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Outcomes Rocket
San Diego, California, United States
Saul Marquez is the founder and CEO of Outcomes Rocket, a healthcare-exclusive market research, media, advisory, and marketing firm that helps med-tech and health-tech companies accelerate growth. A former medical device corporate executive turned entrepreneur, Saul has spent over a decade working at the intersection of healthcare, marketing, sales, and technology. He advises healthcare leaders on practical execution, how to turn strategy into measurable pipeline, revenue, and market credibility, rather than theoretical frameworks that never leave the slide deck. Saul is best known as the host of the Outcomes Rocket Podcast, one of the longest-running healthcare podcasts, with nearly 2,000 episodes featuring executives, founders, clinicians, and investors across the healthcare ecosystem. He also co-hosts and produces additional shows focused on healthcare marketing leadership and payer-focused insights. Through Outcomes Rocket, Saul works with health tech, medtech, payer-adjacent, and provider-focused organizations on go-to-market strategy, account-based marketing, executive thought leadership, podcasts, PR, and speaking-led growth initiatives. His work emphasizes clarity, focus, and follow-through, helping teams cut through noise and execute with confidence.
Saul Marquez is the founder and...
Outcomes Rocket works with healthcare founders, leaders, and brands to help them maximize their market potential. If you're a leader seeking to grow brand recognition and secure market dominance, you're speaking our language. Let's talk.
Outcomes Rocket works with healthcare founders,...
The statistics Saul opens with — 50% of businesses gone at five years, 97% gone at ten — are not abstract. The number one cause of failure is lack of product demand. That’s a marketing problem. Treating marketing as something anyone on the street can do, while expecting a lawyer or accountant to be a specialist, is the root inconsistency. The stakes are not about brand or awareness — they’re about organizational survival.
Only 28% of marketers document their content strategy, per McKinsey research cited in the episode. That means 72% of the market is operating on hunches. For any business willing to go through the Discover and Define phases — documenting personas, pain points, competitive differentiators, and a strategic roadmap — the competitive field shrinks dramatically. You’re no longer competing with the whole market; you’re competing with the 28% who bothered to do the homework.
The Sun Tzu principle Saul references: tactics are noise before the war is lost. In marketing, the equivalent is launching ads, starting a podcast, or running email campaigns before understanding who you’re talking to, what their pain points are, and what differentiates you. The 3D Framework is explicitly designed to force the strategy work first — Discover and Define — so that the Deliver phase has a foundation to build on rather than amplifying undirected effort.
The sequencing of the Deliver phase matters as much as the phase itself. Owned marketing (website, SEO, podcast, social) establishes the infrastructure you control. Earned marketing (other people’s stages — podcast appearances, op-eds, conference talks) builds credibility and external reach. Paid marketing only becomes efficient once the funnel is working — because paid accelerates an existing system; it can’t create one from scratch.
Saul’s Fast Company article names the pattern: teams deploying AI for content creation without a documented ‘bible’ of agreed-upon personas, pain points, and company uniques end up with inconsistent, scattered messaging that reflects no coherent strategy. AI is a multiplier — it amplifies whatever is already in the system. Without a documented foundation, it amplifies confusion at scale. The discipline required is the same as before AI; AI just makes the gap between disciplined and undisciplined organizations wider.
A $4.7 trillion industry with multi-layer regulation — from zero-regulation wellness products to tightly controlled pharmaceuticals and medical devices, with state-level variations on top of national standards — is not a place where a generalist agency can operate effectively. The same complexity that makes healthcare intimidating for outsiders is what makes deep specialization extremely defensible. For any healthcare vendor, working with an agency that has to be educated about GDPR, California privacy law, and FDA marketing guidelines is a liability.
Saul Marquez is the CEO of Outcomes Rocket, a healthcare-exclusive marketing, media, and advisory firm he founded roughly three years ago after a career in medical devices. The firm has worked with over 100 healthcare brands, employs a 25-person remote-first team across the US, Europe, Latin America, and Asia, and focuses specifically on medical device and health tech companies with $5M+ in revenue. In this episode, Saul unpacks why 97% of businesses fail by the ten-year mark — and why the root cause is almost always a marketing problem. He walks through the 3D Framework (Discover, Define, Deliver), the Owned / Earned / Paid marketing taxonomy, and the “AI Frankenstein” risk he wrote about for Fast Company — the danger of deploying AI without a documented strategy foundation.