Full-Time
Posted on 9/9/2025
White-label telehealth platform and services
No salary listed
Des Moines, IA, USA
Remote
Remote position; candidates can also work from HQ in Des Moines, IA.
OpenLoop Health provides white-label telehealth infrastructure that lets organizations launch or scale virtual care. Its platform includes a HIPAA-compliant toolkit—electronic health records, scheduling, payments, video visits, and API integrations—plus back-end services like regulatory setup and revenue-cycle management. It relies on a nationwide clinician network across all 50 states to staff and credential care, enabling partners to keep their own brand. Its goal is to make virtual care accessible to organizations of any size by delivering end-to-end virtual care through combined technology, staffing, and operations support.
Company Size
501-1,000
Company Stage
Series A
Total Funding
$26.2M
Headquarters
Des Moines, Iowa
Founded
2020
Help us improve and share your feedback! Did you find this helpful?
Health Insurance
Dental Insurance
Vision Insurance
Life Insurance
Flexible Work Hours
Unlimited Paid Time Off
401(k) Retirement Plan
401(k) Company Match
Flexible Spending/Health Savings Account
Pet Insurance
EMJ Capital founder Eric Jackson has maintained an $82 price target for Opendoor Technologies, representing an 1,802.55% upside from its current $4.31 share price. Jackson argues the frozen housing market caused by 6.33% mortgage rates has created deferred, not destroyed, demand that will benefit Opendoor when rates drop. Jackson's thesis centres on new CEO Kaz Nejatian, who left his role as Shopify COO for a $1 annual salary at Opendoor. Under Nejatian, the company has slashed headcount per transaction from 11 employees to one using AI. Within seven months, acquisition velocity surged 4.2 times and Opendoor produced its most profitable October cohort. Jackson built his position at $0.73 and published his $82 target at $0.87. The stock reached $10.87 before falling back to current levels.
New Perspective Senior Living partners with OpenLoop Network. In the summer of 2025, a new report confirmed what Rob Fisher knew: it was time. Fisher read Argentum's report "The State of Technology Adoption in Senior Living" and found that 77% of executives surveyed ranked interoperability as a top barrier to technology implementation. The report further validated the market need for Fisher, the CEO of LifeLoop, as the company was already working on a solution to address interoperability challenges. Now seven senior living technology providers, led by LifeLoop, have teamed up to make that solution a reality, solving a problem that is still throttling the majority of operators and giving senior living operators fast and secure access to information to turn fragmented data into coordinated workflows across the entire community. Welcome to The OpenLoop Network. This first-of-its-kind partner ecosystem is built to champion and lead the interoperability movement in senior living, and represents a growing coalition of technology partners. The OpenLoop Network transforms disconnected data into powerful workflows that connect care, engagement and insight for all senior living stakeholders. "We were already down the path of building out the capabilities that were necessary," Fisher says. "We just knew that it was time to present it to the market. Luckily we did establish these original, flagship partnerships, and we will be continuing to add more and more to the network as we move forward." Leading the way on the OpenLoop Network are these companies: * Accushield - visitor management * ALIS - electronic health record * August Health - electronic health record * ECP - electronic health record * LifeLoop - the leading proactive engagement and whole-person wellness platform for senior living * TELS - building management * WelcomeHome - customer relationship management "Health care is about 10 years behind retail and hospitality and other large industries in general technology adoption, and senior living is about eight years behind health care," says Brandon Tabbert, Senior Vice President of Optimization & Innovation at operator New Perspective, an early adopter of the OpenLoop Network. "What we're trying to solve now is this coordination and communication problem, and what Rob and his team are doing is heavy toward that step." The OpenLoop Network is a collaborative initiative, bringing together technology providers who recognize that interoperability requires more than open APIs and integrations - it requires meaningful high-value data flows that deliver impact and results. Erez Cohen, Co-founder and Co-CEO of August Health, also understands the broader mission behind the initiative. "With the OpenLoop Network, LifeLoop and August Health set a new standard for whole-person care, bringing together the full picture of each resident to better support thoughtful resident care and engagement," he says. INSIDE THE NUMBERS: How New Perspective increased length of stay by nearly six months While the OpenLoop Network is in its early stages, Tabbert and New Perspective have already seen promising proof points via a 15-month joint study using LifeLoop solutions. Among the outcomes: * 89% of staff members report significant efficiencies in program planning. By eliminating friction in their systems, community staff were able to get back to what they love: spending time with residents. Communities using LifeLoop reported saving over six hours per week per staff member on administrative tasks, with 89% reporting significant efficiencies in programming planning. * 95% reduction in resident intake time. Through emerging technologies that are intentionally designed for senior living, LifeLoop is delivering real value for operators, including a 95% reduction in resident intake time using LifeLoop's AI-powered resident onboarding solution. * 172 days of longer length of stay. Specific to New Perspective, the operator revealed a 172-day increase in median length of stay at their communities that deeply embedded LifeLoop's comprehensive technology platform into daily operations. "This research is the missing link between what we believe matters and what we can measure," Tabbert says. "It's not just validating - it's actionable. And frankly, if we can keep even one resident longer because they feel more engaged, that's ROI that means something." Along with New Perspective, early OpenLoop Network adopters include Sinceri Senior Living, Phoenix Senior Living and other national operators. As additional partners join and new data flows are developed, the OpenLoop Network is designed to grow. This will expand the availability of curated data flows that simplify implementation, reduce administrative burden and improve coordination across systems. "The impact on residents is better, because there's a higher quality of care with more managed care outcomes," Tabbert says. "Just as important: this is incredibly good for our business. There is a direct NOI connection to interoperable systems." As Tabbert notes, interoperability means fewer systems, fewer spreadsheets, less reconciliation effort and less busy work for accounting teams that have to connect systems in order to generate P&L reports. "We get to make decisions much faster," he says. "Our change in condition for residents is going to move up by about 20 days as this data lands together, which is 20 days twice a year per resident of clinical revenue that did not exist last year. So, it's not just ROI - OpenLoop Network creates a true NOI component. This is how we as operators stay solvent in a world where it is difficult to stay solvent."
