Why Ekko Is Going to the Front Door
Ekko
Why Ekko Is Going to the Front Door
A few weeks ago I wrote about a dilemma. After spending a day going through how different clinic groups here in Singapore handle WhatsApp — some multiplying it across every location and doctor, one abandoning it altogether, one quietly holding it together with a single number — I asked out loud where Ekko should sit. At the front door, competing with WhatsApp for the first message? Or after it, picking up once a real patient relationship starts?
I said I leaned toward staying after the door. A colleague read that and told me, bluntly, to reconsider. He was right to push back. Sitting back and waiting for WhatsApp to hand us a patient isn't a strategy — it's a hope. So here's where I've landed, with more conviction than I had a few weeks ago.
Ekko is going to connect directly to WhatsApp. Not to compete with it. To become it — the structured version of it — from the very first message.
What this actually means
Right now, when a patient messages a clinic on WhatsApp, they're taking their chances. Maybe the right person sees it. Maybe it gets buried under fifty other chats. Maybe it goes to a personal number a staff member set up years ago and nobody remembers who owns it anymore. Maybe the doctor never sees it at all until the patient shows up assuming they're expected.
None of that is the patient's fault, and none of it is really the clinic's fault either — it's what happens when a personal messaging app gets asked to do a job it was never built for.
Our plan is to sit directly on top of that first WhatsApp message. The patient doesn't need to download anything or change their behaviour to start a conversation — they message the number they already know, the way they already do. But from that first message onward, the conversation becomes structured. It's routed to the right person. It's documented. It's attached to the right patient record. If it needs to become an appointment, it becomes one, with continuity, not a copy-paste from a chat thread into a separate booking system. If a doctor needs to be looped in, they're looped in inside the platform, not via a screenshot forwarded on someone's personal phone.
That's the whole funnel — discovery, first contact, booking, consultation, follow-up, documentation — inside one governed system, entered through the door patients already walk through.