648
Vendors in RHTP registry
39%
Service organizations
2.6%
Consultants (critical gap)
648 vendors by capability tag — sorted by count
Vendor density is highest at the top (workforce, community health, telehealth) — exactly where competition is fiercest. Critical gaps exist at the bottom.
| Capability |
Vendor Count |
Market Signal |
Competition Level |
| Workforce Training & Recruitment |
289 |
Saturated — highest active opps but crowded field |
Competitive |
| Community Health & Engagement |
259 |
Crowded — must differentiate on rural specificity |
Competitive |
| Care Coordination & Navigation |
249 |
Needed everywhere, high baseline competition |
Competitive |
| Telehealth & Virtual Care |
240 |
68 active opps but also 240 vendors — moderate ratio |
Competitive |
| Behavioral Health & Substance Use |
181 |
Strong demand but moving toward integration model |
Competitive |
| Mobile Health & EMS |
130 |
8 active opps, limited state-contract experience |
Underserved |
| Financial Sustainability & Revenue Cycle |
106 |
CAH rescue demand; supply far behind demand |
Underserved |
| Social Drivers / Food & Housing |
41 |
24-state demand signal; vendor market forming now |
Critical Gap |
| Aging / Dementia / LTC |
22 |
Growing demand as rural populations age |
Critical Gap |
| Grant Writing |
2 |
Every CBO/FQHC submitting RFAs needs this |
Critical Gap |
Tier 1
Built for RHTP
~85
estimated vendors
Rural-specific experience, published outcomes, CMS reporting capability, active state relationships. These are the vendors already winning. Characteristics: multi-state rural deployments, CAH/FQHC references, performance data.
What they need: Market intelligence and procurement alerts. They will win if they show up to the right opportunities on time.
Tier 2
Rural-Adjacent
~195
estimated vendors
Strong capability with some rural deployments, but thin outcome documentation or limited state contracting experience. Can win through consortium positioning — as a subcontractor to a Tier 1 anchor, then build track record independently.
What they need: Rural pilot partnerships, documented outcome data, and a state relationship entry point.
Tier 3
Urban-Optimized
~240
estimated vendors
Strong capability, but product or service optimized for urban/suburban markets. Connectivity assumptions, deployment models, and workforce strategies don't translate to rural. Competing in RHTP without rural adaptation is high-cost/low-win.
What they need: Rural-specific product adaptation, low-bandwidth telehealth modes, community health worker integration.
Tier 4
Early Stage / Emerging
~128
estimated vendors
Registered in the vendor directory but limited procurement history, thin capability documentation, or single-state presence. Too early for primary contract wins — but SDOH, grant writing, and program evaluation gaps represent entry points where being early carries a premium.
What they need: Market entry through subcontract roles; build to Tier 2 over 18 months.
Active opportunity demand vs. vendor supply — key themes
Opportunity gap = high demand (active opps) + low supply (vendor count). These are the highest risk-adjusted market entry points.
Program Evaluation: structural vacancy
6 active opportunities worth $263M with fewer than 10 dedicated evaluation vendors in the entire registry. Mississippi's $206M assessment is open now. This is the highest-margin, least-competitive segment in RHTP.
Financial Sustainability: demand outpacing supply
106 vendors claim this capability, but CAH closures are accelerating and state programs are explicitly designing rescue procurement. Revenue cycle, alternative payment model design, and financial turnaround are distinct subspecialties — most "financial" vendors don't have all three.
SDOH: market forming now
Only 41 vendors in the SDOH / Social Drivers category despite explicit demand in 24 state strategic plans. Food is Medicine, housing support, transportation coordination — no vendor at scale. First movers will define this category.
Grant Writing: white-space hiding in plain sight
2 vendors in the entire 648-vendor registry claim grant writing support. Every rural FQHC, CBO, and nonprofit submitting to complex RFAs needs professional grant writing help — and they are not currently being served. Highest opportunity-per-vendor ratio in the market.
Health IT Vendors
The telehealth and EHR markets are crowded. Growth is in integration — building connective tissue between telehealth, care coordination, and state data infrastructure. Position for the integration layer, not the application layer.
Workforce Development Organizations
The workforce theme is universal, but differentiation is in rural-specific, outcome-linked models. Generic training platforms are losing to organizations that demonstrate providers placed and retained. If you cannot show rural retention data, you cannot win.
Consultants & Program Management
The RHTP is structurally undersupplied with experienced program administrators. States are running complex, multi-track transformation programs with limited internal capacity. This market is empty and growing fast — highest-margin, least-competitive segment.
Behavioral Health Organizations
Integration is the keyword. Solo behavioral health clinics are not the target. The opportunity is in integrated care models — behavioral health embedded in primary care, connected to social services, measured against whole-person outcomes.
Nonprofits / CBOs
You are who states want. Invest in grant writing and sustainability planning — those are the scoring gaps, not program quality. Partnering with a technology vendor and anchoring a consortium is the highest-leverage pathway for the next 18 months.
Health Systems
Lead the consortium. Stop trying to win solo. Your value is as the anchor — community trust, credentialing, and patient relationships. Bring in technology vendors, CBOs, and program evaluators as partners. The largest awards all go to partnerships.