We can’t wait to share more about how this course can help you extend your clinical expertise into healthcare innovation. Whether you’re looking to advise startups, invest in new technologies, or start your own ventures, we’re here to support you every step of the way.
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Have you ever felt that quiet nudge inside—the one telling you there's more to your career than the next shift, the next chart, the next credential?
Maybe you've scrolled past a LinkedIn post about a physician who became a "Fractional CMO" and wondered: Could that be me?
Here's the truth most people won't tell you: the opportunity is real, but so are the pitfalls.
I've watched brilliant colleagues accept titles that sound impressive—Medical Director, Collaborating Physician, PC Owner—only to find themselves trapped in roles demanding 30 hours while paying for 10. The title looked great on paper. The reality? Not so much.
So let's cut through the noise together.
Think of these roles not as rungs on a ladder, but as doors opening into different rooms. Each has its own rewards—and its own risks.
The Fractional CMO: Strategy Without the Swamp
This is the sweet spot for many physician entrepreneurs. You're the clinical brain behind product strategy, quality frameworks, and go-to-market credibility. You advise. You influence. You're not running the day-to-day chaos.
The win? High leverage, flexible hours, meaningful equity potential.
The trap? Becoming the "face for sales" with vague expectations and unpaid prep work.
This path fits best if you want strategic impact and portfolio income without owning a clinic or supervising a team of APPs.
The PC Owner: The Legal Architect
When a company delivers actual medical care, someone has to own the Professional Corporation. That someone holds governance responsibility—approving protocols, overseeing compliance, ensuring clinical decisions stay in physician hands.
The win? Structural power and often equity in growth models.
The trap? Being asked to also run daily operations "because you're the PC owner," without separate compensation.
This path fits best if you're comfortable with legal complexity, have strong counsel, and want governance without necessarily building the clinical machine.
The Medical Director: The Builder
If you want to hire the team, design the workflows, run QA, and watch something grow from the ground up—this is your lane. It's hands-on. It's operational. And it can be deeply fulfilling.
The win? You shape the clinical culture and see direct results.
The trap? Role creep that turns "10 hours a month" into 30+ hours a week.
This path fits best if you're energized by building, not just advising—and you've secured real authority to do it right.
The Collaborating Physician: The Quiet Risk
State laws require supervision of nurse practitioners and physician assistants in many places. Someone has to sign. Someone has to review charts. That someone carries liability.
The win? Supplemental income, often remote, relatively flexible.
The trap? Being a "rubber stamp" across multiple states with no real oversight power—until something goes wrong.
This path fits best if you trust the organization, have strong audit rights, and can enforce standards when needed.
Before you sign anything, ask yourself:
"Does this role move me toward my ideal 3-year life—or just pad the resume?"
And then: "Is the liability and time cost worth the check and/or equity?"
For a physician entrepreneur exploring digital health, Fractional CMO is often the best risk-adjusted path. Private practice offers the highest income potential but carries the heaviest administrative and liability load. Medical Director and Collaborating Physician roles frequently underpay relative to the liability they carry.
Run—don't walk—if you hear any of these:
"We just need your name for credibility."
No written scope. No cap on hours. No prioritization process.
Pressure to introduce them to your hospital or employer clients.
PC Owner + Medical Director bundled into one payment with unclear authority.
No credentialing workflow, no QA plan, no incident response.
These aren't yellow flags. They're the flashing warning lights before the train hits.
Low-Time, High-Leverage (For Busy Clinicians)
Title: Fractional CMO (5–10 hrs/month)
Structure: Cash + small equity + quarterly review
Guardrails: No sales quotas. No unlimited content reviews.
Governance-Only PC Owner
Title: PC Owner (2–8 hrs/month)
Structure: Governance retainer + separate hourly for projects
Guardrails: You don't run daily ops. Authority is documented.
Builder Role (When You Want to Run Things)
Title: Medical Director (part-time to full-time)
Structure: Salary or retainer + performance bonus
Guardrails: Resourcing commitments and real authority.
Here's what I know to be true: you didn't become a physician to feel trapped. Not by bureaucracy. Not by bad contracts. Not by roles that demand everything and give back crumbs.
The digital health revolution is creating real opportunities for physician entrepreneurs—but only for those who choose wisely.
So take one intentional step today. Review that contract with fresh eyes. Ask the hard questions. Define your boundaries before someone else does.
Because when you align what you do with who you are, every role becomes a platform for significance.
Now's the time to dive in—no overthinking, no second-guessing.
Ready to explore your next chapter?
