What does it take to go from working on a hospital floor to leading a rapidly growing healthcare startup?
In this exclusive episode of Raw and Real Entrepreneurship, host Susan Sly interviews Jasmine Bhatti, RN, the founder and CEO of Navi Nurses. Jasmine shares her journey from working in critical care to bootstrapping her own private-duty nursing company, scaling to over 200 nurses, and transforming at-home healthcare.
If you’re an aspiring entrepreneur, healthcare professional, or business leader, this interview is packed with actionable insights to help you start, scale, and succeed.
ย What Youโll Learn in This Interview:
- How Jasmine Bhatti transitioned from Registered Nurse to Entrepreneur
- The challenges of bootstrapping a healthcare business
- How to find your first clients and determine pricing
- The importance of team culture in scaling a business
- How to manage stress and personal growth as a founder
- The future of healthcare entrepreneurship and B2B expansion
Key Takeaways from the Interview
1. Identifying a Gap in Healthcare
Jasmine spent 12 years as a registered nurse at Barrow Neurological Institute and the Mayo Clinic, working in neurology, plastics, and ENT (ear, nose, and throat). She repeatedly saw gaps in patient care, especially when transitioning from hospital to home.
Instead of accepting the status quo, she decided to take action and build a new model for in-home nursing careโone that prioritizes patient empowerment, engagement, and education.
2. Bootstrapping a Healthcare Startup
Many assume that launching a healthcare business requires millions in venture funding, but Jasmine bootstrapped Navi Nurses from the ground up.
She started with a hybrid approach, working part-time while taking on private clients, proving her business model before fully transitioning.
Tip: If youโre starting a business, consider a hybrid approachโtest your idea, build demand, and gradually scale before leaving your full-time job.
3. Scaling a Business from 1 to 200+ Nurses
Growing from an idea to 200+ nurses in just a few years is no small feat. Jasmine credits word-of-mouth referrals, community engagement, and a strong company culture for Navi Nurses’ rapid growth.
She also emphasizes that entrepreneurs must be adaptable, taking things a few months at a time while remaining open to new opportunities.
4. Managing Stress & Avoiding Burnout
As a former unit nurse, Jasmine faced extreme pressure. To stay resilient, she turned to mindfulness, nutrition, and intentional time with friends and family.
Tip: Prioritize self-care. Whether youโre a startup founder or healthcare worker, mental and physical well-being are critical to long-term success.
5. Whatโs Next for Navi Nurses?
Jasmine is now working to expand Navi Nurses through B2B partnerships, making in-home nursing more affordable and accessible. Sheโs also collecting data to push for insurance reimbursement for private-duty nursing services.
The healthcare industry is ripe for disruption, and Jasmine is leading the charge.
About Jasmine Bhatti, RN:
Jasmine Bhatti, RN, is the founder and CEO of Navi Nurses, a private-duty nursing company redefining at-home healthcare.
With 12 years of experience at Barrow Neurological Institute and the Mayo Clinic, Jasmine saw firsthand the gaps in patient care and launched Navi Nurses in 2021 to bridge them.
She is currently pursuing a PhD in Nursing and Health Innovation at Arizona State University and holds a masterโs in regulatory science and health safety from ASU.
ย Connect with Jasmine Bhatti & Navi Nurses
๐ Website: https://www.navinurses.com
๐ท Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/navinurses
๐ผ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasminebhatti
About Susan Sly:
Susan Sly is the maven behind Raw and Real Entrepreneurship. An award-winning AI entrepreneur and MIT Sloan alumna, Susan has carved out a niche at the forefront of the AI revolution, earning accolades as a top AI innovator in 2023 and a key figure in real-time AI advancements for 2024. With a storied career that blends rigorous academic insight with astute market strategies, Susan has emerged as a formidable founder, a discerning angel investor, a sought-after speaker, and a venerated voice in the business world. Her insights have graced platforms from CNN to CNBC and been quoted in leading publications like Forbes and MarketWatch. At the helm of the Raw and Real Entrepreneurship podcast, Susan delivers unvarnished wisdom and strategies, empowering aspiring entrepreneurs and seasoned business veterans alike to navigate the challenges of the entrepreneurial landscape with confidence.
