The EntreMD Podcast

7 Personality Traits ALL Successful Physician Entrepreneurs Share

April 08, 2024 Dr. Una Episode 413
The EntreMD Podcast
7 Personality Traits ALL Successful Physician Entrepreneurs Share
Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

👉 Ready for the next step? Book a call: https://program.www.entremd.com/call 

I have helped hundreds of aspiring physician entrepreneurs build their businesses and achieve success they never dreamed they could achieve. 

During this time, I've been studying their behavior and figuring out what makes them successful. I sought to find out the secret formula for success. 

Well, after a decade and a half, I did it. I identified the 7 personality traits that ALL successful physician entrepreneurs share. Today, I will share them with you so you can see whether you have what it takes. 

Are you ready?

Let’s jump right in! 


Key Takeaways: 

  • 00:00:00 Intro
  • 00:01:13 Trait #1
  • 00:04:44 Trait #2
  • 00:09:16 Trait #3
  • 00:14:12 Trait #4
  • 00:17:24 Trait #5
  • 00:21:46 Trait #6
  • 00:24:25 Trait #7
  • 00:29:17 Outro 

—

Additional Resources:


When you are ready to work with us, here are three ways:

  • EntreMD Business School Accelerator - If you are looking to make a 180 turnaround in your business in 90 days, this is the program for you.
  • EntreMD Business School Grow - This is our year-long program with a track record of producing physician entrepreneurs who are building 6, 7 and 7+ figure businesses. They do this while building their dream lives!
  • EntreMD Business School Scale - This is our high-level mastermind for physicians who have crossed the seven figure milestone and want to build their businesses to be well oiled machines that can run without them.

To get on a call with my team to determine your next best step, go here ...

Speaker 1:

Your business doesn't exist for you. Your business exists for the person you serve. The business exists for your clients, for your customers, for your patients, like it exists for them. So the more you think about them, the more you will succeed. Hi docs, welcome to the EntreMD podcast, where it's all about helping amazing physicians just like you embrace entrepreneurship so you can have the freedom to live life and practice medicine on your terms. I'm your host, dr Una. Well, hello, hello, my friend, welcome back to another episode of the EntreeMD podcast.

Speaker 1:

You may have wondered what are the things that successful physician entrepreneurs have in common, and today I'm going to show you seven of them. Okay, so we're going to look at the seven characteristics of successful physician entrepreneurs. Now, this comes from over a decade and a half of experience I have had as a physician entrepreneur, and this comes from hundreds and hundreds of doctors that I have studied over the years, wondering what makes them successful, and I have noticed some trends. Okay, so, trend number one, characteristic number one there are people who have redefined failure. Okay, as a physician, right, we, you know, a lot of us are perfectionists and I think with our profession, that is not too bad, right, like that, we want the things to do we do, we want to do them excellently, we want to do them as perfectly as possible, and all of those things it works right, like if you, if you have a neurosurgeon in your brain or you have a heart surgeon in your heart you want them to shoot for perfectionism as much as possible. However, as an entrepreneur, entrepreneurship I call like the great experiments. There's so many things that you are going to, you're going to try. There's some things that work for others but not for you, and there's some things that work for you and not others. There's something that worked in your phase and your time. There's so many new things. You know AI comes in a pandemic, comes in all of these things, and so you need to learn to adapt and be willing to try new things. And so if you have perfectionism as a characteristic, then it will stop you. It'll stop you from being innovative, it will stop you from responding to challenges, it'll stop you from thriving challenges. It'll stop you from thriving.

Speaker 1:

And so what we need to do is to kind of redefine failure, and so the way I found that successful physician entrepreneurs approach this is it's either that you know, failure is you know. You know, a first attempt at learning. You know it's something you do on the way to success, right. Like you fail your way to success, you fail forward. They would define it that way. One of my favorite ways of defining it is I had a failed project, but I'm not a failure. So think about a kid playing with Legos. If it doesn't go according to plan, you tear it down, you start over, no biggie, they just redefine that. It's not fatal, it's not a problem, it's a rite of passage. They think of it differently.

