Right About Now with Ryan Alford - Charles Nader's Changing the Healthcare System: Doc.com's Mission to Deliver Free Care Worldwide
Episode Date: November 25, 2025Right About Now with Ryan Alford Join media personality and marketing expert Ryan Alford as he dives into dynamic conversations with top entrepreneurs, marketers, and influencers.... "Right About Now" brings you actionable insights on business, marketing, and personal branding, helping you stay ahead in today's fast-paced digital world. Whether it's exploring how character and charisma can make millions or unveiling the strategies behind viral success, Ryan delivers a fresh perspective with every episode. Perfect for anyone looking to elevate their business game and unlock their full potential. Resources: Right About Now Newsletter | Free Podcast Monetization Course | Join The Network |Follow Us On Instagram | Subscribe To Our Youtube Channel | Vibe Science Media SUMMARY In this episode of "Right About Now," host Ryan Alford interviews Charles Nader, CEO of Doc.com, about revolutionizing global healthcare access through telemedicine and AI. Charles shares his inspiration from witnessing healthcare challenges in Mexico and explains how Doc.com offers free, AI-powered medical consultations via smartphone. The discussion covers Doc.com’s for-profit model, which funds free care through pharmacy sales, its rapid expansion, and upcoming NASDAQ listing. Charles also highlights the company’s mission to make healthcare universally accessible and invites listeners to follow Doc.com’s journey toward transforming healthcare worldwide. TAKEAWAYS Overview of Doc.com and its mission to revolutionize healthcare access globally. The role of telemedicine in providing free basic healthcare consultations. Use of AI technology to enhance the diagnostic process and streamline patient-doctor interactions. Discussion of the challenges in healthcare accessibility observed in Mexico. The business model of Doc.com, including its for-profit structure and revenue generation through a pharmacy. Efficiency of consultations, with a focus on primary care and preventative medicine. Statistics on case resolution rates during initial telemedicine consultations. Plans for expansion of services, including therapy and veterinary care. Preparation for a public offering on the NASDAQ stock exchange. Strategic importance of the Doc.com domain name for global branding and outreach.
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In this episode, we had an insightful conversation with Charles Nader, the visionary behind Doc.com.
Discover how Charles and Doc.com are aiming to fundamentally change the future of health care.
And that starts right about now.
We really based our technology build on capturizing scientifically relevant data, which in healthcare, data is extremely important.
It's one of the pillars of medicine, epidemiology, and analytics.
What we did is we built something that captures all that data.
We can use it to train our own AI.
models to make each consultation more precise.
Basically, what we go through is a sophisticated process that leads up to connecting you
to a doctor, where the AI is doing the legwork.
It presents it to the doctor all processed with a suggested diagnosis, a suggested
treatment.
Really, it saves a lot of time.
This is right about now with Ryan Alford, a Radcast Network production.
We are the number one business show on the planet with over one million downloads a month.
taking the BS out of business for over six years and over 400 episodes.
You ready to start snapping next and cash and checks?
Well, it starts right about now.
Hello and welcome to write about now.
Always talking about what's right, what's now.
We come to Charles Nader.
He is the president and CEO, the chairman of Doc.
DoC.com.
What's up, Doc?
It's a pleasure to be here, I appreciate it very much.
Well, there's a lot happening right now.
the world. What we're doing is pretty significant in regards to technology in the world's
situation and how it can have a huge impact on society.
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The mission of providing free basic health care globally using tech.
I'll tell you guys a story.
I studied medicine in Mexico.
I used to go to the general hospital in Mexico City.
There would be lines of people that would form around the hospital.
These people would come from outskirts of the city and spend,
half a day, four or five hours to see a doctor there. It was very taxing for the hospital. Most of the
cases were cases that could have been solved at home. You had a guy come in pain in his abdomen.
Oh, you know, I've been feeling bad. It's been hours now all day. And it turned out he had bad
tacos last night. The problem really was that there was no easy access to health care that could
solve these types of situations. Mexico in particular, a lot of these people, they don't have
bank accounts. They didn't have credit cards. Amazingly enough, even the poorest of everyone,
still had a smartphone. That's that ubiquity of smartphones. They would find a way to get a
smartphone. Really, it was something that I was inspired a lot. Our objective was to solve that
access to health care because it takes its form in different shapes, different ways, in different
parts of the world, but really it's a global problem. I wanted to create a solution that would
tend to that specific problem because the world doesn't need more specialists. You actually
need more preventative medicine, more primary care to guide you in the right direction, to be
easily accessible. The way we ended up solving it was through free
telemedicine and built the business around that, ways of monetizing around free health care.
