Fractional Commercial Execution

Your Commercial
Strike Force
for Accelerated
Market Share.

Senior commercial leaders — embedded in your business, executing from Day 1. No full-time salaries. No six-month ramp. No risk of building a team that can't open the right doors. Just experienced fractional execution inside the institutional accounts that drive your revenue.

Built for Pharmaceutical Manufacturers · 503B Outsourcing Facilities · 503A Compounding Organizations
30+ Years of Executive Relationships
Faster Market Penetration
60% Lower Cost vs. The Traditional Path
Day 1 Active Revenue Execution

Is Vendxa Right for You?

We work with a select number of organizations at any given time — by design. These are the three situations where the impact of our model is most immediate.

01

You have a product. You don't have a commercial engine.

Your product is ready. The market exists. But you don't have the institutional relationships, the sales infrastructure, or the runway to build all three from scratch. You need execution — not a six-month hiring plan.

We deploy leaders with relationships already inside your target accounts — from Day 1.
02

You have reps. They're not getting into the right rooms.

You have people in the field — but hospital pharmacy leadership, P&T committees, and IDN procurement aren't moving. Institutional access takes years to build, or one conversation with someone already credible inside those systems.

Our network is already inside the accounts you're trying to reach.
03

You're preparing for FDA scrutiny and your commercial and quality teams aren't aligned.

In 503B and 503A, commercial success doesn't exist in isolation from regulatory readiness. If your quality and operations teams are operating on a separate track from your sales strategy, you're carrying risk that most standard audits won't catch — until it's too late.

We align quality, operations, and commercial execution together — not as separate workstreams.
If any of these describe your situation, we should talk.

Strategy calls are 20 minutes. No pitch, no deck — just an honest read on whether there's a fit.

Schedule a Strategy Call

How Vendxa Works

We embed experienced commercial leaders directly into your business — not as reps plugged into a territory, but as an extension of your commercial leadership from day one.

1. Deploy

We align on your product, target accounts, and priorities, then put a dedicated Vendxa team in the field.

  • 6–10 senior pharmaceutical sales leaders with established institutional relationships
  • Dedicated Vendxa commercial lead managing execution
  • Targeted account strategy across IDNs, hospitals, and physician networks

2. Execute

Our team operates inside your commercial strategy, advancing accounts through real-world buying processes.

  • Direct engagement with pharmacy leadership, P&T committees, and procurement
  • Coordination across clinical, operational, and contracting stakeholders
  • Continuous field intelligence fed back into your strategy

3. Deliver

We measure success by access, adoption, and revenue impact — not activity.

  • Expanded access across targeted health systems
  • Increased contract utilization and product standardization
  • Measurable progress tied to defined commercial objectives

The Build-or-Buy Decision

If you're considering building a commercial team, you're weighing something that looks cheaper on paper than it actually is. Competitors who get formulary placement first become the standard of care — and dislodging an embedded supplier is a months-long, resource-intensive process. P&T committees run on quarterly cycles, so miss one submission window and you wait 90 days. The decision-makers you need to reach are already building relationships with someone else. By the time your hire is trained and in the field, those opportunities have already closed.

Vendxa Revenue motion starts immediately
The Traditional Path Revenue motion begins Month 7–8, if everything goes to plan — and costs $350K+ before it does
Day 1
Active in the Field
Leaders deployed into your highest-priority accounts — working relationships that already exist inside your target institutions
Job Posted
Role defined, recruiting firm engaged — management time already consumed before a single account is touched
Week 2–3
Institutional Meetings
Pharmacy leadership, IDN decision-makers, and P&T contacts engaged through established credibility — not cold introductions
Candidates Interviewed
Screening rounds underway — weeks of leadership bandwidth spent on evaluation while your market sits untouched
Month 1–2
Pipeline Established
Qualified opportunities identified and advancing through institutional buying processes — formulary submissions in motion
Hire Made
Offer accepted, notice period served — $350K+ annual commitment locked in before a single account call is made
Month 3–4
Contract Conversations
P&T submissions filed, pharmacy director relationships at clinical review stage, GPO pathway identified — product inside the decision cycle
Onboarding & Training
Product training, compliance, system setup — still learning the business, not working it
Month 4–6
Revenue Growing
Contracts converting to utilization. Adoption expanding. Revenue motion compounding across accounts.
Product Ramp
Familiarizing with account dynamics — no relationships, no credibility, no pipeline. A competitor has been inside your target accounts for months.
Month 7–8
Vendxa at Month 7–8
  • Multiple accounts under active contract
  • Utilization growing across the IDN
  • Revenue compounding — not starting
Traditional Path at Month 7–8
  • First cold outreach — no existing credibility
  • Introducing themselves to pharmacy directors for the first time
  • $350K+ spent — zero revenue generated
6–8 Months
of revenue not captured, accounts not accessed, and market share given to competitors — the true cost of the traditional path.
See what Vendxa looks like for your situation →
What This Means in Practice

The numbers above describe what the traditional path costs. Here's what Vendxa delivers instead — and how the engagement is actually structured.

