
A regional private equity firm was evaluating a significant acquisition in Southeast Asia's private healthcare sector. The target was a multi-country hospital network with facilities across Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand.
The investment thesis rested on the assumption that rising middle-class demand, underinvestment in public healthcare infrastructure, and favorable demographic trends would support sustained revenue growth across all three markets.
The thesis was directionally sound. What the team could not establish from financial statements, management presentations, and published market data was whether the operational reality matched the investment case.
Three questions drove the primary research mandate.
The firm had a four-week window before the IC submission deadline. Two of those weeks were available for primary research. Speed and specificity were both non-negotiable.
Konnect received the brief and ran parallel searches across all three markets simultaneously. The team identified three practitioner profiles as the highest priority:
For Indonesia, the search focused on practitioners with direct experience in the private hospital regulatory environment under the Ministry of Health framework and the evolving role of BPJS Kesehatan in shaping private sector reimbursement dynamics.
For Malaysia, the team prioritised practitioners with experience in both the conventional and Islamic healthcare insurance segments, given the target's significant exposure to the Malaysian market where takaful-linked health coverage is a growing component of payer mix.
For Thailand, the search targeted former executives from Thailand's leading private hospital groups with direct knowledge of how competitive dynamics between Bangkok-centric chains and regional provincial operators were shifting.
Within five days of the initial brief, Konnect had confirmed practitioners covering all three research areas across all three markets.
The expert sessions surfaced intelligence that materially changed the investment team's view of two components of the thesis.

A former hospital operations executive with direct multi-facility management experience in Indonesia provided a ground-level assessment of the clinical governance challenges inherent in operating private hospitals across Java and non-Java geographies simultaneously. The practitioner also provided direct insight into how the Ministry of Health's recent policy signals on foreign ownership of healthcare assets were being interpreted by legal advisors and existing operators, intelligence that the firm's in-house legal review had not fully captured.
The insurance and managed care practitioner for Malaysia surfaced a shift in how major payers were renegotiating reimbursement rates with private hospital networks, a dynamic that had not yet appeared in any published industry analysis. The timing and magnitude of these shifts were directly relevant to the target's revenue projections in its largest market.
The former hospital group executive in Thailand provided a precise picture of how regional provincial hospital operators were gaining share against Bangkok-centric chains in the specific geographic markets where the target had facilities. This competitive intelligence led the team to revise its market share assumptions in two provinces.
"We thought we understood this sector. The sessions showed us three specific things we had done wrong. That is what primary research is supposed to do."
– Investment Director, Regional Private Equity Firm
The investment team revised its revenue projections for the Malaysian market and adjusted its regulatory risk weighting for Indonesia based directly on the intelligence from the expert sessions. The revised model produced a different valuation range and a more conservative deal structure than the initial draft.
The firm proceeded to the IC with a materially more accurate picture of the target's risk profile and a stronger ability to defend its assumptions under scrutiny. The primary research phase was completed within the two-week window.
For PE teams conducting healthcare due diligence across Southeast Asia, the gap between management presentations and operational reality in private hospital networks is consistently wide. Konnect's coverage across Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand gives investment teams the practitioner access they need within the timelines that deal cycles demand.

Connect with Konnect and get matched with the right specialist within hours.