Speaker 1:

So recently, makita, who's our director of client success, got to interview one of the docs in the Entree of the Business School. Her name is Dr Monica. She runs a direct primary care clinic. She's absolutely a direct specialty. She's absolutely amazing. But she, during the interview, one of the things I noticed that she kept saying is well, you know, I got an EHR and I had to change my EHR. Like, whatever we figure it out, right, if you hire somebody and it doesn't work out, whatever you figure it out, and she just has this beautiful approach to things not working, like a true scientist, like it didn't work. That's one way not to do it. Let's try another way, and what that does is it sets you up so you're willing to learn, you're willing to try new things, you're willing to innovate all of the things that will make you wildly successful.

Speaker 1:

And so what is the thing here? I want to invite everybody to kind of decide to look at failure differently. Failure is not fatal. Failure is a requirement for success. You fail your way to success.

Speaker 1:

Think about the newborn who eventually becomes a year old and takes first steps Right, like would a child walk if they had to get it perfect the first time. Like never, they're not going to walk. So what do they do? They take a few steps. They fall. We all celebrate those steps they took. We don't go like, oh my goodness, this child is a failure because this child fell right. We're thinking in terms of you know, you took the step, and if you could give yourself that grace and think of yourself that way as you think of all the things you did in entrepreneurship, the journey will be so much easier, it'll be so much more fun and you get so much more done. So that's the first characteristic. The second characteristic is these are people who are decisive. Okay, they make decisions. They don't take forever to make decisions, so they get the amount of information they need to make the best possible decision. They can make it at the time and they go for it. And I find that one of the like.

Speaker 1:

I have met people who were trying to figure out what their business idea was, and I met them two years later and they were still trying to figure out what their business idea is. I have met people with established businesses who are like, yeah, you know, I think it's about time to start bringing in executive level leadership, start bringing in managers and things like that, and they kind of thought about who that would be, thought about what the job description thought about where they would put the ad. And two years later, they're still doing that, right, as opposed to the people who are like, wow, okay, I think it's time for me to bring in managers, it's time for me to bring in executive leadership decision. What do I need to do? That? Boom, they've made the decision. Those people, they make so much more progress, right, because that's two years of getting the person on board, iterating, building company culture, not letting them get results through their team and all of those things, whereas the other person was waiting.

Speaker 1:

And so, for instance, when I you know, when I talk to people about joining the OnTrending Business School and I take that to help ask them to book a call and to do all of those things I'm like we don't want. We don't do strong arm sales like hold you, I've actually been on sales calls where people have used all kinds of tactics, including calling me lame and calling me names, to get me to you know, feel bad and sign up for something. We don't do anything like that. Like anything why? Because we want people who are truly a great fit for the school, who want to be in the school, who are committed to their goals, to be in the school. Right, like. We're not trying to start stronger on anybody. That's why we give so much value so many other ways. So if that's not what you want to do, you don't have to do it right. However, on that call, what we do want to do is help you make a decision, like. Help you get to the point you make a decision. Why? Because the ultra successful are people who are decisive. Okay, so we want to get you to a point where you can say absolutely or absolutely not right, as opposed to hanging in the valley of decision. That's where greatness goes to die right, like it's almost as bad as a comfort zone.

Speaker 1:

And so, again, I remember Dr Sarah Stombach. She's one of the docs in the Entrembe Business School and her area of expertise is obesity medicine and she runs a practice. And I interviewed her on the podcast and she said I don't know how many times she said this on the call I made a decision, I decided I made a decision, I decided she said it so many times and I was like wow, you know, like this is somebody who, um, and I could tell by her actions she was that kind of person, but this is somebody who is just on the path. She's on the path of the ultra successful and I'm so excited, just want to see where she's going to get with that. And she said you know what? My practice is not working the way I want it to work, I need help.