The Model
  • Commission-aligned compensation — you carry no fixed sales overhead
  • Selective by design: Vendxa works with a limited number of clients at any time
  • Controlled market entry — no overlap, no wasted coverage
  • Accountability tied to access, adoption, and revenue milestones
The Partnership
  • 6–10 senior representatives embedded in your commercial motion
  • A dedicated Vendxa engagement lead as your single point of coordination
  • Continuous field intelligence fed directly back into your strategy
  • 12+ month engagements built for sustained growth, not short-term lift
How It Starts
01
Discovery
We learn your product, priorities, and target accounts. No assumptions, no templates.
02
Opportunity Mapping
We identify the highest-probability accounts and define the commercial entry strategy.
03
Deployment Plan
A defined execution plan aligned to your revenue goals, timelines, and access targets.
04
Day 1 Execution
We are in the field. Accounts are being worked. Revenue motion has started.

Where Vendxa Wins

We focus on environments where institutional decision-making, regulatory complexity, and execution discipline determine commercial success. Select a market to see how we operate — and what we deliver.

503B & 503A Market Expansion

The 503B space is growing — but so is the scrutiny. Health systems are becoming more selective about which facilities they partner with, and winning their confidence requires more than a product catalog and a price sheet. It requires relationships, credibility, and a commercial team that understands how hospital pharmacy decisions actually get made.

  • Hospital pharmacy directors vet 503B partners on quality, FDA inspection history, and reliability — not just price
  • P&T committee positioning requires clinical credibility, not just sales presence
  • GPO contracting alignment is essential but insufficient without account-level pull-through
  • Multi-site IDN standardization turns a single contract into compounding, system-wide volume
  • Competitive differentiation in a crowded 503B market requires institutional trust built over time
In Practice

503B Outsourcing Expansion

The Real Challenge

503B facilities often have strong product quality and competitive pricing — and still can't penetrate their target health systems. The issue isn't the product. It's that hospital pharmacy leadership makes decisions based on relationships and track record, and those take years to build without the right access.

What We Address

No established relationships with pharmacy directors at target IDNs. Inconsistent field execution across accounts. Contracts won at the GPO level but failing to convert to facility-level utilization. FDA inspection scrutiny creating hesitation among procurement teams. And critically — product portfolios developed without direct input from the Directors of Pharmacy and clinical advisory boards who will actually make the purchasing decision.

Outcome

Institutional access through credible, pre-existing relationships inside target health systems. Contract conversions that drive actual utilization. System-wide standardization that locks in sustained, compounding volume. And product development intelligence sourced directly from the Directors of Pharmacy and advisory board relationships that tell you what the market needs before you build it.

503B & 503A Product Development

Most 503B and 503A facilities develop their product portfolios in isolation — without a direct line to the Directors of Pharmacy, clinical advisory boards, and institutional decision-makers who will ultimately make or reject the purchasing decision. The result is manufacturing investment poured into products the market doesn't need, or products that are clinically appropriate but positioned wrong for the accounts being targeted.

  • Direct relationships with Directors of Pharmacy across health systems, IDNs, and ambulatory surgery centers who can articulate unmet product needs before you build
  • Access to clinical advisory board networks that influence formulary decisions and product standardization across institutions
  • Market intelligence on drug shortages, formulary gaps, and therapeutic areas where compounded alternatives have the strongest institutional demand
  • Product-market fit validation: understanding how your formulation, packaging, and BUD profile align to what pharmacy leadership actually requires operationally
  • Competitive landscape clarity — knowing which product categories are oversupplied and where differentiated opportunity exists in the 503B market
In Practice

Product Portfolio Strategy for 503B Facilities

Challenge

A 503B facility invests in cleanroom infrastructure, cGMP validation, and regulatory registration to produce a product line — only to discover that their target health systems either already have a preferred supplier, don't need that formulation in that packaging, or require a product the facility never considered. The market intelligence gap costs months and significant capital before it surfaces.

