-
Two women die on migrant boat seeking to reach UK
-
Mumbai coach Jayawardene backs Suryakumar to find his 'rhythm'
-
Under full moon, Shakira thrills 2 million fans on Rio's Copacabana beach
-
Bangkok food vendor curbs push city staple from the streets
-
More Nepalis drive electric, evading global fuel shocks
-
Latecomer Japan eyes slice of rising global defence spending
-
Messi goal not enough as Miami collapse in 4-3 loss to Orlando
-
German fertiliser makers and farmers struggle with Iran war fallout
-
OPEC+ to make first post-UAE production decision
-
Massive crowds fill Rio's Copacabana beach for Shakira concert
-
Embiid, Maxey shine as 76ers eliminate Celtics in NBA playoffs
-
Fleeting freedom at festival for India's transgender community
-
Trump says cutting US troop numbers in Germany 'way down'
-
Man charged with murdering Indigenous girl in Australian outback
-
China's Wu Yize wins last-frame thriller to reach snooker world final
-
Serene Korda takes three-shot lead at LPGA Mexico
-
Golden Tempo wins Kentucky Derby in historic triumph for trainer DeVaux
-
King Charles grasped 'opportunity' on US trip, palace says
-
China's Wu wins last-frame thriller to reach snooker world final
-
Verstappen sees light at the end of tunnel
-
Young stretches PGA lead to six at Doral
-
Rio's Copacabana beach hosts massive crowd for free Shakira concert
-
Celtics' Tatum ruled out for decisive game seven against Sixers
-
Wolff heralds Antonelli speed as teen joins Senna and Schumacher in record books
-
Senior Iranian officer says fresh conflict with US 'likely'
-
Barcelona on verge of Liga title, Villarreal secure top four
-
Teen F1 leader Antonelli takes Miami Grand Prix pole
-
Porto edge Alverca to clinch Portuguese league title
-
US airlines step up as Spirit winds down
-
Barcelona on verge of La Liga title defence with win at Osasuna
-
Drugmaker asks US Supreme Court to restore abortion pill access
-
Schalke return to Bundesliga after three-year absence
-
NATO, top Republicans question US troop withdrawal from Germany
-
Napoli frustrate Como in costly Serie A stalemate
-
Illegal party at French military site draws up to 40,000 ravers
-
Arsenal hit stride to go six points clear, West Ham loss offers Spurs hope
-
Arsenal go six points clear as Gyokeres double sinks Fulham
-
Clinical Chennai down Mumbai to keep playoff hopes alive
-
Napoli and Como play out goalless draw in Serie A
-
Murphy into World Snooker Championship final after edging Higgins
-
PSG held by Lorient with fringe team ahead of Bayern Munich return leg
-
Aviation companies step up as Spirit winds down
-
Champion Norris leads Piastri home in sprint 1-2 triumph for McLaren
-
UK PM says some pro-Palestinian marches could be banned
-
The Puma out of Kentucky Derby, leaving 19 starters
-
'Bookless bookstore': audio-only book shop opens in New York
-
Kostyuk defeats Andreeva to claim first Madrid Open title
-
Leinster survive Toulon scare to reach Champions Cup final
-
Villarreal secure Champions League spot, rotated Atletico win
-
'Relieved' Inoue outlasts Nakatani in Tokyo Dome superfight
The One-Person Unicorn Is Coming to Healthcare IT
Black Book Research Founder Doug Brown says AI is beginning to dismantle the old healthcare IT model built on giant staffs, high overhead, and expensive vendor structures that health systems have long been forced to fund
SAN JOSE, CA / ACCESS Newswire / March 26, 2026 / A new operating model is emerging in healthcare IT, one that could reshape how vendors are built, how software is bought, and how much organizational mass is actually necessary to compete in one of the most operationally complex sectors in the economy.
According to Black Book Research, artificial intelligence is beginning to break the long-standing assumption that serious healthcare IT companies must be large, labor-heavy, and structurally expensive in order to win enterprise business. For decades, the industry rewarded scale because scale was necessary. Vendors needed large teams for product development, implementation, training, customer service, documentation, reporting, workflow analysis, and internal operations just to meet the demands of enterprise healthcare buyers.
That model is now starting to change.
"AI is collapsing the cost of building, operating, and scaling software companies," said Doug Brown, Founder of Black Book Research. "In healthcare IT, that means the next major vendor may not be a 10,000-employee incumbent, but an ultra-lean AI-powered company that solves one mission-critical problem better, faster, and with far less overhead."
Healthcare IT companies grew into giant organizations for rational reasons. The enterprise market demanded implementation benches, field teams, support layers, compliance infrastructure, and broad internal functions that signaled durability and reduced perceived risk for hospitals and health systems. Large payrolls and broad org charts became shorthand for credibility. But Brown says many of those structures were built for a pre-AI cost environment and may no longer be essential in the same form.
"The one-person unicorn in healthcare IT is coming," Brown said. "Not literally as a company run by a single human doing every task alone, but as a new operating model in which one founder, or one very small team, uses AI to perform work that once required entire departments."
Brown says this matters because healthcare IT is still crowded with costly, unresolved workflow failures that are painful enough for health systems to pay to solve, but too narrow to command the sustained focus of giant incumbents. Prior authorization friction, referral leakage, scheduling inefficiency, inbox overload, denial management, documentation burden, and brittle interoperability handoffs continue to drain labor, time, and margin across the provider landscape.
"That matters because healthcare IT is not short on problems. It is short on precise solutions," Brown said. "Many of these problems are too narrow to command the full attention of a giant incumbent, but too painful for health systems to ignore."
Rather than replacing enterprise platforms all at once, the disruption is more likely to happen selectively. AI-native companies may begin by stripping away one costly point of friction at a time, pulling budget away from larger vendors workflow by workflow and margin pool by margin pool. That makes the one-person unicorn less a startup fantasy than a market structure shift.
"A one-person unicorn, or a ten-person company built on the same principle, can be radically more focused," Brown said. "It can attack a specific workflow with lower overhead, tighter product discipline, faster iteration, and less internal drag. It can enter the market without the organizational mass that legacy companies treat as normal."
Brown says the implication for health systems is substantial. Buyers have long used company size as a shorthand for capability, while investors and founders often treated headcount growth as evidence of momentum and seriousness. AI may now force a reset on all three assumptions, especially as smaller firms begin producing enterprise-grade output with far fewer people.
"The winners in this next phase will not necessarily be the companies with the largest workforces," Brown said. "They may be the companies that use AI to eliminate unnecessary organizational mass while staying relentlessly focused on a narrow, valuable, unresolved workflow problem. In that model, the advantage is not size. It is precision, speed, and structural efficiency."
As AI compresses the labor required to build, support, and improve software, some of the largest healthcare IT vendors may find themselves challenged not by full-scale replacements, but by smaller competitors able to remove specific sources of cost and inefficiency more cleanly and at lower overhead.
"The real disruption is not that one person can suddenly do everything," Brown said. "It is that AI may make much of the old company structure unnecessary."
About Black Book Research
Black Book Research is an independent healthcare market research and public opinion research firm covering healthcare technology, outsourcing, digital transformation, vendor performance, and stakeholder experience across the healthcare ecosystem.
Media Contact: Kay Ferguson [email protected]
https://www.blackbookmarketresearch.com and https://www.blackbookinsights.com
SOURCE: Black Book Research
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
L.Mason--AMWN