Speaker 1:

She found EntreeMD, found out about the EntreeMD business school, boom, right. And then we came in. She came into the school, realized that she was undercharging and we're like okay, one of the best things you can do is raise your prices. And she was like okay, yes, there's a mind drama around that, all of that, but I made a decision, raise my prices, then boom and like, okay, one of the best things you can do as far as bringing new patients in is, you know, embrace the concept of asking both for new clients and for referral sources. And she has been on an askathon ever since. Now. Did she have the same mind? Drama, what if? All of those things around that? Yes, but she's just so decisive I decide and then I do and I'm off with it.

Speaker 1:

And so you want to stop and ask yourself what are those critical decisions in my business that I'm just running away from making? Maybe this is a time maybe even pause this. Maybe even pause this, I'll allow it. Maybe you pause it and say, okay, I'm just going to stop and I'm going to get to absolutely or absolutely not. I have all the information to make the decision, I just haven't made it yet. Make the decision and let's move. And I say this because we're burning daylights. It's not like we're going to have. We don't have an endless number of days. We have a finite number of days. We have a finite amount of time to do what needs to be done, and so the more time we spend sitting in indecision, the more we rob ourselves of those results right. So that's the second characteristic. The third characteristic is these are people that play the long game. They play the long game.

Speaker 1:

I have listened to you know people who are running eight figure, nine figure businesses, and it's amazing, like, for instance, one of them said you know what, I'm going to try my hand at YouTube Now granted, this was already an eight figure business at the time I'm going to try my hand at YouTube. I'm going to do two videos every week for 10 years and I'm going to see if it works. And I thought that is so insane, right, that he would say that, but 10 years. And he's like I'm going to see if this works, whereas some other person may say I did five YouTube videos and it didn't work and they quit, right, and is it quote unquote understandable? Yes, maybe they didn't get the number of views they wanted and all of those kinds of things, but I want to tell the path of the ultra successful. And what they do is they play the long game.

Speaker 1:

And listen to someone else and she said you know what? Now, at the time, she was running a seven figure business. Now she has multiple seven figure businesses and an eight figure business. And she said you know what I'm going to do. I'm going to embrace this podcasting thing and I'm going to podcast. I'm just going to do it for 10 years and see what happens. Same 10 years. Right, I'm going to do it for 10 years and just see what happens.

Speaker 1:

And you know, I paid attention to that and over and over and over, I'll hear people say the same thing about something that they wanted to do with their businesses. Now, these are people. They are doing the work, they're learning, they're improving, they're learning how to do it better. So it's not just like I'm just going to do it and not get better and suck at it for a decade. No, like, they're constantly, you know, like up leveling their game and all of that, all of that stuff. But they go for the long game right Now. Playing the long game allows you to make the most strategic decisions. If you are going after results that you can get in 30 days, 60 days, 90 days and that's where everything stops then it's hard to make the long, it's hard to make the difficult decisions. It's hard to make the strategic decisions.

Speaker 1:

There is a doctor in EBS. He runs a private practice and he's run the private practice for about a decade at this point, and one of the things right in front of him to do was to build this rockstar team that will give him the freedom to pursue other passions, to take more time off, to be with his family, to truly build a practice that can work without him, build a practice that he can sell and that doesn't mean he wants to sell it, right. But we always build practices with the exit plan in place, right, the exit strategy being executed from day one, because we want to have options, all right. And you know, as my dear friend Dr Dosoma would say, she says a practice worth selling is a practice worth keeping. So you'll still end up with the best possible practice. So, anyway, it's building a team.