What We Address

Vendxa's existing relationships with Directors of Pharmacy and clinical advisory boards provide a direct channel to understand what institutional buyers actually need — formulary gaps, shortage-driven demand, preferred formulations, and operational requirements around BUD, packaging, and ready-to-use convenience. We translate that intelligence into product development direction before you commit resources.

Outcome

A product portfolio built around confirmed institutional demand. Formulations and configurations aligned to what pharmacy leadership will actually adopt. Entry into markets where Vendxa's existing relationships create immediate access — so the product launches into accounts that are already primed to buy it.

Emerging Pharma & First Commercial Launch

You have FDA approval, investor backing, and a product that works. What you don't have is a commercial team, established relationships with institutional buyers, or time to build either from scratch.

  • First commercial launch strategy built around your specific product and target accounts
  • Immediate access to institutional relationships that take years to build independently
  • Market entry execution without the cost and delay of hiring a full commercial team
  • Payer and formulary access strategy aligned to your launch timeline
  • Field intelligence on competitive positioning, account dynamics, and prescriber behavior
In Practice

First-Time Commercial Launch

Challenge

Nearly 40% of new FDA-approved assets now come from companies with little or no prior commercialization experience. Most have strong science and lean teams — but no institutional access, no established relationships with pharmacy leadership or P&T committees, and a launch window that won't stay open while they build.

What We Address

No commercial infrastructure to execute from. Limited network inside target health systems. Pressure to show early traction before the next funding cycle. Market access strategy that needs to be built and deployed simultaneously.

Outcome

Senior commercial leaders already credible inside your target accounts — deployed on Day 1. A structured launch execution plan tied to your product, your accounts, and your timeline. The speed and access of an established team, at the cost structure of a fractional model.

Hospital & IDN Access — From Contract to Utilization

Today, nearly 80% of physicians in the U.S. are employed by a hospital or IDN — meaning they no longer make prescribing decisions independently. IDNs centralize formulary management, embed clinical pathways into EMR order sets, and evaluate suppliers on cost-effectiveness, population health alignment, and institutional fit. A traditional sales pitch gets you nowhere. What gets you in — and keeps you there — is credibility, data, and a relationship with the right people inside the system.

  • IDN formulary decisions involve P&T committees and their specialty subcommittees — cancer therapeutics, antimicrobial stewardship, medication safety — each with its own review cycle and physician champions whose endorsement moves a product forward
  • Identifying and cultivating the right P&T champion inside each specialty panel is often the difference between a fast-tracked approval and a product that sits in the review queue for two or three quarterly cycles
  • Getting on formulary means nothing without EMR order set inclusion and clinical pathway alignment at the department level
  • Pull-through execution requires ongoing engagement with nursing leads, department heads, and clinical staff — not just the pharmacy director
  • Multi-site IDN standardization converts a single contract into system-wide utilization — but only with active account management across all sites
  • Value-based contracting expectations require suppliers to demonstrate outcomes data, not just clinical efficacy
In Practice

Hospital Pull-Through After Contracting

Challenge

A product is on formulary and under contract across a regional IDN. Utilization is a fraction of what the contract allows. Leadership assumes the contract will drive volume. It doesn't — because the contract opened the door, but no one is working the room on the other side.

What We Address

IDNs don't respond to sales activity — they respond to institutional partnership. Vendxa engages pharmacy directors, clinical leads, and department heads at the level where utilization decisions are actually made: the order set, the clinical pathway, the department protocol. That's the access that turns a contract into compounding revenue.

Outcome

Active utilization growth within contracted IDN accounts. Clinical stakeholder alignment that embeds product usage into workflows rather than relying on discretionary prescribing. Multi-site standardization that locks in sustained, system-wide volume.

Specialty & Physician Network Growth

Specialty markets — retina, dermatology, oncology, urology, and large independent physician networks — are increasingly consolidating. Private equity-backed MSOs and large wholesalers are acquiring physician practices and reshaping how products get selected and administered. In this environment, access to the right relationships at the right level is the only thing that creates consistent, repeatable revenue.

  • Retina and ophthalmology specialists operate on buy-and-bill models that require practice-level relationships, not just clinical awareness
  • PE-backed physician networks have procurement teams and formulary processes that mirror institutional buying — and require the same access strategy
  • Dermatology, pain management, and specialty infusion practices demand clinical fluency alongside commercial execution
  • Expanding utilization within existing accounts requires consistent, trusted presence — not periodic check-ins
  • Prior authorization barriers and payer complexity are causing physicians to abandon prescribing — access support at the practice level is essential
In Practice

Specialty Network Penetration

The Real Challenge

Specialty physician practices are busy, skeptical of new reps, and increasingly protected by practice managers and MSO procurement processes. A product with strong clinical data still fails to gain traction if the commercial team can't get in front of the right stakeholders — or doesn't understand how decisions are actually made in that practice type.

