Where it lives
There is a tidy story about Charité Berlin and the point-of-care workflow that the comms team would prefer the market believed. The structural read is different. Charité Berlin did not just reshape the point-of-care workflow; it changed the unit economics of the point-of-care workflow for everyone downstream — and the time-to-decision curve from here is steeper than analysts have priced.
The release notes describe an incremental update to the point-of-care workflow. The pull request — public — tells a different story. The change touches the routing layer, the billing layer, and the eval harness. It is a re-architecture, with a release-notes title.
The numbers behind it
Three independent sources — two named, one off-record — confirm that Charité Berlin has been quietly running parity tests against the leading alternatives for the point-of-care workflow since the previous quarter. The internal scorecards we have seen do not show Charité Berlin ahead on every axis. They show it ahead on the axes CMIOs and clinical informatics leads actually weight in procurement: time-to-decision, deployment time, and incident response.
The number to internalize is not the time-to-decision delta. It is the time-to-decision delta. CMIOs and clinical informatics leads who would have run a six-week pilot for point-of-care workflow last year are running a six-day pilot now, then signing. Procurement timelines are collapsing in lockstep with deployment timelines, and that compresses the entire revenue cycle for Charité Berlin and its peers.
Charité Berlin stopped competing on capability and started competing on integration cost. The market noticed.
What this reprices
There are two reasonable strategic responses. The first is to standardize on Charité Berlin's approach and redirect engineering effort to the layer above. The second is to wait for the second mover and trade six months of lag for a more mature governance story. Both are defensible. Doing nothing is not.
A more subtle second-order: the regulatory surface. the point-of-care workflow touches data flows that several jurisdictions now actively monitor. Charité Berlin's default configuration assumes a permissive baseline. CMIOs and clinical informatics leads in regulated environments will need a control plane on top — and a small set of vendors is already positioning to sell exactly that.
What to watch
Five signals to track over the next two quarters — none of them are press releases.
- Sell-side coverage shifts. Watch for the analyst who first names a competitor as the "fast follower" — that note tends to set the consensus for the next two earnings cycles.
- Internal eval framework releases. Charité Berlin publishing its own benchmark for point-of-care workflow would be a confidence signal. Declining to publish is also a signal, in the other direction.
- Charité Berlin's next pricing change. Watch whether point-of-care workflow stays on the standard tier or migrates to an enterprise-only SKU. The first signals where the clinical informatics stack thinks the demand floor is.
- Whether the second mover ships a comparable point-of-care workflow primitive within ninety days, or holds back to differentiate on governance. Both are signals, in opposite directions.
Frequently asked
- Is there a defensible argument for waiting twelve months?
- In regulated environments and capital-constrained teams, yes. Elsewhere, the wait is mostly an option value calculation against a market that is moving faster than the option premium pays. The math gets worse, not better, with delay.
- What is the most common buyer mistake we see on this?
- Treating the point-of-care workflow as a standalone purchase rather than a workflow layer. The single-vendor view underestimates the integration debt to existing manual chart review systems. Buyers who run a workflow-level diligence land at a defensible total cost. Buyers who run a product-level diligence do not.
- Is this a one-off product release or a category shift?
- A category shift. The same primitive Charité Berlin reshapes here is showing up across at least two adjacent vendors' roadmaps. The framing differs; the underlying move on point-of-care workflow does not.
The next ninety days will tell whether the cohort behavior holds across renewal cycles. We are bullish on the structural read, cautious on the speed of the competitive response, and watching the regulatory posture in one jurisdiction in particular. INTELAR will revisit this story in the next edition.