Speaker 1:

But if you've ever built a team, then you understand that building a team is some of the hardest work there is people building the culture, training them, empowering them to perform at higher and higher levels, overcoming conflict, all of it right. And so this is not something just take on lightly. This is something that I mean it takes a moment to build, and he decided last year he was going to go in on that building his team, building the management team building. You know, like the people who could kind of run things when he's not there, and all of that, and it took months and months and months. It probably took about nine months, right, for him to put all of this together. But guess what? He has a great team. Now he has a. He has a phenomenal team now. He has a phenomenal team overseas because he has some virtual team members. He has a phenomenal team now. He has a phenomenal team overseas because he has some virtual team members. He has a phenomenal team in office. He has managers. He has all of these things and it's just amazing because I can see what he's building. It's one of those things that are foundational and you'll see some of the rewards, but the real ROI it takes a minute to see it.

Speaker 1:

But when you see this so beautiful but very few people are willing to play the long game, and so you want to ask yourself what is something that like, like, have you thought about your business? You know, three years from now, five years from now, seven years from now, have you made a commitment that I'm going to do the work that is required to thrive for five years, for seven years, have you decided that? Oh, if you have a bad day on social media or you have a bad launch or you have a bad month, that you're not just going to stop Because we don't stop because of the crisis right in front of us. If we want to stop, it's a strategic decision, that we've looked at it all and this is not taking us where we want to go. But if it is taking us where we want to go, then we put in the work, then we overcome the challenges, then we don't let the things that are discouraging stop us because we play the long game, okay. So that's number three.

Speaker 1:

Number four number four is that these are people who invest in themselves. I have talked to all kinds of entrepreneurs, including people who are running, you know, like multi nine figure businesses, and I will tell you they are people who invest in themselves. They are people who look like okay, what is the thing that I need? Who has it? Who can? Who's the shortcut? Who can show me this thing? Right, I didn't discover, you know, invested. Well, okay, I didn't discover investing myself as an entrepreneur right Till about 2017. I didn't know there was coaching. I didn't know there was consulting. I didn't know you could just keep retooling yourself and acquire it like stacking on the tools. I didn't know you could do that and so in 2017, when I found out, I didn't even know what the ripple effect will be. You've heard me tell my story many times.

Speaker 1:

I was at a speaker's bootcamp and they had this speaker's mastermind and all this and they're like you can come join our program for 10 months. It's 43 grand. And I was like, oh my goodness, are these guys nuts? What are they selling? Did they lease you with gold? What in the world? And I am still so grateful that that day I said yes, because not only did I learn to become know, like to become a speaker and all these other things Right but I learned the value, the ROI on investing in yourself. Like that's when I discovered that.

Speaker 1:

And since then, I have never stopped investing in myself. And in fact, for me you know like I, I see it as my obligation because you know like I, I, I podcast, right, so I I'm teaching people. I have the I podcast, right, so I'm teaching people. I have the Entree MD business school, so I'm teaching people and and all of this stuff. So the greatest disservice would be for me to stop learning, stop growing, stop retooling, stop expanding my wealth of knowledge and experience and expertise and all of that stuff. So I do that.

Speaker 1:

But the people who are ultra successful, they're people who invest in themselves, right, and so like. Of course, you know, when I think about all the doctors in the entrepreneur business school, these are people who said you know what I'm going to invest in myself to retool myself, to acquire new skills, new experiences, new expertise, get new results, have like, just completely transform my life. And that's what they're doing, right, and it's not just them, right, it's not just them. They're people invest really heavily and, you know, sometimes people say, oh, you know, you know, I want to invest in myself. It's 30 grand and it's a lot, and things like that. And I'm not saying that 30 grand is not, you know, it's not money, it is. However, there are many people who, at the same time, are investing like three times, four times, five times that. Am I telling you to do that? Not necessarily, but what I am telling you is take a look their trends, take a look and you'll find out that these are what ultra successful entrepreneurs are doing, and so that's what I do. Okay, because I am so aware you've heard me talk about my 90th birthday party so many times. I am so aware that I don't have forever to live, I don't have forever to get the job that I need to get done, done, and so I will take every shortcut. Now, when I say shortcut, I mean I will take all the learning I can get by investing in other people who've been there, done that. I have 10 t-shirts right, so I will take every possible shortcut that there is. So that's number four. Number five ultra successful.

