『Ep 154: What a Successful Private Practice Actually Looks Like』のカバーアート

Ep 154: What a Successful Private Practice Actually Looks Like

Ep 154: What a Successful Private Practice Actually Looks Like

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Building a Sustainable (and Yes, “Boring”) Private Practice as a Therapist MomThis episode of The Therapist Mom Podcast is a candid, empowering invitation for every therapist mom who’s tired of chasing a wildly ambitious practice that doesn’t fit her life. If you’ve been worn down by comparison, overwhelmed by hustle-culture advice, or questioning whether your practice “should” look bigger, shinier, or more “successful,” you’ll feel seen here.As someone who’s navigated cross-country moves for my husband’s Coast Guard career, rebuilt my practice after maternity leaves, and supported hundreds of therapists in building careers that actually work for their real lives, I know firsthand how vital it is to honor your capacity and redefine what true success looks like.Let’s get honest about what you actually want from your practice, and why a sustainable, even “boring,” business might be your best bet for autonomy, well-being, and genuine satisfaction.What You’ll Learn in This EpisodeWhy Chasing the Instagram-Worthy Practice Isn’t Always Your Path to Joy:Validation for those feelings of comparison and overwhelm, and why pushing for a flashy practice isn’t always the answer.How to Design a Sustainable, Fulfilling “Boring” Practice:Strategies for caseload, scheduling, and boundaries that protect your real life—not just your ambitions.What True Sustainability Looks Like in Private Practice:Clear ways to identify if you’re building for someone else’s metrics, and how to come home to what you actually want.Episode Timestamps00:00: Naming the reality—juggling private practice and motherhood isn’t all flawless Instagram graphics and meteoric growth02:09: The overlooked value (and beauty!) of a “boring” private practice tailored to your life04:27: Why my own private practice journey was shaped by military moves, motherhood, and honoring capacity06:33: Debunking the hustle: sustainable practice is not the same as “settling”08:17: The hidden cost of chasing online “success”—and a reframe about what matters most10:34: The real math of caseload, fees, and how to work within your actual bandwidth12:43: How to stop defaulting to someone else’s calendar and design your own schedule15:26: Two crucial reflection questions for aligning your practice with your own values—not the highlight reelTop Takeaways on Building a Boring (Sustainable!) Private Practice1. The Case for a “Boring” Practice: Why Slow and Sustainable WinsLet’s break this down: It’s so easy to be seduced by the online images of six-figure months, group practice launches, and endless growth. But for many therapist moms—including me—those models were built under very different circumstances, often with significant support systems or resources.What actually matters is building a practice that honors your energy, family obligations, and mental health—even if it isn’t flashy. “Boring” can mean a calendar that works for school pick-ups, a caseload that lets you show up fully and have gas left in the tank for your kids, and boundaries that shield you from burnout. I’ve rebuilt after baby, after moves, and after periods of upheaval—and guess what? A predictable, stable practice is freedom.2. The Math Actually Matters: Caseloads, Fees, and CapacityHere’s how you can start implementing this TODAY:Step 1: Get radically honest about your weekly capacity for clients—most thriving practices for moms exist in the 10–18 clients per week range, not 40.Step 2: Calculate the fee you need to meet your financial goals while keeping your caseload sustainable. This isn’t greedy; it’s good math and healthy boundaries.Step 3 (Pro tip): Don’t be afraid to revisit or raise your fees thoughtfully as your circumstances change, and get honest about what financial stability means for YOUR family.3. Boundaries and Scheduling: Make Your Calendar Work for YouWe all make mistakes, but let’s save you the headache. Here’s what NOT to do when designing your schedule:Mistake 1: Sliding into default evening or weekend appointments because “that’s just what clients want.”Mistake 2: Accepting every new client without regard for your own rhythms, energy, or commitments.Instead, design your calendar intentionally around your real-life obligations—even if it means saying no to some opportunities. Protecting your afternoons, having “light days,” and putting a hard stop on your workday isn’t just allowed—it’s crucial for your health and sustainability.Join us for Therapist Mom Networking Meetup — a casual space to connect with other therapist moms, share what’s working in your practice, talk through challenges, and build real community. No pressure, no pitching — just support and connection. Register at https://www.raisedtoempower.com/networking💻 This episode is sponsored by Jane, the all-in-one practice management software I use and love. Book your FREE Live Demo HERE and ...
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