How To Create An Open House For Your Music Therapy Practice In 3 Easy Steps

Feb
14
2012

How to Create an Open House for Your Music Therapy Practice in 3 Easy Steps

One of my new friends and resources that I’ve made on Twitter is board-certified music therapist (MT-BC), Rachel See Smith.  We were tweeting a while back about the open house she was planning for her music therapy practice when it occurred to me that you need to know about it, too!  Rachel has graciously agreed to write this guest post so that music therapists (and other mental health professionals, too) can see how easy and profitable it is to host your own open house.

(If you are interested in writing a guest post, check out the guidelines here.)

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A Guest Post by Rachel See Smith, MT-BC

As a new private practice owner, I had to start from scratch when it came to establishing a client base.  Out of all of the various marketing efforts I tried, the one that proved to be the most successful was hosting a free music therapy open house.  Although free demos require time without pay, preparation, and plenty of advertising beforehand, I highly recommend hosting a few.

What I Did

Since I work primarily with children, I decided to host the open houses at local pediatric therapy clinics (building fees may apply).  In these locations, I held two 30-minute sessions at no cost to the participants.  The first time slot was for ages 0-5, the second, for ages 6-10.   (Suggestion – Allow at least 15-30 minutes between sessions to talk with parents and to invite them to share in cookies/drinks, or pick-up your music therapy materials).  I also invited siblings to attend, as many of the parents may not have been able to come otherwise.

I was extremely pleased with the turnout at these open houses and, as a result of proper preparation and execution, I gained countless clients!

Now it’s YOUR turn!

Here are three easy steps to creating your open house for your music therapy practice . . . .

Step 1 – Prepare

Creating a successful open house involves marketing beforehand.  Advertising your event can be done via email, your website, newsletters, posters, support group message boards, and in pediatric therapy clinics.

Having news of your upcoming event spread through word-of-mouth is one of the most effective ways in increasing the number of open house participants.  This word-of-mouth advertising may come from asking parents of current clients to tell their friends and connections about the demo, or, from established connections with other therapists (speech-language pathologists, occupational therapists, etc.) in the area.  For example, my fellow therapists emailed or talked to their clients about the open house information and encouraged their families to attend.

You may or may not decide to have open house attendees RSVP beforehand.  I recommend it, as it gave me an idea of how many people I could expect in order to prepare appropriate interventions and to have plenty of copies of handouts.  Which leads me to my next step . . . .

Step 2 – Create

Here are the materials I suggest you create and have ready for your open house:

  • Thank you notes
  • Music therapy brochures
  • Information sheets about your private practice
  • Plenty of business cards and other marketing materials out for display and available for pick-up

Step 3 – Follow-up

At the open house, encourage parents to sign-in (have a sign-in sheet ready and available at the door) and follow up with them via email or phone.  Be sure to sincerely thank them for coming, then ask if they are interested in future sessions.

And don’t forget that your open houses/demo sessions are TAX DEDUCTIBLE!

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How to Create an Open House for Your Music Therapy Practice

About the Author: Rachel See Smith is a board-certified music therapist (MT-BC) with a Master’s in Music Therapy and a B.A. in Communication Disorders.  Rachel is currently employed as an independent music therapy contractor in Austin, Texas, and is the owner of Music Therapy Services of Austin.


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Can You Really Trust Good Therapy?

Jan
25
2012

Many of you have contacted me to inquire about the usefulness of online directory listings.  After hearing Kat Mindenhall’s experience with Good Therapy, I decided to invite her to write a guest post to share with you today.

_______________________

A Guest Post by Kat Mindenhall, LCSW

(If you want to guest post on this blog, check out the guidelines here.)

After signing up for four online directories six weeks ago, I began comparing how my profile shows up on each of them. I began by searching in a zip code that borders my own, and what I found on Good Therapy really surprised me.

The Issues

Zip code searches by Good Therapy take the very middle of your zip code area and use that to calculate how far you are from the very middle of another zip code. I searched in a zip code area that was 7 miles away according to Google Maps. However, my profile did not show up on Good Therapy until the seventh page. There were listings ahead of mine that were 16.83, 14.79, and 9.75 miles away.  Good No More Good Therapy For MeTherapy says that listings appear in order of proximity to the center of the chosen zip code, but this didn’t seem to really be the case.