Speaker 1:

They are so customer focused. They are focused on their customers, their clients, their patients. They're thinking about you know, what do these people? What do they need? What are the needs that they have? Where are they stumbling? How can I support them better? What are the questions they have? What is confusing to them? What are the myths they believe? They're constantly thinking about their customers, and if you are somebody who wants to be super successful as an entrepreneur, you must remember your business doesn't exist for you. Your business exists for the person you serve. The business exists for your clients, for your customers, for your patients, like it exists for them. So the more you think about them, the more you will succeed. It is really as simple as that, and so, for instance, right, like when I think about what I do, right, I think about the doctors in the Ontario MD Business School and I have them on my mind all the time, like all my business time, and I'm thinking like, okay, what are the questions they have? And those are the things that become Wednesday live sessions. What are the challenges they're facing? Those are things I solve on the live session. Or it becomes a book that I recommend, or it becomes a challenge. Where are they getting stuck right? I start solving that. Where are they not seeing themselves as great as they can be? Where do they need a paradigm shift? Right, and it's on and on, because the more I focus on them, the more I can help them win. The more they win, the more I win. Right, same thing for you.

Speaker 1:

Listening to the podcast, I'm constantly thinking what is the? What is the thing that I can package in 15 to 20 minutes that will make a huge difference for you, that will help you move forward, that will help you make it. It will help make a difference. What is that mindset shift that you need? What is that how to? What is that thing? You need to know how to do? What is that trap that you're going to come across as you cross the $500,000 mark or the $1 million mark, or as you start bringing your team on and all of those. I'm constantly thinking about that, so I can provide the answers you need, I can provide the support you need. I can provide the help you need. Okay, I listened to um.

Speaker 1:

You know, like many entrepreneurs who design products, who do all of these things, and they're constantly thinking like how can I serve this person better? How have they evolved? How have they changed? How does the product need to change? Because they've changed, and all of that, and on and on, and on and on. And so you know, like the reason why a lot of people will not do a podcast or YouTube or show up on social media or do any of those things is because they're constantly thinking about themselves and not, you know, like I wouldn't call that being selfish, it's just like their inward focus, right, and so what will people say about me? What would they think about me? Am I doing this perfectly?

Speaker 1:

And sometimes, with the actual, you know, like bringing in revenue is I'm thinking about how much can I make and not how can I serve this person. Now, please don't misunderstand me. Of course you need to make money, but it's serve and earn and the serving leads first. You see what I mean. The more you think about them, the easier it would be to overcome a lot of the mind drama. Right? If you think about you know, like Dr Rachel Rubin again, big shout out to her. I'm shouting out a lot of the docs in the Ontario Business School.

Speaker 1:

She's a urologist fellowship trained in sexual health and sexual medicine, and she, you know like she's constantly thinking about the lies that women have been told and so they're not using vaginal estrogen and all of these things. And she goes on and on about it because she's thinking about her person. So she's going to show up and she's going to do video and she's going to do reels on Instagram and she's going to do masterclasses, she's going to speak on stage and all of that. When we first started working together, she told me she said my face is made for radio. My face was not made for video, but because she's so customer focused, she's so focused on the menopausal woman, she's going to come out and do what she needs to do and I want to invite you to do the same thing.

Speaker 1:

Like what are the problems my people are having? What is the help they need? What are the lies they believed? The more you can tune into that and make a commitment to solve those problems, the better everything will be, the more successful you'll be, okay, okay, so that's number five. Number six, number six ultra successful physician entrepreneurs. They are hard workers. We live in this fascinating time where people are like, yeah, ooh, la la, sing kumbaya and drink margaritas on the beach and you know, just think your way to success in business and the truth of the matter is it doesn't work. Okay, I've talked to tons and tons and tons and tons of successful entrepreneurs. Now, they're not killing themselves, like they're not working themselves to the bone, but they are working hard, right, like they are working hard.