Connect with Susan Sly
๐ Website: https://www.susansly.com
๐ท Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/susansly
๐ผ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/susansly
๐๏ธ Our Last Episode: https://susansly.com/navigating-startup-growth-and-challenges-with-gregory-shepard/
Susan Sly 00:00
Well, what is up, Raw and Real Entrepreneurs? I hope you are having an amazing day wherever you are in the world, and Iโm back. You know, itโs, um, itโs, itโs been a minute since our last show. I recorded almost 400 interviews for the podcast, and then my father passed suddenly. And if youโve been a long-time listener, you will know Joe was his name, that he was raising me as a single dad, and it was a gut punch on July 10, 2024.
Susan Sly 00:33
When I got up and received that call. And I know some of you have aging parents, some of you have dealt with loss, and my heart goes out to you. And so when that happened, I was also spinning up my newest venture, ThePause.ai.
Susan Sly 00:47
And what The Pause is, it is making menopause care accessible for millions of women through a commercial app. Itโs currently available in the App Store, and soon it will be available in the Play Store. So, I was building a company, navigating grief, and doing all of those things. The show paused for a minute, but we are back, and Iโm so excited about this seasonโs guests, especially my guest today, who is absolutely remarkable.
So, letโs get into the show. Today, I have the privilege of bringing on someone who is not just the founder and CEO of Navii Nurses, a rapidly growing private duty nursing company. She is also a healthcare provider. She saw gaps in the system and was a nurse at Barrow Neurological Institute, which is extremely prestigious, and the Mayo Clinic, where she focused on neurology, plastics, and Ear, Nose, and Throat populations for 12 years.
It was during the pandemic that she saw so starkly what was happening in terms of patient care and at-home care that she decided to make the leap. In this episode, sheโs going to talk about what itโs like to go from being an employee to an entrepreneur, calculated risk, dealing with scale, what happens when people leave or you have to let people go, and how she manages stress now compared to how she used to.
So, letโs jump into the show with my friend and guest, the amazing CEO and founder of Navi Nurses, Jasmine Bhatti.
Voiceover 02:31
This is Raw and Real Entrepreneurship, the show that brings the no-nonsense truth of what is required to start, grow, and scale your business. I am your host, Susan Sly.
Susan Sly 02:43
Okay, Iโm back. Itโs been a minute. 400 shows, the downloads just growing, 141 countries, and I put everything on pause, literally, after my dad died. And as Iโve always said to all of you, you know, hey, when you have to focus and life throws you a curve, itโs time to prioritize. I got a company stood up, and during this entire time, I was thinking about all of you. I was thinking about the show, the global audience, and our first show backโthere was one person at the top of my list, and she is here today, which Iโm super flippinโ fired up about. So Jasmine, welcome to Raw and Real Entrepreneurship.
Jasmine Bhatti 03:26
Oh, thank you, Susan, for having me. Iโm so, so honored to be here.
Susan Sly 03:31
Well, listen, I mean, firstโyou are likeโwhen I first met you, you walk around, and I think that literally angels follow you, and thereโs a light just on you. And I met you at an award ceremony where you were receiving an award, and you have this, like, incredibleโas we would say in Frenchโthis joie de vivre, this joy of living about you. And as I got to know you, and then you spoke at our femtech event, you have an incredible story.
And so you, you founded this company, Navi Nurses, which people are calling, like, the Uber for nurses. And I even feel that, you know, hey, I use UberโI love Uber (disclosure: I donโt own any Uber stock). I almost feel thatโs a downgrade, because I think what youโre doing is so much more. But before we jump into Navi Nurses, like, when did you decide to become an entrepreneur?
Jasmine Bhatti 04:28
Yeah, so I think my first experience with being an entrepreneur was actually being a Girl Scout, going door to door, like, knocking, flying, Girl Scout cookies. And I donโt think there was, like, a clear point where I was like, โOkay, this is what I want to do.โ Iโve been a nurse for almost 14 years now, and it wasnโt until just a constellation of things happenedโlike noticing problems in healthcare that I wanted changed and feeling like I couldnโt do anything about it in this system. Then, just working through COVID and, like, losing my soul to all of that, it just was like...
Jasmine Bhatti 05:00
Iโve got to get out, like, for my own health and well-being. And it was just kind of like, okay, Iโve had this idea for so long. Why donโt I just take this opportunity, heal myself, and then just see what comes of itโlike, what happens with everything?