It became my life mission.
It has a huge, beautiful social benefit.
Maybe a basic service, you get to connect and speak to a doctor through telemedicine.
There are limitations.
We try to limit it to 15 minutes because really, if you need more time than that, you should
actually go see a doctor.
But at least we can guide you in the right direction.
If it's more simpler things, we can give you a prescription, and it solves that basic
access to health care problem.
Our service is 24 hours a day on demand.
Anyone can call you.
You don't need insurance or anything.
We really based our technology build on capturizing scientifically relevant data, which
in healthcare, data is extremely important.
It's one of the pillars of medicine, epidemiology, and analytics.
What we did is we built something that captures all that data.
We can use it to train our own AI models to make each consultation more precise.
Basically, what we go through is a sophisticated process that leads up to connecting you to a doctor,
where the AI is doing the legwork, it presents it to the doctor all processed with a suggested
diagnosis, a suggested treatment. Really, it saves a lot of time. Because if we can save even 30 seconds
on our call average, we used to have a call average of 11.8 minutes. We can reduce that to less than 10
minutes. It allows us to treat thousands more. That has always been our objective to optimize
that as much as possible. And because we have sophisticated AI tools now, we're able to achieve that,
which allows us to scale more and really make free basic healthcare reality for the world. And it's just
exciting time for us. It's really one of the most significant times in human history combining these
things because these service like ours is now something that can be made a reality. It's not dependent
on governments or institutions. It's just a standalone thing lives on its own. We have our pharmacy
vertically integrated. That is part of our business model. Our mission now is to go spread it to all
continents. You know, I want to look back four or five years from now and say we did it. We started
this in Mexico to solve the need and it evolved and now we're a U.S. company.
soon to list on the NASDAQ. It's just been an amazing journey with a lot of different
evolutions. We built our business around solving the problem. What is the problem? Access to
healthcare. It wasn't just focused on trying to make money. We found ways of having a scalable
business around it, but solving the problem was the goal. Business model wise, it's a for-profit
company. I heard NASDAQ, I heard for-profit. So doctors are committing their time for free basic
health care. Obviously, five, 10, 15-minute session. Walt me through that business model. I heard
business model a bit for doctors time, how that's compensated if it's free.
Essentially, we pay the doctors. They are compensated. We pay them. And our business is pharmacy.
That's our core business. We have other revenue streams. We did thousands upon thousands of
consultations throughout the years. And one thing was very clear. Most patients ended up with some
sort of either prescription or suggested product. It was just common sense for us to make that the
core of the business model. In order for that to work and be scalable, we had to really optimize and create
our own protocols for telemedicine. If we're able to optimize the amount of patients
a doctor sees per hour, then the business is scalable. Let's say we have 10 patients seen per hour
through our service and two or three buy from us. It covers the cost of our services and then the
rest becomes profit. But one of the things about pharmacy is pharmacy as a business is a very
noble business. It really works in all markets. What makes us scalable is pharmacy. It's not
pharmaceuticals. It's different pharmaceuticals and pharmacy are two very different things. I think in the
current administration in the U.S., you see all these health care reforms happening.
The focus is really on trying to reduce drug prices.
It doesn't impact how pharmacies work.
Pharmacies will still keep on selling to their customers.
It does impact the total price of the product, but pharmacies still are ongoing.
Our business is really pharmacy and all the additional revenue streams.
And that's why our whole platform is focused around optimizing the time.
All these pharmaceutical companies in the U.S. spent billions of dollars on advertising and
marketing, which drive people to the doctor.
because they hear about symptoms that are marketed that they then go.
And then the doctors get paid.
Then the pharmaceutical companies get paid.
The consumer is always writing the check.
None of it subsidized.
We could have a whole show about just that part of it.
Let's go down the path of what I said is generally true.
It's a very interesting approach and obviously, you know,
has some altruistic values to it that are baked in because there's a lot of people that
need this health care.
But it's an interesting model where the pharmacy profits are paying for the visit essentially.
The quick visit, the efficient visit that we all longed for a lot of times.
Because again, how much time is wasted driving to the doctor, waiting at the doctor,
getting into the doctor, waiting on the nurse.
There's so much inefficiency in that process as it is.
And I love my doctor, but just saying, I can't tell it like it is.
