Episodios

  • Physician Entrepreneurship: 7 Signs You Already Think Like a Builder (And How to Use It in Your Career)
    Apr 13 2026

    In this episode of the Visionary MD Podcast, we explore why physicians should consider thinking entrepreneurially—not just by starting businesses, but by embracing a “builder mindset” within their current careers.

    After a restorative break and time to reflect, Dr. Onwuemene shares insights inspired by the Ice House Entrepreneurship Program and how shifting your mindset can unlock new possibilities. At the core is a simple but powerful idea: your thinking drives your actions, and your mindset is always upgradable.

    Many physicians enjoy diverse, meaningful work—clinical care, research, teaching, and leadership. Yet increasing clinical demands often crowd out these fulfilling activities. This episode challenges you to reclaim those aspects by recognizing and leveraging your entrepreneurial traits.

    7 signs you may already be a “builder”:

    1. You work hard—and persistently—but question whether your effort yields the outcomes you want.
    2. You value autonomy and prefer setting your own schedule.
    3. You have a clear vision of how things should be done.
    4. You can inspire others to share and pursue that vision.
    5. You’re comfortable navigating ambiguity and complexity.
    6. You believe in future possibilities—for yourself and your patients.
    7. You are creative and enjoy building, improving, and innovating.

    Entrepreneurship isn’t just about launching a company—it’s about creating, shaping, and building within your current environment. Where can you design new programs, innovate in patient care, or expand your professional impact?

    Key takeaway: You may have more autonomy than you think. The opportunity is to find it, use it, and align your work with what truly fulfills you.

    If you’re ready to think differently about your career and explore what’s possible, this episode is for you.

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    25 m
  • The nudge you can't ignore: Trusting your feelings to redefine success in medicine
    Mar 31 2026

    Physicians are trained to push through, suppress discomfort, and explain away feelings that don’t fit the system. But what happens when those feelings are actually pointing you toward growth? In this episode of The Visionary MD Podcast, Dr. Onwuemene reflects on her journey through business school and physician leadership, sharing practical insights on self‑trust, validation, and creating a career that truly aligns.

    In This Episode, We Cover:

    • Giving yourself grace in demanding seasons Choosing growth doesn’t mean chaos—it means recognizing seasons of intensity and continuing to show up without self‑punishment.
    • Why physicians struggle to trust Their feelings Medical training rewards emotional suppression, making it difficult to recognize and honor internal signals later in our careers.
    • Pay attention to the nudge That persistent feeling that something isn’t right is real—and it deserves your attention, not dismissal.
    • Stop looking for validation in the wrong places Not everyone can validate your experience. Seeking approval from those who can’t see what you see leads to doubt and gaslighting.
    • The Importance of safe spaces Coaches, therapists, and trusted peers outside institutional power structures are critical for honest reflection and growth.
    • When people explain your concerns away Learn to recognize who can help you process challenges—and who you should stop bringing them to.
    • Find physicians who are doing it differently Look beyond the status quo to those quietly building successful, sustainable careers on their own terms.
    • Take baby steps toward alignment Big change doesn’t require drastic leaps. Small, intentional steps compound into meaningful transformation.

    This episode is a reminder that your experience is valid, your feelings are data, and there are many ways to build a fulfilling career in medicine.

    Thank you for listening to The Visionary MD Podcast. If this episode resonated, share it with a colleague or leave a review to help other physicians find the show.

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    20 m
  • Visionary physicians ask questions
    Mar 24 2026

    In this episode, Dr. Onwuemene shares why asking questions is a defining habit of visionary physicians. Inspired by childhood curiosity—and the tendency to lose it over time—she challenges physicians to reclaim the habit of asking “why” as a path to clarity, better decisions, and true professional freedom.

    Using the classic “ham story,” she highlights how many practices persist long after their original purpose is gone. Without questioning, physicians risk operating within outdated systems that no longer serve them.

