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Gee, Felicia, if you and I could clone ourselves we'd have it made!
My main challenge is that in my medically-oriented group practice, about half of my business is insurance-based. I do almost all the filing myself...I have so far had no success in finding someone who does it as efficiently as I do, and I have found that it causes me more stress to turn it over to someone who screws it up that it does for me to do it myself. I am still waiting for Mr. or Ms. Right For the Job to come along. I suppose it is a sign of the present economy that when I have in the past couple of months advertised for "a person experienced in insurance billing with excellent knowledge of medical terminology" that I received a couple of hundred phone calls and resumes from people who know NOTHING about it and are just desperate for a job. That whole experience has made me very hesitant to run another ad.
If you're reading this and that job description sounds like you, call me!
Gee, Felicia, if you and I could clone ourselves we'd have it made!
My main challenge is that in my medically-oriented group practice, about half of my business is insurance-based. I do almost all the filing myself...I have so far had no success in finding someone who does it as efficiently as I do, and I have found that it causes me more stress to turn it over to someone who screws it up that it does for me to do it myself. I am still waiting for Mr. or Ms. Right For the Job to come along. I suppose it is a sign of the present economy that when I have in the past couple of months advertised for "a person experienced in insurance billing with excellent knowledge of medical terminology" that I received a couple of hundred phone calls and resumes from people who know NOTHING about it and are just desperate for a job. That whole experience has made me very hesitant to run another ad.
If you're reading this and that job description sounds like you, call me!
Hi Felicia...great question by the way..i've been running my own practice for 17 out of 20 years of my Holistic Healthcare Career...13 years ago I started a small company and became incorporated. At one point i had a staff of about 6-7 therapists working for me..but alas..many therapists do leave the field in just a few years which primarily is what happened to my staff..i would train them via an apprenticeship for 2 years solidly as I built a client practice for them..and then usually w/in just a year or two at the most..they would leave the field..not just me..the field of massage therapy..as it seems that our field can be quite transcient. I also taught in the field advanced courses in massage therapy techniques for almost 10 years..etc...and since then..well...i stopped teaching despite the 12 curriculums that i wrote myself and also..i stopped having a staff and am now a much happier single practitioner...with the motto of "less is more"!
So what's the most difficult challenging thng about handling a business and/or the business side of my practice...well there are many aspects..having to learn how to market yourself..how to set up advertisements for yourself...design and/or have someone help you to design a business card...setting up a website which i am right now in the midst of doing so..and boy is that going to be a huge project..putting in a website information that encapsulates all the different services that I do...it would have been much easier in the first 5 years of my practice because i didn't have so many different services / techniques that i did then..so i would have written less..now 20 years later there's a lot more to write and it's a big project..another challenge is keeping great books...bookkeeping..having an accountant to make sure that all the taxes are paid and processed well..making sure that you have a good lawyer to advise you..on many things..reviewing a lease for instance before you sign it..so that you are protected..and so that the lease contract doesn't eventually come back to bite ya...cause there was that little extra something that the landlord slipped into there when you weren't looking..and you signed the contract and were bound to it..not knowing all the aspects...which means you have spend lots of extra time...checking everything out..and seeking out great advice from accountants..lawyers...web designers...printers for business cards..how about artists to do some artwork on your card if you want to design a logo for yourself/company as was the case with me 13 years ago...then there's just the plain old taking care of processing the bills...keeping good files...and tracking your viable business writeoffs with great documentation lest you be audited someday and find yourself with all those well tracked expenses and then oh no...you're in a big tax audit dilemma..but hey it was only making sure that all your paperwork and expenses were filed correctly and valid...that's all...doesn't seem like a lot but it adds up...here's another thing..setting up phone lines for business and/or highspeed internet..always getting the best deals for yourself and your business...and one huge part of the business as it relates to clients...it's such an easy one..but so often overlooked...actually return phone calls when a client leaves a message within a reasonable amount of time..you'll stand out amongst the rest of the therapists who don't think that it is important enough to return a phone call. I cannot times a client has told me thru many years of a practice.."thank you so much for returning my call" and then afterwards divulging that out of 7 phone calls they placed to other therapists..i was the only one that called back...even when they came for the appt...i was still the only one that called back...i remember teaching a seminar on business practices...for massage therapists...and that was my biggest piece of advice..i'd say.."so you want clients..you want to build your practice..it takes a lot of things to accomplish this...but here's just one simple thing...that will make you stand out amongst all the rest...just return phone calls...in a timely fashion...no one believed me that it could be as simple as that...and you know what...many of my students didn't follow my advice but still complained about not being busy enough...and soon after dropped out of the profession altogether...!
