CEO: Infusion Express $13.5M round proves realistic investment can come to KC
October 31, 2017 | Meghan LeVota
When Kansas City-based Infusion Express closed a $13.5 million Series B round earlier this month with McKesson Ventures as its lead investor, the move wasn’t a fluke, Don Peterson said.
“If you build something really great, the money will find you,” said Peterson, CEO of Infusion Express. “I didn’t call McKesson, they called me. When the largest healthcare company in the world who touches every corner of the industry decides they want to invest in you, I think that says a lot about what we’re doing.”
Launched in 2013, Infusion Express is medical services provider that offers IV drug therapy to patients with chronic conditions requiring regular treatment. The firm currently has three Kansas City area locations — Overland Park, Independence and Briarcliff — as well as locations in Chicago, the San Francisco Bay area and Pennsylvania.
In addition to McKesson, Health Velocity Capital also invested in the round. With the recent funds, Peterson plans to add about 20 new locations next year. By 2020, he hopes Infusion Express will expand to 60 locations.
“The round definitely accelerates our national expansion,” he said. “Like any company, we need to build our infrastructure so we can support the expansion. Everything has to be scalable. Every process, every policy, every department and every service. This requires a great deal of discipline.”
Patient-aligned business model
Infusion Express received a No. 60 ranking on 2017’s Inc. 500 fastest growing companies list, touting a growth rate of 5,549 percent with $7.1 million in revenue. One thing that helps the medical service provider stand apart is its customer experience, Peterson said.
“In many ways, we run Infusion Express as if it were a high tech startup,” he said. “The culture is very similar and our attitudes toward our customers is similar. We take ‘patient-centric’ a bit further and we call our approach ‘patient alignment.’”
Think of the last time you set an appointment with a healthcare provider, Peterson said. Chances are, you flexed your schedule to fit theirs and not the other way around, he added.
“We’ve completely inverted the alignment,” Peterson said. “We don’t even post hours on our site. It’s by appointment only, whenever you need to come in we’ll move heaven and earth to make sure you can come into that appointment when you need it.”
Infusion Express isn’t Peterson’s first time running a company. A previous firm, DeskStation Technology, sold to Samsung in 1998, he said.
When launching Infusion Express, Peterson wanted to bring a forward-thinking, entrepreneurial spirit to the medical services industry.
“Health care has no price transparency and the industry is designed where the patient fits their lifestyle around the needs of the provider and not the other way around,” Peterson said. “In what other service industry could you get away with that? What we’re doing isn’t common in health care. It seems simple and straightforward, but it’s not.”
In addition to offering convenience for its customers, Infusion Express facilitates clearer communication with doctors and collaborates with insurance companies to keep costs lower.
Get real, Kansas City
Peterson hopes that Kansas City entrepreneurs can gain inspiration from his experience and begin to take action on their own endeavors, he said.
“Great things can be done here,” Peterson said. “It doesn’t happen as often, given the relative size of our community and the relative expertise of people. But I think we are doing OK. If I can help people understand that it can be done here, I will.”
Simply put, Kansas City shouldn’t try to be the most entrepreneurial city in America, he said. It should instead just focus on being “more” entrepreneurial.
“It’s an unattainable goal,” Peterson said. “There are three areas of high capital concentration in this country and we’re not one of them. Let’s accept that and then move on to what we actually can do, instead of clamoring about what we can’t do or won’t do.”

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Last to know, first to go: ‘Out of touch’ ballpark plan leaves Crossroads small biz owners feeling betrayed
Unlike many of her Crossroads neighbors — hoping to draw in crowds of football fans still riding high from Kansas City’s Super Bowl win — Jill Cockson’s business wasn’t open during Wednesday’s Chiefs victory parade. Candidly, jersey-clad sports enthusiasts aren’t really within her typical customer profile, the James Beard-nominated owner of Chartreuse Saloon said, and…
Royals want Crossroads ballpark open by 2028, calling up ‘generational’ impact on newly linked arts district, downtown
A late-to-the-game East Crossroads site is expected to take shape as the new home of the Kansas City Royals if voters approve the extension of a stadium sales tax that would help support the $2 billion downtown ballpark project. Ending months of speculation, majority owner John Sherman and team officials announced on Tuesday the ball…
KC apparel brand commandeers Chiefs’ ‘Nobody Likes Us’ spirit for latest wave of designs
Back in 2016 — when the Chiefs were still rebuilding from a franchise-worst season — Joe Brynds set sail with Commandeer Brand, aiming to carve a niche in the apparel industry by infusing pride and the rebellious spirit of counter-culture. “When I started Commandeer, I wanted to create something that was unique to Kansas City,”…
Why one entrepreneur is Swiftly rolling up the warehouse doors for thirsty Chiefs parade-goers
Wednesday’s Chiefs victory parade will be the city’s third in four years, but for East Crossroads-based Wild Way Coffee, the 2024 rolling downtown-to-midtown event hits different, said Christine Clutton. The brand’s iconic mobile coffee camper — stationed in the Wild Way warehouse at 708 E. 19th St. for the winter — will once again open…