Susan Sly 05:14
And I want to give a shoutout to Girl Scouts, because I was a Girl Guide in Canada, and you get rejected! You would think everyone wants your cookies, but thatโs not true. Like, not everyone wants your cookies. Itโs like, โIโm cute,โ like, you know. And facing that rejectionโthe door knocking, the like, โYes, I want your cookies,โ itโs a win, but โNo, I donโt.โ
Susan Sly 05:39
You know, I love that you brought that up because I think that, you know, COVID, especially tooโI was having this conversation with a friend about our kids because I had one who graduated high school during COVID, and one who graduated university. And thereโs a whole group of young people that, you know, they were at home and they were sheltered. They didnโt go out and knock on doors and sell cookies. They didnโt get that experience or that grit, and weโre starting to see some of that now.
I know weโre going to talk about finding the right team members. Obviously, as youโre growing the company, youโre bringing on so many amazing people, but weโll talk about that in a minute.
I want to ask youโNavi Nurses is disrupting this model of healthcare. For the listeners who donโt know about the company, how did you go from โI have this ideaโ to โIโm actually starting a companyโ? Because the statistic is that 70% of Americans want to start a business, but less thanโyou know, what is it?โ7% actually do. So how did you become one of those 7%, Jasmine, who was like, โThis is my idea, and Iโm actually going to go for itโ?
Jasmine Bhatti 06:52
Yeah. Well, so much of it really is rooted in my own personal experience as a family caregiver. My grandmother was diagnosed with head and neck cancer. We took her home, and what we realized during that time was that insurance covered almost nothing. There were definitely points where I was like, Where else can we go? There has to be more help and support.
That whole experience inspired me to become a nurse, but it also opened my eyes to the idea that thereโs a lot of shame in healthcare. We donโt talk about things as often as we should, and caregiving is one of those spaces. My patients would always tug at my clothes and say, โHey, can you come home with me?โ I thought the problem my family and I faced was unique to usโlike maybe we just couldnโt handle it.
But in truth, there are millions of people who go home, and about half of those discharged from the hospital donโt even qualify for any support. That doesnโt mean they donโt want it or couldnโt benefit from itโwe all can. It was just this idea, and working in a system can be difficult. You can have ideas and see problems, but where do you take them? Whoโs going to pay attention to you? The hospital has 500 other things to think aboutโwhy would they listen to me as a nurse?
So I realized I had this idea, and I needed to take it forward. I actually had a professor at ASUโIโm trying to finish my PhDโand when I was talking to this professor, he said, โIโm going to start connecting you to people in the startup community.โ Thatโs really how it started. Someone else said, โHey, I know some resources. Let me share them with you.โ
For me, that changed the game. Because otherwise, itโs really dauntingโwhere do you start? Who do you talk to? What do you need? What do you do? Having some direction pointed toward me was really helpful.
Susan Sly 08:53
So you see a problem, right? Thereโs this whole thing with entrepreneurs solving problems. And Iโm going to give a mad shoutout to Gregory Shepard, who has been here before. Heโs had so many exits totaling over a billion dollars. Heโs amazing, and one of the things he talks about is this story, Jasmine, of his mom when he was a little kid. She asked him, Who made more moneyโthe people mining for gold, or the Levi Strauss company providing them all with jeans?
She explained that the chances of finding gold were very slim, but the company saying, Everyoneโs going to need jeans, those were the ones who made all the money. And look at Leviโsโtheyโre still going strong. I donโt even know how old they are, but well over 150 years old.
Itโs the same thing. You see this problem, the industry is ripe for disruption. Healthcare is a massive, monolithic industry. But then youโre like, No, Iโm actually going to do something about it. Just point me in the right direction.
Susan Sly 09:59
Yeah, and, you know, just knowing you as I do, itโs like, Point me in the right direction. Youโre like a husky dog, and youโre going to run in that direction, and youโre going to go. So, what were the first steps you took?
And speak toโyou know, we have a global audience: India, Nigeria, Australia, the UK, everywhere. Speak to the person listening whoโs like, You know what? I want to start a business, and like Jasmine, I donโt know which way to turn. What were those first steps you took?
Jasmine Bhatti 10:29
Oh, it was 100% just immersing myself into the community. For me, that meant two communities: one being ASU, the university Iโm at, and tapping into the resources of the university, which was incredibly helpful. But then also the startup community around me, which is filled with all these other big dreamers who have experience in so many different realms.