Whether you're navigating burnout, considering a pivot, or building something new—I'd love to connect.

Have you ever felt that quiet nudge inside—the one telling you there's more to your career than the next shift, the next chart, the next credential?
Maybe you've scrolled past a LinkedIn post about a physician who became a "Fractional CMO" and wondered: Could that be me?
Here's the truth most people won't tell you: the opportunity is real, but so are the pitfalls.
I've watched brilliant colleagues accept titles that sound impressive—Medical Director, Collaborating Physician, PC Owner—only to find themselves trapped in roles demanding 30 hours while paying for 10. The title looked great on paper. The reality? Not so much.
So let's cut through the noise together.
Think of these roles not as rungs on a ladder, but as doors opening into different rooms. Each has its own rewards—and its own risks.
The Fractional CMO: Strategy Without the Swamp
This is the sweet spot for many physician entrepreneurs. You're the clinical brain behind product strategy, quality frameworks, and go-to-market credibility. You advise. You influence. You're not running the day-to-day chaos.
The win? High leverage, flexible hours, meaningful equity potential.
The trap? Becoming the "face for sales" with vague expectations and unpaid prep work.
This path fits best if you want strategic impact and portfolio income without owning a clinic or supervising a team of APPs.
The PC Owner: The Legal Architect
When a company delivers actual medical care, someone has to own the Professional Corporation. That someone holds governance responsibility—approving protocols, overseeing compliance, ensuring clinical decisions stay in physician hands.
The win? Structural power and often equity in growth models.
The trap? Being asked to also run daily operations "because you're the PC owner," without separate compensation.
This path fits best if you're comfortable with legal complexity, have strong counsel, and want governance without necessarily building the clinical machine.
The Medical Director: The Builder
If you want to hire the team, design the workflows, run QA, and watch something grow from the ground up—this is your lane. It's hands-on. It's operational. And it can be deeply fulfilling.
The win? You shape the clinical culture and see direct results.
The trap? Role creep that turns "10 hours a month" into 30+ hours a week.
This path fits best if you're energized by building, not just advising—and you've secured real authority to do it right.
The Collaborating Physician: The Quiet Risk
State laws require supervision of nurse practitioners and physician assistants in many places. Someone has to sign. Someone has to review charts. That someone carries liability.
The win? Supplemental income, often remote, relatively flexible.
The trap? Being a "rubber stamp" across multiple states with no real oversight power—until something goes wrong.
This path fits best if you trust the organization, have strong audit rights, and can enforce standards when needed.
Before you sign anything, ask yourself:
"Does this role move me toward my ideal 3-year life—or just pad the resume?"
And then: "Is the liability and time cost worth the check and/or equity?"
For a physician entrepreneur exploring digital health, Fractional CMO is often the best risk-adjusted path. Private practice offers the highest income potential but carries the heaviest administrative and liability load. Medical Director and Collaborating Physician roles frequently underpay relative to the liability they carry.
Run—don't walk—if you hear any of these:
"We just need your name for credibility."
No written scope. No cap on hours. No prioritization process.
Pressure to introduce them to your hospital or employer clients.
PC Owner + Medical Director bundled into one payment with unclear authority.
No credentialing workflow, no QA plan, no incident response.
These aren't yellow flags. They're the flashing warning lights before the train hits.
Low-Time, High-Leverage (For Busy Clinicians)
Title: Fractional CMO (5–10 hrs/month)
Structure: Cash + small equity + quarterly review
Guardrails: No sales quotas. No unlimited content reviews.
Governance-Only PC Owner
Title: PC Owner (2–8 hrs/month)
Structure: Governance retainer + separate hourly for projects
Guardrails: You don't run daily ops. Authority is documented.
Builder Role (When You Want to Run Things)
Title: Medical Director (part-time to full-time)
Structure: Salary or retainer + performance bonus
Guardrails: Resourcing commitments and real authority.
Here's what I know to be true: you didn't become a physician to feel trapped. Not by bureaucracy. Not by bad contracts. Not by roles that demand everything and give back crumbs.
The digital health revolution is creating real opportunities for physician entrepreneurs—but only for those who choose wisely.
So take one intentional step today. Review that contract with fresh eyes. Ask the hard questions. Define your boundaries before someone else does.
Because when you align what you do with who you are, every role becomes a platform for significance.
Now's the time to dive in—no overthinking, no second-guessing.
Ready to explore your next chapter?
Whether you're navigating burnout, considering a pivot, or building something new—I'd love to connect.

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