Archive for HolisticPracticeDevelopment.com

Next month we will be launching our new multipurpose space in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. As well as our corporate offices, our intention for the space is to use it to help practitioners to reach their practice goals through teaching and a thinking environment.
Today, one of our favorite practitioners who we have known for a number of years, Dr Steve Rosman, came into our offices for our first live strategy session.

I will let Dr Rosman speak in his own words.

‘I am in the middle of relocating and transitioning my practice… I was absolutely lost about how to do this successfully, professionally and practically. Just one session with James and Rachel brought my vision to reality and has left me incredibly excited and enthused about the amazing new practice… The ideas they generated will be easily implemented and bring the success I never thought possible.
They are wizards in the wold of practice development, but most important for me, they are compassionate professional of great integrity and remarkable skills’

Whether you live in NYC and can come live, or can sign up for a free practice strategy session, we look forward to serving your practice needs.

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In our 8th show, Dr. Andrew Colyer and James Maskell deliver your latest Holistic Practice Building tip,
and shares information from over 30 years of combined clinical and business experience.

This week’s show was filmed on location at the beautiful Glen Ivy Spa in Corona, California.

Be sure to leave your comments and questions below!

Thank you for watching, and enjoy!

Your Question of the Day: What do you want to know about Holistic Practice Development?

Click here, scroll down to the bottom of the page and leave your comment now!

Thank you for being here as part of our Holistic Practice Community.

James Maskell, CEO

Dr. Andrew Colyer, Executive Director

At Holistic Practice Development we know that Marketing can be overwhelming; what to do, when to do it, and determining effectiveness can have your head spinning like a top.

For example…

  • Are you ready to move forward with your practice goals in 2011?
  • Do you have your external marketing plan to get new patients?
  • Do you know what your new patient activities are for the next 3 months, 6 months, 9 months?

Get ready to say “Yes” to every one of the above questions with our Silver Level Coaching Package: Marketing Mastermind in action.

We here at HPd are committed to helping practitioners at every level.

If you haven’t been able to afford our Total Practice Success Teleseminar series, or our one-on-one coaching, we now have a package that’s been created just for you.

For less than $3 a day, you will get access to the Total Practice Success External Marketing Module (over 4 hours of Practical Marketing Tips and Information, a 22-page Action Guide, and over two hours of Live Q&A recordings), plus twice a month Marketing Mastermind calls with Dr. Andrew Colyer.

And here’s the best part:  as long as you remain a member of the Silver Level Coaching Package,
every six months, you’ll receive access to another Total Practice Success Teleseminar series module!

Reserve your space today and get ready to take hold of your marketing before 2011 passes you by.

You’ll be able to come up with your annual marketing plan, then get on the phone every two weeks
to get your questions answered personally!

Think you can’t afford it?  If you just get one new patient per month (at $150) from investing  in the new
Silver Level coaching package
, you’ve made an immediate 55% Return on Investment.  You can’t get that in real estate, the stock market, or anything else that’s legal.

If you need to create your annual ongoing external marketing plan to get new patients; if you want to have regular access to Dr. Andrew Colyer and a marketing mastermind to get your questions answered; if you’d like to get access to our external marketing module from the Total Practice Success teleseminar series; then the new Silver Level Coaching Package is the just right thing for you.

Our next call is Tuesday, February 15th, so call or email now to get started!

To get started today, Call (845) 475-8716  -  or  -  send an email to: support [AT] holisticpracticedevelopment [DOT] com.

Still not convinced?  Check out the videos on the new Silver Level Coaching Package (and more) available to support you.

Our latest featured article for NDNR.com spoke to an area we feel could be of huge potential to not just naturopaths, but any type of holistic practitioner.

“Positioning is far more important than the copy.” - Drayton Bird
The successful marketing of your naturopathic practice is not something to take lightly, nor view solely in isolation. Not only is it crucial for the growth and success of your business, but also it helps to improve the health of your local community, because by engaging them in healthful education, we are actually shifting the paradigm of health holistically. Putting your practice and your brand in front of your target demographic consistently should be one of the priorities for your business and is your responsibility as the business owner. But what are the best practices for marketing in our industry?

The first thing you must understand fully is the concept of market positioning. We at HPd love Drayton Bird’s quote at the start of this article, because of its truth and succinctness. Also, this has not been a particular area of strength for NDs or their holistic colleagues. Effective positioning is quite often missed by practitioners because either they haven’t completed a proper business plan, they focus solely on the copy or because they are unaware of its importance. Positioning is broadly defined as ‘efforts to influence consumer perception of a brand or product relative to the perception of competing brands or products. Its objective is to occupy a clear, unique, and advantageous ‘positionin the consumer’s mind’.