By becoming more integrated with the community, I started to think and see differently, and that was really pivotal for me. Being surrounded by people who are ambitious, excited, and passionate, and whoโve had experience doing things before, helped me potentially avoid mistakes or think about things differently.
So, being connected to your communityโthatโs the golden piece. I donโt think it matters what country youโre in; finding that community is key. Now that so much is available online, I think people can find virtual communities to help support them on whatever mission theyโre on.
Susan Sly 11:39
I love that, and thatโs a testament to a brilliant entrepreneur. Youโre coachable, right? Youโre plugging into the community. Itโs not just showing upโyouโre actually taking the advice and saying, Okay, Iโm going to do this.
So, you bootstrapped Navi Nurses. Talk about the beginnings of the company. For people whose first language isnโt English, bootstrapping means youโre putting up your own money. Just like Sarah Blakely bootstrapped Spanxโshe put $5,000 into building her prototypes, and now, you know, the company is...
Susan Sly 12:19
You know, massive, multi-billion-dollar company. So thatโs what it meansโyou took your own resources to start it. Talk about starting it and bootstrapping it with your idea and your energy, and thatโs all there was.
Jasmine Bhatti 12:33
Thatโs pretty much it, yeah. So, everything kind of started towardโ
Jasmine Bhatti 12:39
The idea really started during COVID, but it wasnโt until the tail end that I finally said, Okay, Iโm leaving. That was actually really hard for me because it was still the tail end of COVID, and as a clinician working in the hospital, I felt a lot of guilt about leaving. I didnโt want to leave my colleagues to finish taking care of everything that was happening. That was probably the hardest barrier for me to overcomeโthe guilt.
But I knew that if I really wanted to build something that was going to make a difference, I needed to focus 100% on building. So I set a date. I told myself, Iโm going to leave the hospital by this date. I planned it months ahead of time.
While still working in the hospital, I was taking patients on the side and figuring out, Is this something I can do? I set the date based on the number of patients I was caring for at the time and thought, I think Iโll be okay. And if it doesnโt work out, Iโm a nurseโI can always go back to practicing in a hospital. I had something to fall back on.
Susan Sly 14:37
Wow, and thatโthere are so many questions I have for you, and I want to unpack that a little bit. Like you said, itโs just you, and itโs harder, right? Weโve had so many entrepreneurs on the show whereโ
Jasmine Bhatti 14:53
They have had a partner who is working, right? So it does give that buffer. And by the same token, weโveโ
Susan Sly 14:59
Had those who havenโt, who are in your space. Itโs just proof positive that if youโre fiscally responsible, deliberate, andโyou knowโyou started in hybrid, right? You went part-time while also building your company part-time, which is what a lot of entrepreneurs do. So, how did you find your first clients, and what was your pricing model?
Jasmine Bhatti 15:28
Oh, gosh. Okay, so first of all, as nurses, itโs really hard to charge for what we do. You just want to help everyone, and it was really hard for me to even come up with a number. So I looked at the current rate for something similar. I researched across the countryโwhat are people charging?โand I set a number that I thought aligned with current market trends.
We started at $75 an hour, but weโre actually much farther beyond that now because weโve had to build infrastructure and a lot of other things.
Jasmine Bhatti 16:06
But that was really how we set the pricing. As far as finding our first customers, I actually turned to social media. I found some Facebook groups for senior care providers and posted, Hey, Iโm Jasmine, Iโm a nurse, hereโs my philosophy, hereโs what Iโm doing. Iโd love any referrals.
This December will be our four-year anniversary of booking our very first client. Itโs been an amazing whirlwind since then. In healthcare, so much of what you do is built on trustโhealthcare providers feeling comfortable saying, Okay, Iโm going to pass this person off to your care.
When you can demonstrate that youโll meet or exceed their expectations, people start to come. So much of our businessโactually, almost all of itโhas grown through word of mouth and consistent referrals from people who know we provide great outcomes.
Susan Sly 17:12
Thatโs amazing. I love what you said about the pricing model because pricing is such an interesting thing, right? I was having this conversation with a friend about pricing software, and in my previous world, we priced something that didnโt exist.
How do you price it? How do you benchmark it? Especially when youโre opening a business in an area that doesnโt have that type of businessโhow do you account for geolocation and all sorts of other factors? Kudos to you for figuring that out.
Initially, was your business all cash pay, or was there an insurance component? How did that work?
