Telehealth platforms operate as the infrastructure layer between patients and physicians. They handle patient acquisition, appointment booking, billing, and the technology that connects the two. Board-certified dermatologists connect as 1099 independent contractors. The physician practices medicine. The platform handles everything else.
The clinical work is the same. A patient submits a case — photos, history, complaint. The dermatologist reviews, diagnoses, and responds with a treatment plan. Asynchronous cases take minutes. The platform pays the physician per case or per hour. No overhead. No billing department. No front desk. No clinic administration.
The Async Advantage: Four asynchronous cases can be completed in the same 15 minutes that one synchronous video visit takes.
Step 1: Identify the Right Platforms
Not every telehealth platform is built for dermatology. The Blueprint teaches you exactly what to look for, what to avoid, and how to evaluate each platform against your clinical and income goals.
Step 2: Complete the Licensing and Credentialing Pathway
Each platform has its own credentialing requirements. The Blueprint documents the full pathway — what is required, in what order, and how long it realistically takes.
Step 3: Build Your Case Workflow
How you structure your review process determines your income per hour. The Blueprint gives you the workflow built by a dermatologist already operating at high volume.
Step 4: Launch and Scale on Your Schedule
You decide when you work, how many cases you take, and how many platforms you operate across. The infrastructure is yours. The schedule is yours.
The Virtual Practice Blueprint was built for board-certified dermatologists who are currently employed, who are burned out on the clinic model, and who have never had virtual practice presented to them as a real and viable option.
If you are not board-certified in dermatology, this program is not for you.
If you are looking for a side hustle or a temporary fix, this program is not for you.
If you are a board-certified dermatologist who is done practicing medicine on someone else's terms and ready to find out what your practice looks like when it belongs to you — this was built for you.
The complete virtual practice system. Self-paced. Lifetime access. 11 modules.
A structured six-month curriculum, a private physician community, and two live Q&A sessions with a board-certified dermatologist practicing virtually today.
90 days. Your entire virtual practice infrastructure built for you personally. Application only.
The Virtual Dermatology Practice Roadmap covers the 7 biggest mistakes dermatologists make when trying to go virtual — and how to avoid them . It will tell you more about whether this is the right move than any sales page.