Naturopathy still has a way to go before a tipping point is reached where the majority of the country knows what it is and how it works. We tend to lose objectivity about this because most of our friends and families are more aware of it purely through contact with us. As a result, a lot of naturopathic marketing focuses on twoirrelevant things:

  • · Who you are, your techniques and where you went to school
  • · How naturopathic medicine is different than allopathic medicine

NEWS FLASH! Both of these mean nothing to most of the population, as they are tuned into their favorite radio station, WIIFM (What’s in it for me).  Health care marketing is different than marketing ‘stuff’; you are selling a service, and so the approach needs to be different. The public needs to understand

  • How you can help them
  • Why you are the best fit for their need

In short, they need to be able to ‘self-diagnose’ themselves into your office. Your copy can help with this, but it is the positioning of the practice that gives the real power. As an example, one practitioner we met a few years ago ran a fairly busy acupuncture practice outside of Boston, MA called “Callum Complementary Medicine.” However, when he really looked deeply at his skill set he realized that his greatest areas of strength and best results were helping patients with pain and allergies. With a quick “re-positioning” Callum Complementary Medicine became “The Callum Pain and Allergy Clinic” and all of a sudden, the middle of the bell curve in the local population could identify clearly what the practice offered and how it could help them and in short order the clinic was bustling with new business.

Imagine if it was that simple? Imagine if every person in your local community knew exactly how you could help them? Well, we encourage you to think about this area, because in many cases it is that easy.

So how could you create better positioning for your practice?
1. Get clarity over the value your core business offers. We would recommend starting by going through a SWOT analysis (List your Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats)

2. Find a niche that allows you to leverage your strengths, hide your weaknesses, take advantage of opportunities and thwart potential threats

3. Look at areas that your competition are not operating effectively (Depression, Osteoarthritis, Bone Health, Pain, Metal Detox, etc are all areas where the effectiveness of allopathic medicine is generally slight or only short term)

4) From that positioning, identify your target market and through which media you intend to reach them (Covered in most business plans)

5. 5) Look at ways to offer social proof of your core services through testimonials, either video or written. The best place to put them is on Google Maps Business Page.
Once you have your positioning down, it will drive your other marketing efforts and there will be congruence and consistency which will lead to superior results. If you need help in getting clarity over your optimal positioning, feel free to get in touch.

In our 7th show, Dr. Andrew Colyer and James Maskell deliver your latest Holistic Practice Building tip,
and shares information from over 30 years of combined clinical and business experience.

This week’s show was filmed on location in New York City,
in beautiful Riverside Park, near the Soldiers and Sailors Monument.

Be sure to leave your comments and questions below!

Thank you for watching, and enjoy!

Your Question of the Day: What do you want to know about Holistic Practice Development?

Click here, scroll down to the bottom of the page and leave your comment now!

Thank you for being here as part of our Holistic Practice Community.

James Maskell, CEO

Dr. Andrew Colyer, Executive Director

In our 6th show, Dr. Andrew Colyer and James Maskell deliver your latest Holistic Practice Building tip,
and shares information from over 30 years of combined clinical and business experience.

This week’s show was filmed on location in New York City,
in beautiful Riverside Park, near the Soldiers and Sailors Monument.

Be sure to leave your comments and questions below!

Thank you for watching, and enjoy!

Your Question of the Day: What do you want to know about Holistic Practice Development?

Click here, scroll down to the bottom of the page and leave your comment now!

Thank you for being here as part of our Holistic Practice Community.

James Maskell, CEO

Dr. Andrew Colyer, Executive Director

On Christmas Day, an article came out of the Huffington Post called Veterinary Care: Advances in Integrative Medicine or Consideration for  your Pet. The Huffington Post is the most popular blog in the world, attracting 25 million unique visits a month. It has also been a lone voice in supporting holistic and integrative medicine.

The article talks about homotoxicology, a study of the two parts of the word that describes it. Homo- of man/body, toxicology – the studies of toxins. With this type of exposure, techniques like homotoxicology are likely to become increasingly popular with the informed general public.

With more and more information coming out daily on the toxicity of our environment and the acute and chronic conditions that it is leading to,  practitioners who can implement effective detoxification techniques in their practice position themselves to be ahead of the curve.

