00:00:00 Introduction and Guest Background

Arun introduces Adam Trinas, highlighting his role as CEO of Health Launchpad, a marketing consulting firm specializing in ABM (Account-Based Marketing) for healthtech companies. Adam shares his background as a “recovering health tech entrepreneur,” describing his 20+ years in marketing mostly in B2B tech agencies before transitioning into healthcare around 2012. He explains how he co-developed a communication app to improve doctor-hospital relationships, which sparked a seven-year journey building a healthcare software company called UniFi Health. He recounts the steep learning curve entering healthcare, raising capital, and eventually selling the company due to the need for a large investment to compete. Adam emphasizes his preference for running a services company now, avoiding investor pressures, and focusing on marketing, particularly ABM, to help healthtech firms navigate the complex healthcare sales landscape.

00:05:20 Healthcare Market Dynamics and ABM Focus

Adam explains the friction between physicians and hospitals due to shifts from a physician-centric to patient-centric healthcare model, driven by changes like the Affordable Care Act. Hospitals began acquiring physician practices, creating tension and complex buying groups. He clarifies that Health Launchpad implements ABM for healthcare technology companies selling to hospitals, not for hospitals themselves. The firm identifies in-market hospitals (from over 6,000 US hospitals) relevant to clients’ products, maps the buyer collective (key decision-makers and influencers), and builds targeted campaigns based on understanding their needs and the buying journey. The approach includes demand and lead generation via social selling and content marketing. Arun notes the advantage of vertical focus and Adam confirms that deep healthcare expertise differentiates Health Launchpad from generalist agencies.

00:11:20 Vertical Specialization and Agency Differentiation

Adam discusses why he chose healthcare as a vertical: it leveraged his unique experience and filled a gap in the market for specialized ABM services. He acknowledges some large agencies have healthcare practices but often lack deep domain understanding, which caused frustration when he previously worked as a fractional CMO. Health Launchpad’s specialization means clients don’t have to educate the agency on healthcare nuances. The agency also launched a broader brand, Total Customer Growth, to expand beyond healthcare without diluting their core expertise. Adam stresses that healthcare marketing is complex, with longer sales cycles and larger buying groups, and clients value an agency that truly understands this.

00:17:00 Identifying In-Market Accounts Using Intent Data

Adam explains their disciplined approach to account selection, starting with defining an ideal customer profile. To find in-market accounts, they use intent data—signals showing which hospitals are actively researching or buying relevant solutions. They leverage three types of intent data: first-party (website and social engagement), second-party (platforms like G2 and Capterra), and third-party (aggregated external data from providers like Bombora and ZoomInfo). While intent data is not perfect, it significantly improves targeting efficiency. Arun queries about the effectiveness of intent data in healthcare, especially since doctors may not be digitally active; Adam clarifies they target hospital decision-makers like chief nursing officers and CIOs rather than individual physicians, and LinkedIn is a key channel for engagement.

00:21:45 ABM Process and Playbook Overview

Adam outlines the Health Launchpad ABM Playbook, a collaborative, systematic process starting with goal-setting (short to long term), segmentation analysis of the healthcare market, and identification of the buyer collective within target accounts. The buyer collective includes champions, decision-makers, economic buyers, and influencers. They then develop a detailed buyer journey framework aligned with how buyers actually purchase—from problem recognition, solution definition, vendor evaluation, to final decision—rather than traditional marketing funnels. This journey guides content strategy and campaign tactics, including LinkedIn ads, programmatic ads, and equipping SDRs with tailored content for each buying stage.

00:29:00 Engagement Strategies During Long Sales Cycles

Given healthcare sales cycles often last nine months or longer, Adam discusses tactics to maintain prospect engagement. These include content marketing, targeted outreach, event-related programs such as geotargeted ads to encourage booth visits at trade shows, and continuous measurement of account engagement to prioritize outreach. He highlights that ABM tools and platforms provide crucial automation, intent data integration, and pipeline tracking that would be difficult to manage manually, especially over prolonged cycles.

00:33:15 Role of SDRs and Collaboration with Marketing

Adam emphasizes the essential partnership between SDRs and ABM marketing—likening them to “peanut butter and jelly.” SDRs engage identified in-market accounts through social selling, LinkedIn outreach, and nurturing relationships with personalized content. Timing and intuition are key for SDRs to know when to move from passive engagement to active outreach. Weekly meetings between marketing and SDR teams are critical to review intent signals, discuss account progress, tailor nurture sequences, and provide content support. Adam also explains coaching SDRs on social selling skills, which many salespeople lack despite LinkedIn’s importance in healthcare B2B.

00:38:15 Best Practices in Social Selling

Adam shares social selling tips such as optimizing LinkedIn profiles to build trust, avoiding automated and spammy outreach, and focusing on relationship-building through sharing valuable content. He advocates the “give three, then ask” approach—sharing helpful content multiple times before making a sales request or invitation. He warns against aggressive pitching that damages reputation and LinkedIn’s effectiveness, stressing that thoughtful engagement is more productive and sustainable.

00:40:45 Closing Remarks

Arun thanks Adam for the insightful discussion. Adam invites listeners to connect with him on LinkedIn or via Health Launchpad’s website and email. The episode concludes with gratitude and applause.

Profile Adam Turinas CEO & Founder at Health Launchpad LinkedIn

Adam Turinas is the Founder & CEO of Health Launchpad, specializing in B2B healthcare-tech marketing and account-based growth for high-value enterprise clients. As a “recovering health-tech entrepreneur” turned ABM practitioner, he helps teams in regulated industries translate strategy into scalable pipeline-driving execution. Adam is known for making marketing measurable—focusing on revenue alignment, repeatability and cross‐functional orchestration. He shares frameworks and playbooks that bridge the gap between deep domain knowledge and pragmatic B2B marketing action.

Show Notes -

Adam breaks down why selling into hospitals and health systems works differently from every other B2B market.
We talk about identifying the right accounts, navigating large buying groups, and keeping momentum during long sales cycles without burning out your team.

What you’ll learn:
-Why healthcare buying is complex and requires a different approach
-How to find the hospitals that are actually in research or evaluation mode
-How to map the buying group and support SDRs with the right content
-How to stay engaged during long sales cycles without feeling repetitive

Links & Resources -