What's challenging to it all..you ask...to keep calling yourself to a higher and higher ground of business practices...to keep pushing yourself even when you don't feel like it...to make sure that things are done in a professional manner...that your filing is on the mark...your accounts are balanced...your business card represents you well..and your website when you get that up and running...that you represent your industry in the community well and realize that in doing so..people think of all massage therapists...as you are so presenting yourself to be...following up with clients and not just for a session to make money..but to really support them and show care...for their well being..even if you just spend some time on the phone with them...it all comes back to you you know...cause you really care for your clients..ahhh word gets around..that plus..and here's the big one..they really really really want a great therapist..who is also a really good business professional..too...each part of the equation is as important and the other...i've heard from clients that they've left their therapists because they didn't practice good business professionalism..didn't take the business part of it all seriously...despite the great therapy that the therapist gave to them...it's really important to clients that you are on the mark in both arenas..and that in one huge nutshell is the most challenging thing...to balance all of this...and do in a way that is genuine..professional..yet caring...and shows that you're in it to really help people first and foremost...and you're a business person too..and oh..by this way..this your bread and butter too..and you get to make that bread and butter by helping people..and that makes all the difference in the world to you and to your clients especially.
Anyway..hope that helps...Felicia...perhaps though a lot of this you already knew...if so..then perhaps it just helps to hear it again...and perhaps there are a few things that you didn't know...either way..it's a great question..and one that i believe every therapist including myself need to be asking ourselves all the time..so that we can all continue onward and upwards to even higher and higher standards in our profession!
Be well and good luck..diane
Gee, Felicia, if you and I could clone ourselves we'd have it made!
My main challenge is that in my medically-oriented group practice, about half of my business is insurance-based. I do almost all the filing myself...I have so far had no success in finding someone who does it as efficiently as I do, and I have found that it causes me more stress to turn it over to someone who screws it up that it does for me to do it myself. I am still waiting for Mr. or Ms. Right For the Job to come along. I suppose it is a sign of the present economy that when I have in the past couple of months advertised for "a person experienced in insurance billing with excellent knowledge of medical terminology" that I received a couple of hundred phone calls and resumes from people who know NOTHING about it and are just desperate for a job. That whole experience has made me very hesitant to run another ad.
If you're reading this and that job description sounds like you, call me!
Hi Felicia...great question by the way..i've been running my own practice for 17 out of 20 years of my Holistic Healthcare Career...13 years ago I started a small company and became incorporated. At one point i had a staff of about 6-7 therapists working for me..but alas..many therapists do leave the field in just a few years which primarily is what happened to my staff..i would train them via an apprenticeship for 2 years solidly as I built a client practice for them..and then usually w/in just a year or two at the most..they would leave the field..not just me..the field of massage therapy..as it seems that our field can be quite transcient. I also taught in the field advanced courses in massage therapy techniques for almost 10 years..etc...and since then..well...i stopped teaching despite the 12 curriculums that i wrote myself and also..i stopped having a staff and am now a much happier single practitioner...with the motto of "less is more"!