Susan Sly 18:48
Oh, definitely. And when I think about my dadโso Iโve talked about Joe on almost every show. Long-time listeners of the show kind of followed along in his journey.
Just over a year ago, he went into the hospital. Prior to that, weโd had an intervention with his doctor, and his doctor said, Joe, if you go into the hospital, you are not coming out. So, he went into the hospital, and then we struggled to find an assisted living facility for him because he was on a sliding scale of insulin.
There were a lot of very specific needs, but prior to that, the goal was to keep my dad in his house as long as possible with dignity. He was in Canada, and I kept searching and searching. I wanted a nurse to come in and take his blood sugar readings because I didnโt trust him to give me accurate numbers.
Susan Sly 19:59
Love you in Heaven, DadโI know you lied to me.
Susan Sly 20:04
Anyway, I can laugh about it now. And, you know, we didnโt have that. To your point, there is such a need. Being Gen X and part of the sandwich generationโstill having kids at home and, at that point, dealing with an aging parentโnot having that person to come in, care for him medically, and report back to me about what was going on was challenging. I love the need youโre fulfilling.
Now, as you approach your four-year anniversary, talk about how youโve managed to bootstrap your company and still grow. How big is the team now, and approximately how many clients are you reaching?
Jasmine Bhatti 20:48
Wow, so we have over 200 nurses now, just here in Phoenix alone. This year, weโve already surpassed 30,000 hours of care provided in our community. Again, itโs been entirely through word of mouth.
Weโre also learning what people are searching for because weโre running a study. I won a $1.5 million grant to study our work, and weโre seeing incredible differencesโnot just for patients but also for nurses, which is really important. Along the way, weโve done both qualitative and quantitative work. Weโve talked to people and asked them questions, and weโve analyzed data.
Interestingly, many people donโt even understand what nurses can do. When given the option to go home with a nurse, some say, I donโt know how thatโs going to help me. But once they experience it, they canโt imagine going home without that support because of the immense value it provides.
Weโre now focused on educating the community about what we do, why weโre important, and how we can help in so many ways. Even as a profession, we havenโt done a great job of that. People often see nurses as hand-holders or order-followers, but in reality, weโre your eyes and ears every second youโre in the hospital. We catch the small changes, coordinate care, and shield you from the chaos so you can focus on healing.
My mission now is to essentially rebrand nursingโnot just for my company but for the profession as a whole. I want people to recognize what we do, so more people can find us and learn how we can help, especially in challenging healthcare situations.
Going into a hospital is scary, and staffing impacts mortalityโwe donโt talk about that enough. My dad spent a lot of time in the hospital last year, so I completely understand how vulnerable that feels. But when hospitals arenโt properly staffed with nurses, patients are more likely to die. Thatโs why nurses strikeโwe know we can provide the care people need and deserve.
Sorry, that was a long-winded answer!
Susan Sly 23:26
No, and preach, because in the United States, thereโs a healthcare worker shortage, and itโs only going to get worse. Even with thePauseโขโfor people who donโt know, thatโs the company Iโve been buildingโwe look at the ratio of patients to certified providers in the U.S. alone, which is one to 30,000.
Looking at that problem, itโs like, How do we provide accessible support to women navigating perimenopause and menopause until they can get with a provider? Even then, the provider has limited time. So how can we continue to support them? Thatโs what weโre buildingโand have builtโbut weโre still building.
Jasmine, when I think about your growth, itโs incredible. You go from having this idea, a professor pointing you in the right direction, and now you have 200 nurses working for you. What has been a big learning lesson for you in scaling a team? Thatโs hugeโmost companies donโt scale that fast. Whatโs been a big takeaway for you in terms of building a team?
Jasmine Bhatti 24:47
Oh, gosh. The importance of having the right people around you is so critical. Iโve come to realize that some people are here for part of the journey, while others can stay longer. I think there are people who are really good at certain segments, and being okay with that...
Jasmine Bhatti 25:04
Thatโs been a big aha for meโjust appreciating people for the significance of their contributions during their time with us. Coming from healthcare especially, Iโm not sure if youโve heard of this, but in nursing, we call it โnurses eat their young.โ Thereโs a lot of what we call lateral violence, where instead of helping one another, we actually hurt one another. Itโs very pervasive in nursing culture.
Thereโs also a lot of discussion about psychological safety in healthcare and why itโs so important for patients. But what Iโve realized is that many hospitals have these great missions and visions, but at the basic unitโthe people providing careโthose individuals donโt feel safe or valued.
