Business Cultures: USA
Key Cultural Values
- Results orientation: American business culture is focused on outcomes, ROI, and measurable performance — lead with data, not relationships
- Directness and efficiency: meetings have agendas, time is money, and vague commitments are professionally unacceptable
- Contract first: verbal agreements mean little; everything significant is reduced to written contracts with clear terms and liability provisions
- FDA compliance as baseline: US healthcare buyers assume all products are FDA-cleared or approved — anything less is a disqualifier for hospital procurement
- Competition and innovation: Americans respect competitive ambition and genuine product innovation; 'me-too' products without differentiation struggle
- Follow-through: commitments made must be kept, on time and to specification — failure to deliver as promised damages relationships irreparably
First Meetings & Business Etiquette
Greetings & Introductions
A firm handshake, direct eye contact, and a first-name basis from the first meeting are standard American business norms. Titles (Dr., President) are used in formal introductions but Americans typically move to first names quickly. Business attire varies significantly by region and sector: formal on the East Coast and in medtech corporate settings; more casual in the West and tech-adjacent environments. Punctuality is important but not as ceremonially strict as in Germany.
Business Cards & Gifts
Business card exchange is less ceremonial than in Asian or Gulf cultures but still standard at trade events and formal meetings. Cards are exchanged without ritual — take a moment to read the card before setting it aside. Small gifts are not typically part of US business culture and can sometimes create awkward compliance questions around corporate gift policies. Focus on the value proposition, not relationship gifts.
Communication Style
American communication is highly direct by global standards. If a US buyer is not interested, they will tell you — or simply stop responding (ghosting is common and should be read as polite disinterest). Feedback on proposals and products is direct and candid. This directness is professional courtesy, not aggression. Match it: be clear, confident, and specific about your product's clinical benefits, regulatory status, and pricing.
English is the business language. Communications should be clear, professional, and free of grammatical errors — Americans take written communication quality as a signal of organisational professionalism. Marketing materials, technical documentation, and regulatory submissions must be in high-quality American English (not British English).
Negotiation & Decision-Making
Negotiation Style
US negotiations are structured, rapid, and data-driven. Buyers have typically done their research, know your competitors, and have specific pricing and performance benchmarks. Lead with clear value differentiation, clinical evidence, and ROI arguments. Price negotiation is expected in distribution and GPO (Group Purchasing Organization) negotiations. Verbal commitments are not binding — ensure all agreed terms are confirmed in writing.
Decision-Making Process
US hospital and health system procurement typically involves supply chain managers, value analysis committees (VACs), and clinical champions (surgeons, department heads). Clinical evidence and physician endorsement are the most powerful procurement drivers in the clinical segment. For distribution, Purchasing Executives at distributors like Cardinal Health or Medline make commercial decisions based on market potential, margin, and regulatory status.
Building Long-Term Relationships
American business relationships are professional first and personal second — the opposite of many other cultures. Trust is built through delivery: meeting commitments, solving problems quickly, and demonstrating technical competence. That said, personal connection matters for sustained relationships — industry conferences (HIMSS, MD&M, FIME) are where American medtech relationships develop and deepen. LinkedIn is extensively used for professional networking and should be part of every US market engagement strategy.
Meeting Norms
- Meetings have agendas and start on time — arrive prepared
- Lead with your key message — Americans appreciate getting to the point quickly
- Prepare data-rich presentations: clinical evidence, market data, competitive positioning
- Follow up the same day with a written summary of agreed next steps
- Virtual meetings (Teams, Zoom) are standard and as professional as in-person
Key Dos & Don'ts
| ✓ Do | ✗ Don't |
| Obtain FDA 510(k) clearance or PMA approval before approaching US hospital buyers — this is non-negotiable | Do not approach US hospital buyers without FDA clearance — it is a disqualifier |
| Lead every conversation with clinical evidence and ROI data | Do not be vague about product specifications, clinical evidence, or regulatory status |
| Have a clear, competitive pricing structure with distributors and GPO contract capability | Do not ghost communications — always send a brief reply even if declining interest |
| Follow up promptly and consistently — American buyers respect responsiveness | Do not assume relationship-building will overcome regulatory or clinical evidence gaps |
| Get everything in writing — verbal commitments have no standing in US business | Do not use British English in US-facing marketing materials — details signal professionalism |
Tips for Turkish Medical Exporters
- FDA 510(k) pathway for most Class II devices: the 510(k) clearance process (demonstrating substantial equivalence to a predicate device) is the most common pathway — budget 12–18 months and USD 150,000–400,000 for a straightforward submission with regulatory consultant support
- GPO contracts are essential for hospital volume: US hospital purchasing is dominated by Group Purchasing Organizations (GPOs) like Premier, Vizient, and HealthTrust — a GPO contract gives access to thousands of hospitals through a single commercial arrangement
- Target US distributors first: companies like Cardinal Health, Medline, and McKesson have the reach to distribute nationally; securing one national distribution partner is more valuable than many regional ones
- MD&M and HIMSS exhibitions: the Medical Design & Manufacturing (MD&M) shows and HIMSS (Health Information and Management Systems Society) annual conference are the primary US industry events for relationship-building and market intelligence
- LinkedIn strategy is critical: US medtech procurement managers and clinical champions are active LinkedIn users — a strong company LinkedIn presence and targeted engagement strategy should precede any direct sales outreach
Conclusion
The USA is the world's most rewarding but most demanding medical device market. For Turkish manufacturers with genuine product innovation, strong clinical evidence, and the resources to navigate FDA clearance, the American market offers scale and commercial return unmatched anywhere in the world. The investment is real — but so is the prize.
Discover Turkish medical device manufacturers ready to export to this market.
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