Commure Up Close: Julian Builds Infrastructure Powering Modern Healthcare

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Commure Team
 | 
February 13, 2026

Tell us a little bit about yourself—what do you like to do outside of work?

Sometimes the simplest things are best: spending time with my wife, two daughters, and dog. Commure keeps me busy, but I’m grateful I can still prioritize quality time and silly adventures with them.

I’ve worked part-time as a singer and music educator since 2007, mostly with professional choral ensembles and the occasional collaboration with dance companies and instrumental groups. Ask me about my Grammy or Super Bowl ad for some wild stories.

I co-founded an arts nonprofit in 2015 and have loved growing the organization, which was officially recognized by California last year for 10 years of contributions to the city of San Francisco.

As a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up?

The first problem I genuinely considered tackling was criminal justice reform, which initially put me on a law track: courses at Stanford Law School, a summer at the US Attorney’s Office in Washington, D.C., and a role at a boutique law firm in San Francisco.

Growing up in rural Maryland, I saw circumstances that I wanted to change and that I came to realize were a sample of well-known, complex, systemic issues. I also realized—somewhat quickly, unfortunately—that becoming an individual practicing attorney wouldn’t give me much leverage at scale, and that the legal industry structurally disincentivized technological innovation.

So I moved into the tech startup world, first in education and now healthcare for the past decade. I’d be thrilled if I found myself with another at-bat on criminal justice in my career.

Describe a day in the life of your role.

In my role as Director of Operations, I’ve gotten to build out several functions for our RCM and Athelas Air product lines: customer support, accounts receivable, scaled account management, and churn intervention.

On any given day, my teams and I might be root-causing user frustrations, normalizing fragmented data into new alerting systems, shaping the P&L for a new market segment, or flying out to see users’ workflows in person. At the end of the day, we’re building long-term retention infrastructure while raising the bar on essential functions for today’s customers.

What made you decide to join Commure?

If I have the privilege of choosing what I do for a living, why invest my life in anything but trying to help others in the most leveraged way I can? That philosophy has led me to seek out missions to gain leverage on massive, meaningful problems.

The breadth of Commure’s mission is absurdly ambitious: from “humble” (relatively speaking) beginnings in blood diagnostics to today’s staggering suite of products across ambient AI, provider and asset safety, medical devices, pharmacy, patient engagement, RCM, EHR, and more.

If we execute, upshots include:

  • Business-in-a-box provider solutions to combat healthcare deserts,
  • Unlocking AI applications with true end-to-end data of the patient journey,
  • Earning a seat at the table with payers and policymakers,
  • Advancing direct-to-consumer, insurance-free care,
  • And more.

That’s impact at scale, with a proven, hungry team just getting started.

How would you describe the Commure company culture?

Commure is my third tech startup, and the fastest one yet. It’s a unique culture obsessed with getting more shots on goal on every possible surface: sometimes messy, and sometimes in need of recalibration, but the iteration is relentlessly fast for customers.

In all honesty, it’s not the right environment for everyone. But if you’re mission-driven and looking for ambiguous problems, a faster pace than feels comfortable, and outsized ownership, you'll find plenty of opportunity here.

What advice would you give someone on their first day at Commure?

Three things:

  1. At all costs, figure out how things get done at Commure. Have 1:1s across departments and seniority levels. Shadow decision-making. Get on the board quickly with one customer-facing deliverable, no matter how ugly the process. The faster you learn, the quicker the path to real impact.
  2. You have fresh eyes for the first week or two, and then you’ll never have them again. It’s tremendously valuable for new hires to observe, annotate, and question the status quo; it reflects how new customers experience our product, and surfaces technical and operational debt.
  3. Set workback goals. Most new hires hit the ground running, but the best avoid tunnel vision by planning on multiple time horizons—hours AND days AND sprints AND quarters—to maximize their impact.

What has been your greatest accomplishment so far at Commure?

I’d say shifting habits in our midmarket business from resource lobbying to APIs: clear internal service layers with documented processes, SLAs, and escalation paths.

Defining protocols among eng, ops, and sales lets us build on top of reliable stacks, fund critical processes properly rather than off the side of people’s desks, and lower our default operating cortisol so true escalations carry real signal.

That, or the sheer volume of emojis I’ve added to our Slack instance.

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