Speaker 1:

And I want to give a big, big, big shout out to a doc in the entrepreneur business school. Her name is Dr Carolina Swallowdale and she is a fertility doc in Florida and she was in California when she joined the business school and started building her personal brand and started making a name for herself, was known as the go-to expert, appeared on CNN, all of these things happening and she decided it was time to start her own practice. She moved across country to Florida and she started this practice and, like any other practice, well, 99% of practices in the beginning was hard and it was hard and it was hard work and I remember watching her and I was like I know she has it and I know that between oh my goodness, this is so amazing, like between where you start and that so amazing like between where you start and that a long time there's this dry, silent, wilderness style period and you just have to get through that. And I watched her month after month after month, crushing it, doing the work, putting in the reps, going after the referral sources, speaking, showing up on social media networking, doing all of those things, and just been a few months later, okay, and and things have turned around to the point where she's like, okay, I can see it now, I can see it now, right, but if she didn't put in that work, guess what? It would be a story. It would be like, you know, I tried that private practice thing and it didn't work. But here she is and I have no doubt that not only will she go on to make that like super successful, but she's going to go on to create verticals and all these other things that are going to follow that Right, but the hard work is required.

Speaker 1:

I talked about Dr Emeka earlier, who had to build this team. It is hard work to build a team, but this is the thing If you do the hard work of building the team, they could get the peace and quiet afterwards. You see like but, but the hard work goes first and I'm so proud of him and I could tell you story after story after story of the doctors in the entrepreneur business school doing these things Right. And even even without, hard work is required. Don't believe the lie. Okay, that's number six.

Speaker 1:

Number seven is really number one, and I say this because when I talk about ultra successful physician entrepreneurs, I'm not talking about only people who have businesses that are successful. I'm talking about people who have businesses that are successful and lives that are successful. I'm talking about people who are building really successful businesses and they're not burnt out. They have time for their family, they're building quality relationships, they enjoy their lives, they work hard when they're working in their business, they play hard when they're playing, and that's what we want In the Entrepreneur Business School. We say building your dream life and your dream business at the same time, because we want both. I have no interest in building a business at the expense of my life. I have not. Okay, so number seven? Number seven is they are committed to their dream life. They're committed to their dream life. Now, this is the way we say it, right?

Speaker 1:

You can have a version like when you're building your business. You have a version of your dream business, right? It's not the ultimate dream, it's a version. It's like 1.0 and you keep building 2.0, 3.0, 4.0. In the same way, you want to build your dream life. Now, you may not have the ultimate dream Nobody really starts with the ultimate dream but you can also have 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0. So what that means is dream business. Dream life means I have this 1.0 version of my dream business and 1.0 version of my dream life, and I'm working towards 2.0 and 3.0 or 4.0. And so, for instance, you know, you just started a business 1.0, as far as you know, like your dream business.

Speaker 1:

Maybe I'm at this stage where you know I'm bringing in, I'm having my first 50K year, or my first 100K year, or my first, you know, 250k year, or whatever. That is right, and your dream life could then be that maybe you had somebody work once a week so that you can have a long weekend every weekend. Or maybe it is that you hired somebody to do the laundry and you hired somebody to do the cleaning, right, and so that your weekends you have it to truly rest. Like it could be that, it could be just that. And as you go higher, right, then you have, well, we crossed the million dollar mark. And then maybe over here you're like I take off, you know, like I take five weeks off every year and it just keeps going higher and higher and higher.