    Key Takeaways:

    • Curiosity is a skill—not a phase. Visionary physicians intentionally ask thoughtful, open-ended questions.
    • Many systems go unquestioned. What made sense in the past may no longer apply today.
    • Questions create awareness. They force you to slow down, observe, and truly understand your environment.

    7 Reasons Visionary Physicians Ask Questions:

    1. To pay attention – Awareness begins with curiosity.
    2. To make sense of observations – Turn confusion into understanding.
    3. To remove mental fog – Clarity reduces cognitive overload.
    4. To inform decisions – Better information leads to better choices.
    5. To assess others’ understanding – Not everyone knows why things are done.
    6. To identify which rules matter – Some rules protect; others are outdated.
    7. To distinguish structure vs. people problems – Not all challenges are personal—many are systemic.

    Core Message: Stop accepting things at face value. When you ask better questions, you gain clarity, uncover hidden assumptions, and make decisions aligned with the life and career you actually want.

    Call to Action: This week, practice asking more questions. If one person doesn’t have the answer, ask another—until you truly understand.

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    27 m
  • When they say it can't be done . . .
    Mar 16 2026

    Dr. Onwuemene offers five lessons for pursuing goals that others say are impossible:

    1. Hold fast to the dream. Letting go guarantees failure. Keeping the dream alive keeps possibility alive.

    2. Listen to the naysayers—but use their information strategically. Their objections often reveal real barriers that can help you refine your approach.

    3. Develop a strategy. When the traditional path is blocked, ask what alternative paths might exist.

    4. Build your team. Even when many doubt you, there are always people who believe in what is possible and can help sustain your momentum.

    5. Don’t give up. The real reward of pursuing difficult goals is not only achieving them—it’s the person you become in the process.

    If you are facing a goal that feels impossible, this episode is a reminder: the challenge may be real, but so is the possibility of finding a way forward.

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    21 m
  • Don't get trapped in your "comfortable" career
    Mar 9 2026

    In today’s episode of the VisionaryMD podcast, Dr. Onwuemene uses the classic “boiling frog” metaphor to explore physician career growth, burnout prevention, and how to recognize when it’s time to make a change. Through a powerful and relatable story, she challenges physicians to stop second-guessing past decisions, examine the hidden dangers of comfort, and trust their instincts when subtle shifts begin happening in their professional environments.

    If you’ve ever questioned your job choice, felt stuck in academic medicine, or wondered whether you’ve become too comfortable to grow, this episode offers practical mindset shifts to help you move forward with clarity and confidence.

    Key Points Discussed:

    • Why the first career decision you made was likely the right one given the information you had at the time
    • The emotional cost of blaming your past self for your current circumstances
    • How prolonged comfort can quietly lead to stagnation and disengagement
    • The importance of recognizing subtle early warning signs when something feels “off”
    • Trusting your instincts instead of outsourcing validation to others
    • Responding proactively to institutional and healthcare system changes
    • Why it’s never too late to pivot, seek help, or make a career move
    • Growth as a vital sign of a healthy and sustainable physician career

    Links and Resources Mentioned:

    Coaching with Dr. Onwuemene (Discovery Call): https://www.coagcoach.com/service-page/consultation-call-1

    Call to Action: If this episode resonated with you, subscribe to the Visionary MD Podcast, leave a review, and share it with a colleague who may need encouragement.

    If you’re ready to explore your next level of growth and leadership, sign up for a coaching discovery call today.

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    29 m
  • Crabs in a Bucket: Different Institution, Same Experience
    Mar 2 2026

    When an academic physician feels frustrated with a mentor, senior colleague, or Division chief, it’s easy to make it personal. But what if the issue isn’t the person but the environment?

    In this episode of the Visionary MD Podcast, Dr. Onwuemene unpacks the powerful metaphor of “crabs in a bucket” to explore why institutional dynamics can make even kind, capable physicians behave in ways that feel constraining, competitive, or even adversarial.

    If you’ve ever thought, “My institution is the problem” or “Leadership is toxic,” this episode invites you to pause — and consider a deeper, more strategic perspective.