You're serving all types here, but there's a lot of efficiency here that we could learn from.
There has to be a clear separation between what the doctor does and the prescription side of things,
the product side of things.
What we wanted to create was the ultimate health care solution.
You do want to have a consultation in easy access and something that's pure that's not influenced by any one brand or anything.
You want that to stay pure.
And it's really a requirement.
It has to stay like that.
But you also want to have treatments because treatments are a necessary thing in healthcare.
It's really having a clear separation there.
That's how we built it.
So doctors, for example, are they're not incentivized to do any kind of prescription or anything.
Their objective is just to give the highest quality consultation within that moment possible and solve that patient's problem.
Yes, we have a pharmacy. It's vertically integrated. But there's no incentive there to prescribe a certain
medication more or anything. You need both sides of it. You're right. It's true that the way the system
has been kind of created over the last 50 to 100 years, there's been a lot of interests and a lot
of changes and influencing happening. It's still antiquated. We started this in 2012, the whole
journey, what evolved into what today's doc. And I just, even back then, there was Skype that already
existed. There's still many types of cases that are more on the primary care side you can solve
through telemedicine through video chat. We're now in 2025, almost 2026, it still hasn't gone
mainstream, which is incredible to me to think, wow, you know, it's we're pushing this. I think
we're that key that unlocks telemedicine to the mainstream. What volume of patients are being
served and what percent of them go on to need more than just that? How many things are getting
knocked out with that one 10, 15 minute visit versus they have to go to a next one and how many people
are we serving? Historically, our statistics have said majority of things, let's say more than 50%
are things that we can solve. So you're talking about thousands of types of cases now. There's a lot
of gastrointestinal and respiratory issues. You have a lot of focus on that. If you look at
hella medicine things out there right now, they're more focused on specific niches like weight loss.
We're just saying this is a healthcare solution for whatever you need. And the data comes
comes in from patients using it. Okay, normal, very common. Any hospital will tell you that
gastro and respiratory are the most common types of ailments that people have. Those are the most
common. In the U.S., there's state-by-state regulation, unlike in other countries. We're doing
basically a staged rollout throughout the U.S. More and more people are finding out about our
services. Historically, you've treated hundreds of thousands, and we want to make that millions
go from there. Part of the reason we're listing on the NASDAQ and moving forward with this is because
Because that really allows us to export what we've created and what's currently running in the U.S. to other countries and scale it much faster.
That's the path ahead of us. That's our growth plan ahead of us.
Especially for general stuff.
I mean, look, if you got something special, you need a specialist.
You got to go see something more in depth.
That makes sense.
But for everyday stuff, it makes a lot of sense.
We have three services, medical, therapy, and veterinary.
So basically the same process.
Those are coming in next year, therapy and veterinary.
All you do is press the button.
And the first thing it does asks you what type of consultation.
we're just going to go into medical assistance.
Then after that, what we do is we can speak to it.
My head hurts.
I have a headache and I think I have a fever.
It just records that.
Now, it scans your face.
What it does is a lot of patients will tell you things that, oh, you know, I feel this way.
Then when you do a real-time scan, we see their pulse and their blood pressure and other metrics tells a different story.
So that's very useful to make a higher quality consultation for a doc.
It's about 30 seconds.
And within that 30-second period, we can distinguish.
determine lots of different metrics. So once that's done, there's discovery questions that are done
based on what I told my head hurts. Like when did it start hurting? That's in an hour ago. Where did
you feel your headache back of the head? Different discovery questions based on what I told it and based
on the scan. And then after that, it allows you to upload any pictures or any kind of documents.
Let's say you have a rash on your skin or you're taking a certain medication or you have a blood
test. You can upload any of that. And once that's done, it puts you in queue. It's a 24 hour
service. What's the average wait time, Charles? I can go from 15 seconds to five minutes depending on
the hour of the day. It really depends on the days. The weekends have more people than the
week times on the East Coast during the nighttime. There's less people that use it. It's really
common sense goes that way. But either way, just to wait five minutes and speak to someone at no
cost, it's worth the wait to speak. And anybody where this is available can use this for free.
Yep. Anyone you don't need insurance. You don't need anything but a smartphone, basically.
and download it from the App Store, of course.
Fascinating. That's really interesting.
When is your NASDAQ and all that roll out with a detail?
We plan on listing before the year ends.
We spent the last year and a half prepping the company for that.
It was a lot of work to become public company.
