People who are blind ask for directions at the front desk.
Paper maps are made of lines and boxes, and rooms & wards are generally numbers and letters.
Further, any hospital in a multi-lingual area will ensure they provide service in the languages they expect people to speak. For everyone else there’s family members to do the visit with.
Is the healthcare industry really losing money?
Is it losing enough money to sit through an explanation of Solana?
Which part of the industry do you refer to?
How many stakeholders have you spoken to?
Do you come from an enterprise sales background?
Have you sold things into large enterprises before?
Have you sold things into large enterprises operating under strict regulations where your solution must coexist with decades of legacy iteration?
Sorry to be an ass, but, I only want to spare you the 2-3 years you’re about to sink chasing this.
I worked in healthcare directly with CXOs for 15 years - the entire industry is moving towards tokenizing everything. In 15 years, I never saw a paper map handed out, not once.
My entire job was to work with the GPOs to align vendor contracts on device sales
The indoor navigation industry sits presently at approximately $22B TAM, per Grand View research it is to reach $174B TAM by 2030.
Wayfinding solutions increases patient experience, this directly increases HCPCS scores. That translates directly into the federal MIPS program (Merit Incentive Payment System) which directly correlates to increased reimbursements from Medicare.
If you increase patient experience scores, it makes the bondholders a bit more likely to offer favorable credit terms.
Sorry to be an ass - but you have no freaking clue what you are talking about and perhaps you should stay in your lane
Edit: And yes, the healthcare industry has been losing money hand over fist for decades - this is not true of device and pharm manufacturers, but for your average community hospital, they are barely scraping by
Those are some impressive credentials. I wish you well.