Why the Room Matters More Than the Information

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A few years ago, I was sitting at PIMDCON watching one of our Pitchfest presenters share a new business idea she’d been working on. Halfway through, she got nervous. Stumbled over her words. Froze for a second.

And the entire room started cheering her on.

Not politely. Not awkwardly. Genuinely. Four hundred physicians pulling for someone they’d just met, because they understood what it takes to put yourself out there. She finished strong. And I remember thinking: this is what most physicians never get to experience.

Not the presentation. The room.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice. Any investment involves risk, and you should consult your financial advisor, attorney, or CPA before making any investment decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The author and associated entities disclaim any liability for loss incurred as a result of the use of this material or its content.

If you’ve been circling ideas but still feel stuck, you’re not alone.

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Leave with a plan and the confidence to move.

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Most physicians are building alone

Here’s what I’ve noticed over the last decade of working with physicians who want more from their careers and their lives.

The information isn’t the problem. You can find a podcast on syndications, a blog post on building a side business, a YouTube video on financial independence. The information is everywhere.

The problem is isolation.

Most physicians are figuring things out in a vacuum. You’re reading between patients, listening to podcasts on your commute, maybe running some numbers late at night after the kids are asleep. And all of that is productive. But it’s also lonely. And lonely progress is fragile.

I spent years doing this myself. I thought I could read my way to a different life. And reading helped. But the biggest inflection points in my journey didn’t come from books or courses. They came from being in a room with people who were actually doing the work.

What changes when you’re in the room

There’s a specific thing that happens at in-person events that I haven’t been able to replicate online.

When you hear someone explain what they did, how they structured it, what went wrong, and what they’d do differently, your brain stops treating the idea as theoretical. It becomes a real thing that a real person did. The distance between “someday” and “this quarter” shrinks.

At last year’s PIMDCON, I watched this happen dozens of times. A physician who’d been thinking about real estate investing for two years sat down with someone who’d closed their first deal six months ago. By the end of that conversation, the timeline moved. Not because of pressure. Because of proximity.

That’s the part that’s hard to explain to someone who hasn’t experienced it yet. It’s not motivation. It’s recalibration. Your sense of what’s possible updates based on who you’re around.

I’ve also noticed that in-person commitments carry more weight. If I tell someone at an event, “I’m going to look at my first deal this quarter,” I feel that. Not because they’re holding me accountable. Because I said it out loud to a real person, and I don’t want to be the guy who talks and disappears.

Mindset shifts faster in community

For a long time, I thought success was mostly about strategy. Find the right plan, follow the steps, execute.

I still think strategy matters. But I’ve come to believe that mindset is the multiplier. If you don’t believe something is possible for you, you won’t take the steps. If you don’t have a strong enough reason, you’ll quit when it gets inconvenient.

This is where community does something that solo learning can’t. When you spend time with physicians who are building businesses, investing in real estate, redesigning how they practice, it normalizes action. It normalizes asking questions that feel basic. It normalizes being a beginner at something even though you’re an expert in your clinical field.

At PIMDCON, we couldn’t get people to stop talking. Literally. We had to use a gong to get people back to their seats. The networking sessions, the mastermind groups, the casual conversations over coffee. People told me they’d never had these kinds of discussions at their workplace. For once, they were surrounded by others who understood the journey.

That’s not something you can manufacture online. You can approximate it. But the energy in a room full of physicians who all want more from life, and are willing to do the work, is different.

Relationships are the underrated asset

People love talking about tactics, and I do too. But over time, I’ve become convinced that relationships are one of the most underrated forms of leverage.

The right conversation can save you a year of trial and error. The right introduction can open a door you didn’t know existed. The right perspective, from someone who’s three years ahead of you, can help you avoid the mistake you were about to make.

Events like PIMDCON compress that. You can have conversations in a weekend that would take months to stumble into on your own. You find people who think like you, who want similar things, and who are genuinely willing to help each other execute.

And it goes both directions. When you’re contributing to a community, not just consuming, the whole experience changes. There’s a sense of purpose and momentum that sticks with you long after the event ends.


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This is what PIMDCON is built for

PIMDCON isn’t a lecture series. It’s the room where physicians who are rethinking their careers, building new income streams, and designing their lives on purpose come together.

We have physicians who’ve built seven-figure real estate portfolios. Physicians who’ve launched businesses from scratch. Physicians who’ve transitioned into concierge medicine, telemedicine, direct primary care. And physicians who are just starting to explore what’s possible beyond their clinical role.

The morning workout sessions. The deep conversations that run long past the scheduled time. The connections that turn into partnerships, deals, and friendships. That’s what keeps people coming back.

If you’ve been doing the reading, listening to the podcasts, running the numbers, but still feel like you’re building in isolation, consider whether the missing piece isn’t more information. It might be the room.

PIMDCON 2026 is September 24-26. I’d love to see you there.

Learn more and grab your spot here → JOIN PIMDCON!


Were these helpful in any way? Make sure to sign up for the newsletter and join the Passive Income Docs Facebook Group for more physician-tailored content.

Peter Kim, MD is the founder of Passive Income MD, the creator of Passive Real Estate Academy, and offers weekly education through his Monday podcast, the Passive Income MD Podcast. Join our community at the Passive Income Doc Facebook Group.

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