That's what they call.
It's happening soon.
We have something very unique for the public markets as far as what we do.
And really, because of the nature of our services,
I always thought that as a company, we should be a public company.
It's health care. It's highly regulated. We're doing something very disruptive as well. And it's just something that I think enhances the company more being public because it also brings more attention to our solution. It's a huge milestone for us. We put in one of the things about public companies, people don't realize. Taking a company public is a hard thing to do. Just the auditing alone. It's like, wow, it's the amount of detail in PCOB auditing. And then you realize it's also beautiful in a sense because it forces the company to have everything clean and stray.
And in our particular case, it really has enhanced a lot of the things that we've done.
It just makes everything so much better and polished out.
So it's been a lot of work, but we're essentially at the almost at the moment to list.
And it's something very exciting for us.
It's just been, you know, everything's coming together.
I do know how much scrutiny and how big a deal that is.
It's not an easy process.
And I have to ask, what did we pay for doc.com?
You had to have bought that, I'm sure.
Yeah, yeah.
It wasn't cheap, my bet.
It wasn't cheap.
I acquired the name in 2018.
It was something that I just thought it was a perfect name for what we were doing.
The name I was after for essentially a year, it used to be owned by a big company that owned
DTS sound technology for movie theaters.
They acquired the name through a different acquisition that they did of a different company.
They had it as an asset, but in that way, it was like passed on over the years since the 90s.
So it was never actually used in a significant way.
And I was after it, and I actually spoke to the receptionist,
company. That's how it all started. And I was just like, hey, you know, I really want to buy this
domain that we don't have it. And I'm like, yes, you do. You know, I had to send her some flowers
so I should remember my name because I would call every week. And it just turned after a year later,
we were able to buy it. The day it transferred over to us, I got offers that were over 10 times
what we have paid. It was one of the greatest things. It was just one of those pieces that I thought
was necessary to really make it global. It works in multiple languages. Doc is really
doctor in Spanish and English. And even in China.
you can say doc and they know what that means it's i think the perfect name for what we're doing
in our mission it is as a brand marketing guy very smart play for what you're doing hats off for that
and congratulations on everything you're doing and he's just call to action i've ever had
i love giving gifts but you know what i don't love shopping it seems impossible to find unique gifts
these days. I've got four boys that seem to have it all and a wife that I want to make happy.
That's why I love Uncommon Goods. They have products that are unique from some small vendors,
handmade, handcrafted, made it in the USA. I love these guys. Uncommon Goods makes holiday shopping
stress-free and joyful with thousands of one-of-a-kind gifts you can't find anywhere else.
Trust me, I know, because I couldn't find.
anything, and uncommon goods comes to the rescue every time. Games, toys, clothes, one of
a kind, unique things that you can't find anywhere else. I love these guys. Let me tell you,
you want to go there, you want to shop USA-based, and Uncommon Goods has me and you covered.
So, shop early, have fun, and cross some names off your list today.
To get 15% off your next gift, go to uncommongoods.com slash Ryan.
That's uncommongoods.com slash Ryan for 15% off.
Don't miss out on this limited time offer.
Uncommon goods.
We're all out of the ordinary.
Go to doc.com to learn more or any other callouts, Charles, either social or otherwise.
You can follow us at doc.com official on Instagram and on Twitter.
My personal Twitter is Charles Nader.
My Instagram is Chuck Nader.
And just follow us.
We're on social media.
We're starting a lot more campaigns now to create more awareness.
There's a lot of very amazing people helping us out from all walks of life, from people's
celebrities, from Hollywood and from athletes and things like that.
People that really believe in what we're doing because of the benefit that it provides,
you'll see that happening and it's just right now we're just focused on growing as a public company i want to look back four or five years from now and say okay we did it our services are available all over the world now we can now say we actually change the world for the better that's our focus for the next four or five years hopefully we can get it done faster well on your way appreciate you for coming on and sharing and for all you're doing thank you very much ryan i appreciate it appreciate the time hey guys you know to find us ryan is right dot com we'll have links to social media
and the easy handle, which is doc.com.
Find out, learn more,
and you can watch where that public availability comes on NASDAQ
over the next few months.
We really appreciate Charles for coming on
and we appreciate you for making us, number one.
See you next time on Right About Now.
This has been Right About Now with Ryan Alford,
a Radcast Network production.
Visit Ryanisright.com for full audio and video versions of the show
or to inquire about sponsorship opportunities.
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