What We Address

Limited access to high-value prescribers in target specialties. No established trust with practice leadership or clinical staff. Inability to convert initial prescribing into consistent, habitual usage patterns. PA and payer friction causing physician drop-off before first prescription.

Outcome

Credible access to specialty prescribers through established relationships. Sustained presence that builds durable prescribing patterns. Practice-level support that removes barriers between a physician's intent to prescribe and actual patient access.

FDA Readiness & 503B Operational Alignment

The FDA treats 503B outsourcing facilities like commercial drug manufacturers — not traditional pharmacies. An inspection wave is expected in 2026, and the most common findings are not the ones organizations prepare for. Inadequate sterility assurance, poor documentation, unvalidated aseptic processes, and environmental monitoring gaps are the citations that trigger Form 483s, warning letters, product recalls, and facility shutdowns. The commercial impact is immediate: health systems evaluate 503B partners on FDA inspection history, and a single enforcement action can close accounts that took years to build.

  • Risk-based gap assessments across all cGMP domains — not checklist audits that miss systemic issues
  • Aseptic process validation, media fill review, and sterility assurance aligned to current FDA expectations
  • Environmental monitoring program design and trending against defensible alert and action limits
  • SOP infrastructure, deviation management, and CAPA systems that hold up under investigator scrutiny
  • Mock FDA inspections that simulate real investigator behavior — not internal self-assessments
  • 483 response strategy: root cause analysis, corrective action structuring, and FDA communication within the 15-business-day window
  • Alignment of quality, operations, and commercial strategy so inspection readiness and revenue growth move together
In Practice

503B FDA Readiness & Remediation

Challenge

A registered 503B facility operates under the assumption that their existing quality processes are sufficient — until an FDA inspection reveals otherwise. The most dangerous gaps are the ones that look compliant on paper: media fills conducted but not validated to current standards, environmental monitoring data collected but not trended, deviations documented but investigations never expanded to adjacent lots. These are the findings that become warning letters.

What We Address

Standard internal audits rarely find what FDA investigators find — because they're designed to confirm compliance, not challenge it. Vendxa applies a risk-based methodology that mirrors actual FDA inspection behavior: looking for the unresolved string that unwinds the entire quality system. We identify aseptic process gaps, documentation vulnerabilities, CAPA closure failures, and commercial misalignment before they become observations.

Outcome

A facility that can withstand FDA scrutiny without disruption to commercial operations. Quality systems structured to defend, not just document. And when an inspection does occur — a prepared team, a clear response framework, and no surprises that put accounts, revenue, or the facility's operational status at risk.

What Clients Say

Perspectives from commercial and operational leaders who have worked with Vendxa inside institutional healthcare markets.

We had the product and the contracts. What we didn't have was anyone who could actually get pharmacy leadership to move. Vendxa walked into rooms we'd been trying to get into for two years — and did it in the first 30 days.

VP of Commercial Operations 503B Outsourcing Facility, Southeast

I've hired in-house teams. I've used contract reps. Neither gave us what Vendxa does — senior people who already know the accounts, already understand how IDN decisions move, and aren't learning on our dime.

Chief Commercial Officer Pharmaceutical Manufacturer, Midwest

The FDA readiness piece is what separated them. Our commercial team and our quality team had never been in the same room before Vendxa. That alignment alone changed how we approached our next inspection cycle.

Director of Quality & Compliance 503A Compounding Organization, Southwest

From the Field

Short, practical perspectives on how institutional healthcare decisions actually move — written for commercial and operational leaders who need to operate inside these environments.

IDN product adoption timeline
IDN

The Hidden Timeline of IDN Product Adoption

Understanding governance cadence and decision pathways makes your execution feel seamless to the system — and stalls disappear.

Pharmacy leadership evaluating suppliers
Hospital

How Pharmacy Leadership Evaluates New Suppliers

The strongest story is risk reduction — quality, continuity, operational fit, and economics. In that order.

Hospital pull-through after contracting
Execution

Why Hospital Pull-Through Fails After Contracting

Contracting is eligibility. Adoption is operations. The gap between the two is where conversion quietly stalls.

The Next Step

If any of this resonates,
the next step is a 20-minute conversation.

No pitch. No deck. Just an honest read on whether there's a fit — and what execution could look like for your specific situation.

Scottsdale, AZ  ·  growth@vendxa.com  ·  480-466-9647