The fact that homotoxicology works with,  rather than against, the body’s natural ground regulation or natural function, makes it synergistic with many other effective therapies, especially dietary improvement.

The most important part of that article, however, was “In the best case, some of these masses might reduce, and in the worst case, nothing would happen and we could reschedule surgery knowing that the pain and expense were medically necessary.” We have a health care crisis in America. Finding ways to reduce the costs of unnecessary surgery would be a massive step in the right direction.

Our team at HPd specialize in helping doctors and practitioners get great practical and clinical results with therapies like homotoxicology. We look foward to hearing from you.

Dr. Richard Palmquist

Dr. Richard Palmquist

Posted: December 25, 2010 09:00 AM

Veterinary Care: Advances In Integrative Medicine To Consider For Your Pet

We at HPd are big fans of Michael McIntyre, and this post is the first of our funny Friday practice tips. His little bit on ‘The Man Drawer’ made us think of the dozens of practices whose whole practices are like a man drawer… no systems and no purging!

How well will patients respond to your recommendations to detox when you have a organizationally toxic environment?

The modern American medical system, and particularly its education, was crystallized into being following a Carnegie Foundation funded report in 1910, put together by Abraham Flexner. It sought to raise the bar for medical standards and changed the landscape of medicine in this country almost overnight.

The report and subsequent education recommendations focused on the key issues of the time, namely acute and infectious conditions that were both rampant and relevant. Underpinning these policy changes were some of the prevailing assumptions of the time, specifically the Germ Theory.

These changes were very successful and thrust America towards a healthcare system that by the middle of the century was the envy of the rest of the world, technologically and educationally. The obvious causes of acute and emergent issues had been identified, drugs and surgical procedures and protocols refined.

However, fast forward to 2010 and the US is 46th in infant mortality even though its health spending per capita is several times higher than any other country. The landscape of disease has changed considerably, with chronic and degenerative disease driving both numbers and costs.

Scientific inquiry into these more complex diseases continues to struggle to identify single, clear causes for contemporary issues ranging from cancer to diabetes. More and more, however, the research points to diet, lifestyle and in particular toxicity factors that, over time, contribute significantly to those conditions. As the now famous saying goes ‘The genes load the gun, the environment pulls the trigger.’

Breast cancer has been particularly relevant to me this year, with a member of my close family being diagnosed, and as a result, I have spent a lot of time investigating the latest research. Anything from underwired bras to soy products have been fingered as potential causes, but the overall trend is one that points towards multiple potential causes being able to produce the same symptoms, and this is not only in cancer but in other growing degenerative dis-ease categories from autism to MS.

Once source of hope is that such lifestyle and environmental factors rarely induce these dis-eases overnight. It is unlikely that anyone would develop bowel cancer without a history of significant bowel sluggishness, yet currently these potential causes are not being caught early enough to be able to change behavior to avoid potential pitfalls.

These factors combined have created a ‘perfect storm’ of market and clinical conditions whereby holistic practitioners and holistic medicine can take its rightful place in an optimal, integrated medical system. You can argue until you are blue in the face about the relative value of traditional and ‘alternative’ medicine, but two things that holistic practitioners objectively do better than their allopathic counterparts are listening and educating, two key parts of ‘Empowerment Medicine’

If the cheapest and most easily leveraged area of improving these chronic conditions is lifestyle factors, then empowerment towards consistent behavior is crucial to a sustainable system. This will take changes not only clinically but also in patient flow and office visit structure, and it is encouraging to see the green shoots of empowerment medicine taking root in the integrative practices across the country.

NDNR.com Featured Columnists!

Our team at Holistic Practice Development is excited to announce we have been chosen by NDNR.com, a leading clinical and practical resource for Naturopathic Physicians, to be their regular columnists for their ‘Practice Building’ section. We intend that through this relationship we can help more Naturopaths to develop robust practices and, in this way, further the cause and credibility of holistic medicine.

Our first article is called ‘Growing your Naturopathic Practice in 2011’ and our second article is called ‘Creating Practice Systems: The Ticket to your Dream Practice and Retirement Income’

Although written for a specific market segment, the principles and strategies mentioned would be equally applicable to any private medical practice, holistic or otherwise.

We would love to hear your feedback!

http://ndnr.com/2010/10/growing-your-naturopathic-practice-in-2011/

http://ndnr.com/2010/10/creating-practice-systems-the-ticket-to-your-dream-practice-and-retirement-income/

Thank you for being here as part of our Holistic Practice Community.

Dr. Andrew Colyer, Executive Director
James Maskell, CEO