"Occupational health software" describes two fairly different buyers. Third-party clinics sell services to many employers; employer health teams serve a single workforce. Picking a tool built for the other model is a common, costly mismatch. Use our how-to-choose framework to score either way, then compare vendors side by side.
Third-party clinics & provider groups
If you bill multiple employers, revenue operations matter as much as clinical care. Protocols per client, employer-direct invoicing, and a portal that keeps employers self-sufficient are core, not optional.
- Per-client protocols and pricing
- Employer-direct billing alongside insurance claims
- A strong employer portal as a retention driver
- Event scheduling for high-volume surveillance days
Employer & on-site health teams
If you serve one workforce, the priorities shift toward surveillance accuracy, HRIS integration, and employee experience rather than external billing.
- Tight HRIS sync to keep the population accurate
- Surveillance cohorts driven by exposure and job
- Employee self-service for forms and results
- Less emphasis on employer-direct invoicing
Where the models overlap
Both need rock-solid compliance, structured exam capture, secure role-based access, and dependable lab integration. The difference is mostly in billing, portals, and how protocols are organized.
Some platforms aim to serve both models on one network; if you sit in between, weigh how well a vendor handles your weaker-fit side. Compare platforms capability by capability to see which way each one leans.
Key takeaways
- Clinics should weight billing, per-client protocols, and the employer portal.
- Employers should weight HRIS sync, surveillance, and employee experience.
- Both need strong compliance, exam capture, and security.
- If you straddle both models, test the side each vendor handles less well.