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Your Private Practice: 10 Essentials for Success
(For the printer friendly, PDF version
of this article, please
click here)
As a counselor, therapist or healing professional in private practice, it is quite likely that you did
not chose your profession because you wanted to be a business person. As
a result, it can be challenging to go into business for yourself and be
successful. Taking time to prepare and plan as you build your private practice
will help you avoid costly and time-consuming mistakes. Below are ten
areas to address to help ensure your success.
1. Get Your Life in Excellent Shape
Counselors, therapists and healing professionals know that our personal lives affect
our professional lives, yet many who are struggling to market a private practice
fail to take this into account. Look at all aspects of your life and
determine what seems to be working for you and what needs to change.
Determine any activities you need to reduce or eliminate in order to
have the time and energy to market your practice. Examine your lifestyle and
personal work habits and see where improvement needs to be made. The
more your life is on order, the more time and energy you will have for
marketing and building a practice.
2. Develop a Financial Plan
Before you start marketing your practice, assess your financial situation and make
a financial plan. Make sure you have funds from other sources until your
practice becomes established. Do not put your self in a position where
you are desperate to secure clients in order to pay your bills.
Potential clients may sense your desperation and may not be eager to
hire you. Feeling secure financially will allow you to market and build your
practice with greater confidence and ease.
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3. Know that You Are a Business Owner
It is essential that you start seeing yourself as a business owner if
you haven’t made this mind-shift already. You must pay careful attention
to all aspects of your business--your revenue and expenses, how you
spend your time, methods of attracting clients, and developing operating
systems that allow your business to run smoothly.
4. Develop a Vision for Your Private Practice
It’s difficult to get somewhere if you don’t know where you are going.
Develop a detailed vision of what you want your priavte practice to look like in
6 months, 1 year and 5 years and write it down. How many clients do you
want to have? What days and hours do you want to work? How much income
do you need/want? The more clarity and specificity you have, the more
likely you will turn your vision into reality.
5. Develop at Least One Specialization
Helping and healing professionals new to private practice often fear
that if they are too narrow in the type of services they offer, they
will rule out many other potential clients. The opposite is actually
more often true as people tend to want to hire specialists. The more
targeted you are in marketing your practice, the more you will stand out
from others and become known for your expertise. In addition, it’s
easier to market your practice to a particular group if you know where to find them.
6. Determine Any Negative Attitudes and Fears You Have About
Marketing
Many counselors, therapists, and healing professionals are uncomfortable with the
marketing aspect of being in private practice. They see their role as to
be there for others and not to promote themselves. Our repeated exposure
to negative and manipulative types of marketing further contributes to
the belief that marketing ourselves is somehow inappropriate. Any
negative attitudes and fears you have about marketing a practice need to be
eliminated. You can and should find ways to market with integrity and
authenticity. Be proud of your services and have confidence that you
have something to offer people that they need and want.
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7. Develop a Marketing Plan
In order to market your private practice successfully you must have an integrated marketing
plan. One of the most common mistakes helping and healing professionals
make is trying a few methods of marketing your practice haphazardly, and when the
results are not immediate, they erroneously assume the techniques don’t
work. Flourishing private practices are frequently built upon a number of
marketing strategies that work together over time. To market effectively
you must make yourself repeatedly visible to potential clients and
referral sources so that they get to know and trust you.
8. Choose Marketing Methods That Excite You
Take some time to explore and develop marketing methods that suit your
unique talents and interests. There are numerous ways to promote your
practice. To get ideas, read books, take courses, ask other
professionals how they built their practices, or hire a marketing
consultant or coach. Marketing can be an enjoyable and creative process
that provides a balance to the work you do with your clients. Find a way
to take pleasure in this aspect of your business and you will be more
motivated to do it.
9. Make a Commitment To Build Your Practice
Typically it can take anywhere from 1-3+ years to build a full practice.
Exactly how long will depend on several factors including the size of
your current network, how effectively you market, the demand for your
area of expertise, and how much time you spend developing your practice.
Make a commitment to take action steps on a regular basis. It’s best if
you set aside a specific amount of time on a weekly basis for marketing your practice,
and try to stick to this schedule even when you become discouraged or
become tempted to allow other things to take priority.
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10. Get Support
Because you will be primarily working alone, you may feel isolated and
discouraged at times. It’s important to have people and resources you
can access for support. Most successful people have consistently had
other people helping them. Whether you get expert guidance from a
professional business coach or consultant, or get help from your
colleagues and friends, getting support, guidance and feedback on your
ideas and goals is essential. The more support you get, the greater your
chances of success with your private practice.
Many professionals who are having difficulty building their practices
tell me the reason they can’t get clients is either because there is too
much competition or because of tight economic times. While it may be
true that competition for clients has increased and that financial
resources are limited for many people, there will always be those
professional sin your particular field who do have a full practice.
Competition is not going to go away and you have you don’t have control
over the economy. You need to find a way to develop and sustain a
private practice in spite of these apparent obstacles. If you act on the above
ten guidelines on a consistent basis, you should have a thriving
practice within a few years. Be persistent, believe in yourself, learn
from your mistakes, and most importantly, get out there and be visible.
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P.S. If you liked this article, feel free to share it
This article was originally published in Insights, the
newsletter of the BC Association of Clinical Counsellors. Spring, 2003,
Volume 2003, Volume 15, Number 1.
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