The Laser Spine Institute's final day started like many others. Prospective patients called in from as far as the coast of Africa for consultations. Families flew in from Canada under the promise they would receive world-class care in the company's glossy $56 million headquarters in Tampa, Fla., where a steady stream of patients arrived for appointments to visit chiropractors, seek second opinions and schedule back surgeries.
That afternoon, Robert Koser, DC, had a potential patient on the line when members of the leadership team told him to wrap up the call. It was time for an all-employee meeting.
Then, the news came in: The Laser Spine Institute, the company that had billed itself as the nation's leader in minimally invasive spine surgery, was closing at the end of the business day, shuttering its 4 surgery centers in Tampa, St. Louis, Cincinnati and Scottsdale, Ariz., and laying off almost 600 employees nationwide who'll long recall March 1, 2019, as Black Friday.
"It was shock," says Dr. Koser, who had worked as a chiropractor for the company since late 2017. "You had people gasping. People were crying. Other people were just really disappointed that they found out like that with no warning essentially."
Since 2005, Laser Spine Institute had become known for the kind of profit margins that would garner envy from any C-suite executive, and its slick marketing strategies drew patients from around the globe. After the company collapsed, Laser Spine CEO Jake Brace said the company received an ultimatum from its lenders: Find an investor to keep the business afloat in the next week or cease operations and liquidate your assets.
How did Laser Spine fall so far, so fast? Interviews with company staffers, analysts and others in the industry provide a glimpse of what happened behind the scenes that led to the epic collapse.