Title Valuation challenges and investor influence in sustainable health ventures
Authors Vasiliauskaitė, Deimantė ; Mažylytė, Ieva ; Teresiūtė, Paulina ; Meng, Wen Ting ; Kaab Omeir, Ahmad
DOI 10.22495/cgsrv10i2p7
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Is Part of Corporate governance and sustainability review.. Sumy : Virtus Interpress. 2026, vol. 10, iss. 2, p. 78-90.. ISSN 2519-8971. eISSN 2519-898X
Keywords [eng] cluster analysis ; ESG integration ; investor structure ; startup valuation ; sustainable health ventures
Abstract [eng] This study examines valuation challenges and investor influence in sustainable health startups, a sector characterised by regulatory complexity, high capital requirements, and increasing integration of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) factors. The research addresses the limitations of traditional valuation models in capturing early-stage success indicators and proposes a more nuanced approach. A mixed-methods design was employed, combining a systematic literature review with empirical cluster analysis using a dataset of 923 U.S.-based startups across 35 sectors. The analysis identified five distinct startup archetypes based on investor structure, funding levels, and exit outcomes. Startups with the most diverse investor base — engaging both angel and venture capital (VC) across multiple funding stages — exhibited the highest acquisition success rates (91.8 per cent). Sector-specific analysis revealed that health startups received above-average funding and achieved a 100 per cent acquisition rate, whereas medical startups displayed greater outcome variability. These findings highlight the need for multidimensional, sector-sensitive valuation frameworks that incorporate investor signalling, ESG orientation, and market timing. The findings of this study both support and build upon prior research on startup valuation and success factors. In line with Davila et al. (2003) and Lerner et al. (2018), the clustering analysis demonstrates that investor diversity — especially the combined involvement of angel and VC investors — substantially enhances the likelihood of acquisition. The results are also consistent with Somaya and You (2024) and Adner et al. (2016), underscoring scalability as a central determinant of valuation, particularly in technology-intensive sectors such as software, mobile, and biotechnology, which secured the highest levels of funding. The study offers new insights into the entrepreneurial finance literature and provides practical guidance for investors, founders, and policymakers aiming to scale sustainable innovation in the health sector.
Published Sumy : Virtus Interpress
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2026
CC license CC license description