    This conversation is about ownership, choice, and understanding the systems physicians work within — so you can decide intentionally how you want to move forward.

    The key insight: If you’re in the bucket, you’re choosing to be there.

    You can stay. You can move to a different bucket. Or you can brave the ocean.

    Visionary physicians don’t blame others for their experience — they choose.

    Interested in one-on-one physician coaching?

    To explore working together, connect with Dr. Onwuemene on LinkedIn

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    24 m
  • When "More Money" Isn’t Really About the Money
    Feb 24 2026

    This episode normalizes salary discomfort and reframes it as valuable data rather than something to feel ashamed of. Dr. Onwuemene walks listeners through five key questions to ask when the thought “I should be making more money” comes up, helping physicians think strategically, emotionally, and practically about compensation, negotiation, and long‑term financial goals.

    This episode is especially relevant for physicians in academic medicine, career transitions, or anyone questioning whether their current role can truly support the financial life they envision.

    Key Topics Covered

    • Why it’s normal—even for high‑earning physicians—to feel dissatisfied with their salary
    • The emotional weight of pay cuts and lifestyle expectations during career transitions
    • Wage compression, equity, and fairness in academic and institutional settings
    • The difference between wanting more money and wanting fairness
    • How to think clearly and productively about salary negotiations

    The 5 Questions to Ask When You Want a Higher Salary

    1. What’s really driving this desire? Is it truly about money—or is it about equity, fairness, recognition, or comparison? Clarifying the “voice behind the voice” helps you approach negotiations calmly and effectively.

    2. What kind of financial future can this institution support? Think of your workplace as a financial foundation. Is it built to support a “ranch house” or a “skyscraper”? Understanding structural limits helps you decide whether to adjust your goals—or change environments.

    3. Who is already earning what I want to earn—and what are they doing? Look around. Identify people achieving your financial goals and examine the price they’re paying in time, energy, call schedules, and lifestyle. Then ask: Is that a price I’m willing to pay?

    4. What is actually possible here? Avoid prematurely closing doors. Many physicians create significant income through consulting, entrepreneurship, hybrid models, or strategic roles—even within academic settings. Ask: How could this be possible?

    5. Do I have the courage to act? Comfort can be a trap. Building wealth often requires discomfort, risk, and change. This step is about having the courage to move—even when the path feels uncertain.

    Final Takeaway

    Institutions can set ceilings—but you get to decide whether to push against them, raise them for others, or build somewhere else entirely. The key is clarity: about your goals, your environment, and the moves you’re truly willing to make.

    If you’ve ever thought, “I should be making more money,” this episode will help you unpack that thought and turn it into informed, intentional action.

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    24 m
  • What are you optimizing for?
    Feb 16 2026

    In today's episode, Dr. Onwuemenenvites physicians to pause and ask a powerful question:

    What am I optimizing for in this season of my career—and who chose that target?

    Too often in medicine, we inherit our optimization goals. Early on, it may be productivity or proving ourselves. But as our lives evolve, so do our priorities.

    Dr. Onwuemene reflects on how her own decisions shifted across seasons—from choosing proximity to family over prestige in medical school, to prioritizing community when transitioning to faculty, to seeking institutional environments that truly supported physician-led research.

    She outlines seven optimization targets physicians may consider:

    • Community – proximity to family and meaningful support
    • Experience – the type of training or growth an institution enables
    • Opportunity – whether advancement pathways are real and documented
    • Networks – access to collaborators and intellectual community
    • Lifestyle – schedule flexibility and structural breathability
    • Time – protected space to build beyond clinical work
    • Finances – income, asset building, or long-term wealth strategy

    The key is not which category you choose. The key is choosing intentionally.

    Every institution is a vehicle. The question is whether it’s designed to help you optimize for what matters most in this phase of your life.

    Priorities shift. Seasons change. What served you five years ago may not serve you now—and that’s okay.

    Reflection Prompt: What are you optimizing for at this stage of your career? And does your current platform support it?

    DM Dr. Onwuemene on LinkedIn and share your answer.

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    27 m