So what's the most difficult challenging thng about handling a business and/or the business side of my practice...well there are many aspects..having to learn how to market yourself..how to set up advertisements for yourself...design and/or have someone help you to design a business card...setting up a website which i am right now in the midst of doing so..and boy is that going to be a huge project..putting in a website information that encapsulates all the different services that I do...it would have been much easier in the first 5 years of my practice because i didn't have so many different services / techniques that i did then..so i would have written less..now 20 years later there's a lot more to write and it's a big project..another challenge is keeping great books...bookkeeping..having an accountant to make sure that all the taxes are paid and processed well..making sure that you have a good lawyer to advise you..on many things..reviewing a lease for instance before you sign it..so that you are protected..and so that the lease contract doesn't eventually come back to bite ya...cause there was that little extra something that the landlord slipped into there when you weren't looking..and you signed the contract and were bound to it..not knowing all the aspects...which means you have spend lots of extra time...checking everything out..and seeking out great advice from accountants..lawyers...web designers...printers for business cards..how about artists to do some artwork on your card if you want to design a logo for yourself/company as was the case with me 13 years ago...then there's just the plain old taking care of processing the bills...keeping good files...and tracking your viable business writeoffs with great documentation lest you be audited someday and find yourself with all those well tracked expenses and then oh no...you're in a big tax audit dilemma..but hey it was only making sure that all your paperwork and expenses were filed correctly and valid...that's all...doesn't seem like a lot but it adds up...here's another thing..setting up phone lines for business and/or highspeed internet..always getting the best deals for yourself and your business...and one huge part of the business as it relates to clients...it's such an easy one..but so often overlooked...actually return phone calls when a client leaves a message within a reasonable amount of time..you'll stand out amongst the rest of the therapists who don't think that it is important enough to return a phone call. I cannot times a client has told me thru many years of a practice.."thank you so much for returning my call" and then afterwards divulging that out of 7 phone calls they placed to other therapists..i was the only one that called back...even when they came for the appt...i was still the only one that called back...i remember teaching a seminar on business practices...for massage therapists...and that was my biggest piece of advice..i'd say.."so you want clients..you want to build your practice..it takes a lot of things to accomplish this...but here's just one simple thing...that will make you stand out amongst all the rest...just return phone calls...in a timely fashion...no one believed me that it could be as simple as that...and you know what...many of my students didn't follow my advice but still complained about not being busy enough...and soon after dropped out of the profession altogether...!
What's challenging to it all..you ask...to keep calling yourself to a higher and higher ground of business practices...to keep pushing yourself even when you don't feel like it...to make sure that things are done in a professional manner...that your filing is on the mark...your accounts are balanced...your business card represents you well..and your website when you get that up and running...that you represent your industry in the community well and realize that in doing so..people think of all massage therapists...as you are so presenting yourself to be...following up with clients and not just for a session to make money..but to really support them and show care...for their well being..even if you just spend some time on the phone with them...it all comes back to you you know...cause you really care for your clients..ahhh word gets around..that plus..and here's the big one..they really really really want a great therapist..who is also a really good business professional..too...each part of the equation is as important and the other...i've heard from clients that they've left their therapists because they didn't practice good business professionalism..didn't take the business part of it all seriously...despite the great therapy that the therapist gave to them...it's really important to clients that you are on the mark in both arenas..and that in one huge nutshell is the most challenging thing...to balance all of this...and do in a way that is genuine..professional..yet caring...and shows that you're in it to really help people first and foremost...and you're a business person too..and oh..by this way..this your bread and butter too..and you get to make that bread and butter by helping people..and that makes all the difference in the world to you and to your clients especially.
Anyway..hope that helps...Felicia...perhaps though a lot of this you already knew...if so..then perhaps it just helps to hear it again...and perhaps there are a few things that you didn't know...either way..it's a great question..and one that i believe every therapist including myself need to be asking ourselves all the time..so that we can all continue onward and upwards to even higher and higher standards in our profession!
Be well and good luck..diane
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