Speaker 1:

But you choose, right, but they're they're not willing, they're not willing to build a business at the expense of their life, so they just keep that version and keep taking it higher and higher and higher. So you know, we've had people who decided, well, I want to homeschool my kids. So you know, we've had people who decided, well, I want to homeschool my kids. They've decided, I want to take a vacation every quarter, international vacation and they've done it Like it's whatever, whatever that means for you, ok, you just start from where you are and you keep working your way up, so that way you can always say I'm building my dream life and my dream business concurrently, right, because it's a version. You understand that it's a version and you're not bothered by somebody else's version because you have your version, okay.

Speaker 1:

Okay, now, one of the people who demonstrates is probably the best that I know of the docs that I've worked with is Dr Catherine Toomer, and you know she's family medicine trained and she really has this whole movement around trained and she really has this whole movement around wellness and weight loss and getting rid of the weight, like the fat shaming and things like that, and she has always aggressively protected her time. She values time more than money and you say, yes, and we all do, but the truth of the matter is she's always lived it out right Like some people say that, but they don't quite do that but she's always valued it more than money. She's the first person I heard of the fear of success, because she's like then what happens to my time if I become successful? She is always committed to her dream life and so in doing that, she has built a business that has allowed her to live her dream life. And so here she is, crushing as an entrepreneur and she says you know, I work three days a week and I work five hours those days and this is this is a year or two ago, so I don't even know what she's doing now, but you know she's able to take off time for her family If it's. If it's if it's a family member's birthday, she can take a week off and go hang with them. If her daughters need her, um, she can go be with them. And you know, like she's really created time, location, freedom, financial freedom for herself, all while building a very successful business, like. There've been times I've talked to her she's like oh, my business has grown by, you know, 671%, and another time my business has grown by a thousand percent. And all of this happening while she's building her dream life. No business is worth our dream life, right? Okay? So so this is the deal. These are seven characteristics I have here. Okay, so they've redefined failure. They're decisive. These are seven characteristics I have here. Okay, so they've redefined failure. They're decisive, they play the long game, they invest in themselves, they're customer focused, they're hard workers and they are committed to their dream life. Guess what? We can all be that way, we can all improve how we are that way.

Speaker 1:

Right, and I want to invite you to kind of, you know, take this and sit with yourself and ask yourself, like is this something that I'm doing? Is this something I can do better? How am I showing up this way? How am I not showing up this way? And I want to invite you to not judge. This is not about judgment. This is about observation, right, like a scientist, we're just observing and then we can course correct based on that.

Speaker 1:

But this is the deal, right? I believe I know for a fact that the physician space needs as many successful physician entrepreneurs as it can be created, right? And this is a critical time in our history as physicians, and I want to invite you to be one of the people who say yes to being a very successful entrepreneur, a very successful physician entrepreneur. Kind of do an audit here and up level the way you're showing up. You know up level, the way you are displaying these characteristics of the ultra successful and you know, like as you do, that you'll be surprised by the ripple effect that will have in your business, and not only your business but your life as well. Okay, because we're not just about building dream businesses. We're about building dream businesses and dream lives, both of them. Okay, I cannot wait to celebrate you, to celebrate the wins you create, to celebrate the transformation in your business.

Speaker 1:

I cannot wait to celebrate the ripple effect of your success on the physician community, because that's what exactly what's going to happen. You're going to be end up. You're going to end up being a vision board for other people, right? I can't wait to see all of that. And it's just tied to you doing a quick audit and making some quick shifts. So make those shifts. And if you did like, you know like, I want you to send me a DM, send me a PM, say hey, dr Una, you will not believe what I just did. Like, let me know. I want to cheer you on, okay, and if this episode was helpful to you, I want you to take it, take a screenshot of it, share it on social media, tell the doctors in your life you just gotta listen to this. Okay, this will rock your world. All right, all right. As always, I'm rooting for you and I on the next episode of the Uncensored Podcast.

Traits of Successful Physician Entrepreneurs
Path of the Ultra Successful
Invest in Yourself and Customers
Customer Focus for Success and Hard Work
Characteristics of Successful Physician Entrepreneurs