I now get to create a culture where we do value our nurses. We treat them as though theyโre worthy. Seeing them come to life because someone pays attention to them, appreciates them, and values themโthatโs been so beautiful to watch. Itโs unlike anything I ever experienced, and itโs something many of my nurses havenโt either.
While building this team has been incredible, one of my biggest concerns going forward is, How do we protect and nurture this beautiful culture as we continue to grow and scale rapidly? Itโs so important for the people working for us because it ultimately impacts the patients we serve.
Susan Sly 26:45
Yeah, I hadnโt heard about that piece with nurses. My mother-in-law was a nurse, my mom was a nurse, and my co-founder at TBT is a nurse practitionerโMia, who you met. All I see is that the people entering the profession have these beautiful hearts of service.
Thereโs also an attractive salary now, given the supply and demand. But I also see the stressโnurses being pulled in so many directions. During the pandemic, we worked on using computer vision to help pre-screen patients because nurses were so overtaxed. They needed to be saving lives, not pointing an iPad at someone and asking, Have you had the sniffles in the last...whatever.
To your point, How do you create this culture of nurture? I love what you saidโI wrote it down: Appreciate people while theyโre there. As entrepreneurs, we know that the people who take our company to one level arenโt always the ones who will take it to the next. Sometimes that can feel personal.
Has it ever felt personal to you when someone leaves or when someone has to go?
Jasmine Bhatti 28:14
It has. You know, I actually had to exit my co-founder early on in building everything, and that was really, really hard for me. I think that was my first taste of realizing that you can have the best intentions and try to put everything together the way you want, and sometimes it just doesnโt work outโand thatโs okay.
You release them to go out and do whatโs beautiful for them in their own life, and it allows you to continue building what youโre meant to build. You honor them for their contributions during that time.
Susan Sly 28:55
Yeah, absolutely. I know for myself, any time Iโve had to let someone goโand very candidly, this is Raw and Real Entrepreneurshipโsometimes it hasnโt been hard, but other times itโs been really, really hard.
Iโve found that people who are supposed to come back into your life, they do, right? Especially in entrepreneurship, youโre either learning or youโre dying. If youโre not growing as a founder, your company isnโt growing either. We all grow, shift, and change, and there are seasons for everything.
Let me ask you thisโgoing back to your incredible growth: 200 team members, and I know youโre growing month over month because demand isnโt diminishing. How do you handle stress personally?
Jasmine Bhatti 29:55
Oh, you know, Iโ
Jasmine Bhatti 29:59
Iโ
Jasmine Bhatti 30:00
Say all the time...
Jasmine Bhatti 30:00
I worked on a COVID unit in the hospital. Thereโs nothing thatโs ever going to happen to meโeverโthat will come close to what I went through. To help me cope with everything that happened, I spent some time in Bali. I worked with some shamans and learned techniques to incorporate, like mindful walking and chanting.
Sitting out in nature, reconnecting to my rootsโtaking my shoes off and putting my feet on the earthโis so grounding for me. Being near water is especially important; thatโs where I go when I need time to reflect, think, and find peace.
I also lost control of my physical health during COVID. You didnโt see me then, but I was 50 pounds heavier because I was eating pizza and ice cream every day. Iโd come home, eat, cry, go to bed, and wake up to do it all over again.
Since then, Iโve been more mindful about nutrition. Iโve learned how it impacts my well-being, mental clarity, physical self, and confidence. I focus on eating the right foods for me while still enjoying things I love, like chocolate. Itโs about balance.
Iโve also become more intentional about staying connected. When I worked in the hospital, I wasnโt great at keeping up with family and friendsโfamily, yes, but not friends. Now, as an entrepreneur with limited time, I live off my calendar. Every week, I look at it to see which friends Iโm spending time with. I block out time for the people who lift my soul, knowing I can do the same for them. That connection is critical for me.
Susan Sly 32:15
Jasmine, thank you for your vulnerability and truth. One thing for entrepreneursโboth men and womenโis that sometimes, while grinding it out, it can feel empty or lonely. Your experience in the hospital is profound. My friends who were healthcare workers went through so much.
I was also trading emails with Lorna Breenโs husband. She was the physician famously written about in The New York Times who committed suicide. Youโre rightโpizza and ice cream arenโt the healthiest coping tools, but they were in your toolkit at the time.
