Successful Practice Discussion Panel
From the outside, just owning a business can look like success. But from the inside, your relationships may be deteriorating, you may not be making enough to sustain yourself, or you may be managing a heavy caseload.
Success can vary from person to person and change over time. Kelly and Miranda discuss their definition of business success: When your practice has great clinical outcomes AND you have a great income. One isn’t sacrificed for the other. And even as a successful business owner, you can still dive deep into your marketing, finances, and processes to improve your business!
This episode features successful Business School for Therapists members sharing their personal stories of expanding their practices after joining. Guests share why they joined, what they implemented, and what they refined after reaching success in practice.
Resources Discussed
Why joining Business School for Therapists is beneficial if your business is already successful.
How to be attuned with yourself and your business.
Refining and evaluating your business over time, even after reaching success.
How Business School connections can help you in your personal life.
Increasing diversity and access in the mental health field for clients, employees, and YOU.
Jill, MS, LPC in Oregon specializing in anxiety, mentions how she creates time to focus on the business side of her practice.
Zipa, LCSW in New York working with trauma victims, already implements resources from Business School in her practice, which speeds up her productivity and ease when handling client calls.
Wanda, MA, LPC in South Carolina specializing in marriage counseling, talks about the challenge of working with minority groups that don’t feel therapy is accessible to them. She mentions how Business School helped her connect with other diverse therapists she feels comfortable referring clients to that have a safe space for them.