US Signal investing $29.8 million to expand data center in Waukee. OpenLoop Health is expanding its footprint in downtown Des Moines, moving its executive offices to the second floor of the Federal Home Loan Bank Building at 909 Locust St. Building plans indicate that nearly $4 million will be spent remodeling the 30,000-square-foot space, which will include the CEO's office (top left), a reception area and bar and lounge. Architectural renderings courtesy of Knop Killeen Architects US Signal, a national digital infrastructure provider, is expanding its data center in Waukee, adding over 33,000 square feet of space to meet demand for more high-performance computing. US Signal is building an addition to its existing 19,453-square-foot data center at 590 NE Alice's Road in Waukee. The Grand Rapids, Mich.-based company was issued a building permit in February that valued the project at $29.8 million, a Business Record review of permits shows. The addition includes a 2,145-square-foot office on the east side of the building and a 31,377-square-foot warehouse on the west side, according to city documents. The company's existing data center was built in 2009 on 5 acres. The addition will "add significant capacity and advanced cooling capabilities, helping our customers power the next generation of workloads, from [artificial intelligence] to mission-critical enterprise applications," Nate Ohrt, data center manager, wrote in a blog post. The addition will allow for long-term growth while minimizing energy use, Ohrt wrote. The addition includes a 2,145-square-foot office on the east side of the building and a 31,377-square-foot warehouse on the west side, according to city documents. Also 35 parking spaces will be added, increasing the number of spaces to 65. A 6-foot-tall ornamental fence with a gate entrance will be installed around the perimeter of the property. The Waukee Planning and Zoning Commission approved the project's site plan in November; the city council approved it in January. Also in February, a permit was issued to remodel 30,000 square feet of space on the second floor of the Federal Home Loan Bank Building at 909 Locust St. in downtown Des Moines. OpenLoop Health Inc., a staffing, software and technology company that provides services to the telehealth industry, has outgrown space in a 14-story downtown office building and is relocating its headquarters to the Federal Home Loan Building, a spokesperson said. In 2020, the company moved into the building at 317 Sixth Ave. Three years later, more than $2.5 million in tenant improvements were made to the office building to accommodate the growing company, which occupies the majority of the building, now known as OpenLoop Tower. In the past two years, OpenLoop Health's workforce has grown more than 900%, a spokesperson said. The growth has been "driven by strong demand for our telehealth infrastructure and expanding partnerships across the country." Building plans submitted to the city of Des Moines indicate several improvements will made to the second floor of the Federal Home Loan Bank Building including an office for OpenLoop Health's CEO. Other improvements include a reception area, kitchen and addition of lounge and bar, building plans show. The second floor will also include several small collaboration offices and open space office areas. The building permit placed the value of the remodeling project at over $3.9 million. In February, four building permits were issued for new projects in Polk County and 13 area communities, a review shows. The permits estimated the value of the new projects at over $5.1 million. Kathy A. Bolten is a senior staff writer at Business Record. She covers real estate and development, workforce development, education, banking and finance, and housing.
Opendoor Technologies stock has fallen to $5.08 after rallying from an all-time low of $0.51 in June to $10.87 in September, driven by social media-fueled retail investor frenzy rather than fundamentals. The company buys and flips homes, offering quick sales to vendors. However, this business model struggles when housing markets decline, as Opendoor holds thousands of properties in inventory. Competitors Zillow Group and Redfin previously shut down their direct buying businesses after the 2021 housing boom ended. Opendoor has never turned an annual profit, posting a $1.3 billion loss in 2025, up 231% from the previous year. The company sold 11,791 homes during 2025 whilst purchasing 8,241, deliberately acquiring fewer due to challenging market conditions with US existing home sales near five-year lows.
Opendoor Technologies reported fourth-quarter 2025 results that beat revenue expectations and showed sharply increased home acquisition activity under its "Opendoor 2.0" programme, yet shares fell 7.7%. The company is targeting adjusted net income profitability by end-2026 through a more capital-light, AI-enabled model. The results showed Opendoor's Cash Plus product reaching 35% of contracts, supporting improved contribution margins and reduced balance sheet risk. Acquisition velocity increased several-fold year-on-year. However, the quarter delivered a deeper-than-expected loss despite the 24% revenue beat. Management is pushing toward profitability whilst year-on-year revenue continues declining. The mixed market reaction reflects investor concerns about execution risk, with analysts questioning whether improved unit economics can offset ongoing cash burn and debt obligations before the company achieves sustainable profitability.