And hereโs my PSA for anyone listening: if youโre that guy on the United flight at 6 a.m. pounding Bloody MarysโIโve seen youโitโs not healthy. If youโre carrying 70 extra pounds, youโre at risk for a heart attack. But you recognized it, said Enough is enough, and made changes.
My question for you is: whatโs next? Entrepreneurs are always thinking about growth and scaling. Youโre in Phoenix, the fifth-largest city in America, and I know thereโs still a lot of runway there. But whatโs next for Navi Nurses?
Jasmine Bhatti 35:00
Oh my gosh, thereโs so much on the horizon. Weโre building out a separate segment of our business focused on business-to-business (B2B), so not necessarily for consumers. There are ways we can have organizations help fund and pay for this, so hopefully people wonโt have to pay so much out of pocket. Thatโs a route Iโm really looking at.
Weโre also collecting evidence to hopefully create a billing code that shows what weโre doing should be covered by insurance. Weโre laying the foundation for that because the way weโre delivering care is life-changingโnot just for people, but in terms of cost savings. Thatโs everything to the healthcare system.
We spend about a fifth of our GDP on healthcare in the U.S., and if we can save these large systems a lot of money, thatโs huge. So, weโre working on building relationships to make that happen because every single person deserves the level of care weโre providing.
Partnerships are a big focus. What else? Oh my gosh, my role is always evolving. Thatโs another interesting thingโIโve gone from doing everything to figuring out how to be the face of the brand and change the narrative. Part of what we do may involve changing policy or legislation, so those things are on the table, too.
I try to take it a few months at a time because everything is changing so rapidly. I can set goals for where I want us to go or where I think weโll go in the next few months, but if a new door opens, I might walk through it. Thatโs one of the exciting things about entrepreneurshipโyou get to pick which path you want to take.
Thereโs so much you donโt know yet because those opportunities havenโt revealed themselves. As an entrepreneur, your job is to find all the doors and then decide which ones you want to walk through.
Susan Sly 36:00
I love that because entrepreneurship has changed. One of my friends, Anthony Sohoโheโs been an entrepreneur for years and was just appointed CEO of MoneyGramโsays, Business plan? I never show a business plan.
Any entrepreneur who says, This is my plan for the next five years,โno! How can you possibly know? The landscape is always changing, so how can you seize new opportunities?
I love your approach: Iโm going to take it a few months at a time, seize opportunities, and make sure they fit our brand and growth trajectory.
Well, Jasmine, I freaking love you, girlfriend, and Iโm so proud of you. Iโm proud to know you. For everyone listening, I hope this show gives you the courage to say, You know what? If Jasmine can do it, I can do it.
You donโt have to raise millions of dollars to start a huge company. You can do what she didโbe discerning, take the hybrid approach, and build it step by step.
So, Jasmine, any final words for our audience?
Jasmine Bhatti 36:09
Yeah, no, I think you just nailed it. If I could leave an ending message, it would be: just start. Go and do it. Especially for females, nurses, and minoritiesโdonโt let anything hold you back.
There are people in your community who want nothing more than for you to succeed. Know that they exist, find your people, and youโll get the support you need. Just start.
Thank you so much for having me, Susan. Itโs an honor to be here with you.
Susan Sly 37:51
Absolutely. Well, thank you, Jasmine. Just start. I love that. Just start.
For everyone listening, if this show has helped you, weโd love a five-star review. Please share the show and tag us on social media. All of Jasmineโs social links will be in the show notes, so check those out. Be sure to explore our past episodes for continued inspiration to crush it on your own Raw and Real Entrepreneurship journey.
Thank you, everyone, and Iโll see you in the next episode.
Susan Sly 38:20
Hey, this is Susan, and thanks so much for listening to this episode of Raw and Real Entrepreneurship. If this episodeโor any episodeโhas been helpful to you, and youโve gotten at least one solid tip from myself or my guests, Iโd love it if you left a five-star review wherever you listen to podcasts.
After you leave your review, email us at reviews@susansly.com to let us know where you left it. If I read your review on air, you could win a $50 Amazon gift card! Weโd appreciate it so much, as reviews help boost the show and spread this message around the world.
If youโre interested in any of the resources we discussed on the show, head over to susansly.comโthatโs where all the show notes live. With that, go out, rock your day, and God bless. Iโll see you in the next episode!