FeelGood's Men's-Health-First Model: Worth the Focus?
A platform built around two categories instead of a dozen. Here's the real case for narrow-and-deep.
FeelGood built its platform around two things: erectile dysfunction and weight management. That's a deliberately narrow focus compared to a general telehealth platform that happens to also offer ED treatment among a dozen other categories — and narrow, done well, is a real pitch.
What "men's-health-first" actually buys you
A platform built around a short list of core categories tends to have its evaluation, clinical review process, and support built specifically around those categories — not adapted from a generic template that also handles allergies and skin care. Whether that translates into a meaningfully better experience for you depends on execution, but the structural logic is sound: fewer things to be mediocre at.
FeelGood
A telehealth platform built specifically around men's health, with ED as its core offering. Fast online evaluation, ongoing clinical support if you need to adjust treatment.
View Offer Paid LinkThe ongoing support angle
FeelGood's model is built with follow-up in mind — the expectation that your first treatment approach might need adjusting, and that there's a clinical relationship to go back to rather than a one-and-done transaction. If you'd rather have a provider you can return to as your situation changes, that continuity is worth weighing more heavily than a marginally faster initial evaluation elsewhere.
Is the focus worth it
If ED and weight management are genuinely the two things on your mind, a platform built around exactly that combination is a tighter fit than a broader catalog you'd have to navigate around. If you're looking for a wider range of men's health categories under one roof, a multi-vertical provider elsewhere on this site may serve you better.