16M → −$12M → −$4M → 0)
+$20M
Says it plainly: standalone ceiling ~+$3.3M (band $0–6M) — the enabler, not the endgame
Steady margin
~0.8% — from −3.9% to the national median
Capital
$28M: vendor at-risk + philanthropy + NewCo sponsor equity + IT financing
Financial ✓60Market ✗72Execution ✓60 — not a path to +$20M and says so; but the highest risk-adjusted dollars anywhere in the set, and competition-proof (no one can block RCH from cutting its own costs).
Rank 4 · senior risk, earned not assumed C+

SilverPass: Earn the Right

Standalone break-even by 2030 on RCH's own P&L first — then exercise a severable, partner-funded senior global-risk option built on the engagement's single most valuable insight: RCH owns at ~50¢ marginal cost the hospital days that Oak Street, Cano, CareMax, and agilon all died paying retail for.

Break-even
2030 standalone (±$1M by 2029)
+$20M
Plan of record +$6.1M by 2034–35; full gated build ~2040 — shown, not underwritten
Steady margin
~1.3% consolidated at plan of record
Capital
$69M committed ($39M bridge + $30M NewCo operator capital)
Financial ✓57Market ✓55Execution ✓60 — the only strategy passing all three lenses; its internalized-Part-A insight powers the portfolio's senior-risk option.
Rank 5 · the shared command center C−

Redlands Unbound 2.0 — Fix the Core, Share the Center

Run the hospital smaller and smarter from one 24/7 command center — proven on RCH's own P&L first — then share it at cost-plus through a member-owned cooperative of small hospitals (Avel-style). The most honestly-architected of the five, and still dominated on every axis by RedlandsOS.

Break-even
Yr 4 (FY2030) hospital core
+$20M
Ceiling stated plainly: +$1–2M planning case; ~+$5M conditional by Yr 7–8
Steady margin
~0.3% consolidated
Capital
$22M staged & gated
Financial ✓55Market ✗68Execution ✓55 — absorbed into the portfolio as the command-center operating hub, not funded standalone.
What died — and why that matters The graveyard is as informative as the survivors: the Glass Hospital (transparent-price national surgical destination) failed three consecutive rounds — the employer-travel demand never penciled at Redlands' cost base. The original DTC consumer/longevity vertical survived only after shrinking to a +$1–2M "escalation sleeve" with $2M of contract-gated capital — a Hims/Hers-style national brand was judged unwinnable against pure-plays with 100× the marketing budget. The premium-flip payvider and the 5/50 serious-illness continuum died on capital reality and Knox-Keene timelines. Round log: 9 developed → 1 passed; 5 repaired → 2 total; 4 repaired → 5 total.

3The Tesla answer: it's a stack, not a strategy

Every pretender to the pull-away claim died in panel. The honest answer: no single strategy is the Tesla — the Tesla move is a stack, and it only matures at replication.

Layer 1 · RedlandsOS The audited AI-native cost structure — three years of hospital-specific workflow libraries, denial taxonomies, staffing models, and CFO-verified benefit realization at community scale. Copyable software; uncopyable track record.
Layer 2 · The Independent Alliance An SB351-protected coalition of the 188-group independent bench, PHN's ~54k lives, and Arrowhead's surgical franchise — around the only independent full-stack hospital in the corridor. Optum legally cannot lead it (it's what the physicians are fleeing); Kaiser is closed by design; LLU can't price it.
Layer 3 · Internalized Part A The senior-risk chassis: RCH owns at ~50¢ marginal cost the hospital days that Oak Street, Cano, CareMax, and agilon all died paying retail for. Hospital-anchored global risk is the version of the model that can actually work.
Why the stack pulls away Each layer alone is copyable operational excellence. Stacked, they create a position none of the four named predators can occupy — ownership identity + regulatory position + a three-year audited execution dataset — assets a copycat cannot buy in 36 months with unlimited software budget. And the national vision matures at replication: if the stack works at RCH, the chassis — AI-native ops × alliance economics × hospital-anchored senior risk — franchises to the 400+ money-losing independent hospitals in America. That's how a 211-bed hospital in Redlands moves the health of a nation: not by getting bigger, but by proving the model every independent can copy — from us, not from Optum.

4The funded portfolio — what to actually do

Fund once, count once

  • One ops engine: RedlandsOS at full spec (~$15–17M net run-rate swing), absorbing the command center and every overlapping restructuring line from the other four plans. One transformation office; CFO sign-off on every claimed dollar.
  • One physician chassis: friendly-PC / MSO / CIN — built once, serves everything (alliance, employer-direct, senior risk).
  • One ambulatory engine: buy-don't-build — recapitalize Arrowhead's existing ASC at Track-B economics; GI recap gated on a live LOI.
  • Two options carried at ZERO: the PHN senior global-risk book (gate decision FY2030, underwritten at realized-V28 economics with internalized Part A) and playbook externalization (RedlandsOS NewCo or co-op, Year 3+).

Gate Zero — next 90 days, before any capital moves

  • Read the master trust indenture (it conditions all receivables-based liquidity)
  • Confirm AB 869/seismic filing status; price the minimum-compliant footprint
  • Verify unrestricted cash; run the 340B/DSH model before any OB decision
  • Open the Arrowhead/AASC diligence window
  • Stand up the transformation office with benefit-realization authority

What we stop doing

  • Staffing 211 beds (consolidate to a census-derived ~165–175, reconciled to the seismic footprint)
  • Greenfield ASC construction; all pre-contract capex
  • Registry/traveler dependence as a permanent posture
  • Marketing against the structurally locked 70% of leakage
  • The consumer longevity membership; executive health (conceded to LLU)
  • More than four concurrent major workstreams — by board covenant
Tripwires — pre-agreed, automatic If FY2029 standalone operating income is worse than −$4M, or the CMS 3-star and stroke-mortality gates miss, the pre-agreed banker-run affiliation process opens automatically. The board is buying a funded break-even with two priced options on top-quartile performance — and should reject any future version of this plan in which a gated option has quietly become load-bearing.
Method. Nine strategy archetypes (ambulatory platform, senior MA risk, transparent-price surgical destination, decentralized hospital, DTC consumer/longevity, payvider flip, anti-Optum physician platform, serious-illness continuum, AI-native lean hospital) developed by independent teams with mandatory rules: bridge from −$16M net of new overhead, no double-counting, named external capital, steady-state margin vs. industry benchmark, honest ceilings, what-we-stop-doing, and a 3-year copyability test. Each attacked by a financial-realism, market/competitive, and regulatory/execution panel; failures repaired against the specific objections or replaced across three rounds until five survived (9 → 1; +5 repairs → 2; +4 repairs → 5). Grounded in the project's verified datasets (HCAI leakage, CMS Care Compare ×21 hospitals, the 188-group independent census, LEHD/ACS commuting, CDC PLACES, DOL 5500, IRS 990). Planning analysis — not actuarial, legal, or investment advice.