If you search for a therapist by “browse location,” Good Therapy will only show profiles within that exact town, despite the fact that it says it’s looking within a radius of 25 miles. A search of a town that borders mine returned only 4 profiles followed by a statement that said, “There are a limited number of therapists in your area, but other distance therapy professionals are available to help.” Included within this list of “distance” therapists was a profile from someone in London! Instead of showing nearby towns, Good Therapy apparently thought that I paid them $269 per year to show my potential clients the profiles of therapists from other countries. I find this unacceptable.

I also found that they show all instances of a certain zip code at once. What this means is that if you are 7 miles away, and another highly populated area is also 7 miles away, they may show every one of the other zip’s profiles before yours (instead of mixing them up). This is why I was on the seventh page for a zip code that borders mine.

How I Addressed These Issues

I wrote to Good Therapy about these issues and received a form letter that did not address my specific concerns. They didn’t explain why their website doesn’t quite work the way they claim. I responded and restated my concerns. They simply replied with another form letter on why I would miss Good Therapy if I left.

Mental health professionals have a reputation of being technophobes that don’t understand how simple it actually is to create an intelligent search algorithm. We certainly don’t have a reputation as a community that looks out for each other and uses technology to our advantage to spread the word about an expensive and inferior product. Is Good Therapy capitalizing on this? They don’t seem to care that they are going to lose me as a customer, and Good Therapy’s impersonal response made me feel talked down to.

Good Therapy costs $269 per year, or $24.95 per month, second only to Psychology Today in price ($360/year).  On Psychology Today, Network Therapy ($149/year), and Theravive ($197/year) I had no trouble seeing my profile within the first 1-3 pages for the same nearby cities and zip codes. Part of the premium you pay for an online directory is for their “high ranking.” I’m not convinced that Good Therapy’s ranking really makes such a difference when other directories are also on Google’s first page of search results right alongside Good Therapy.

What Does this Mean for You?

So, the question is: Is it better to take your $269 and use it to get on two other “less popular listings,” or stay on a “mega directory” even if it isn’t showing your profile?

You have to research how your profile shows up in searches to make that decision. Search for yourself in many different ways. See if your listing comes up when . . .

  • you search a nearby city by name,
  • you search that same city by zip, and
  • how your profile is displayed for all nearby zip codes.

Compare how many locations or zip codes you can list with each directory. Track your referrals so that you can know what your return on investment is for each directory.

If you live in a suburb next to a heavily populated area, it may be difficult to show up in Good Therapy’s listing because of their search algorithm. If there is a chance that potential clients will search the city next to you for a therapist and not search for your specific town, beware.  You probably won’t come up in the search. I know I didn’t.

_____________________

Kat Mindenhall, LCSW, is a therapist in private practice with Image of Kat Mindenhall, LCSWA Peaceful Life Counseling Services LLC in Lakewood, CO. She specializes in helping parents enjoy their relationships with each other and their children by overcoming depression, anxiety, and relational issues.


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2011 List Of Online Directories For Mental Health Professionals

Nov
28
2011

It’s been another year since I last updated our list of online directories for mental health professions.  Because so many of you have taken Image of Online Directories for Mental Health Professionalsthe time to share your knowledge with us, I’m happy to say that our list continues to grow.

Remember, some of these are free; some charge a fee.  If you participate in any of these directories, I hope you will take a moment to let us know which ones are working well for you and what, if anything, you are paying for the listing.

And, of course, if you know of other online directories for mental health providers, please do take a moment to let us know about them so that we can continue to strengthen our practices and our networks as a professional community!

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The Knowledge Market – Free Q & A For Mental Health (& Allied Health) Professionals

Nov
15
2011

We’re BAAAACK!  The Private Practice Online Survival Guide is hosting another free Q & A session on how to grow your The Knowledge Market - Marketing Onlineprivate practice by marketing online.

You and your colleagues are invited to join me and social media guru, Beth J. Hayden for this one hour phone call as we plow through and answer as many of  your individual questions as we can!

During that time, we will try to answer anything you throw at us and point you to resources to support you as you grow your private practice.

Have I piqued your interest?  Great!  Here’s where you can go to get the details, start asking your questions early (if you wish), and to sign up for the call!  And, by the way . . . if you submit your questions ahead of time, you can get a recording of the entire call!

What: The Knowledge Market

When: Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Time:   1 p.m. Pacific / 2 p.m. Mountain / 3 p.m. Central / 4 p.m. Eastern

Remember . . . you MUST PRE-REGISTER to join us.  Then you will be able to ask your questions and hear the entire call!  I hope you’ll help us spread the word by telling  your colleagues, posting this on your Facebook walls, tweeting about the opportunity, and sharing it with your connections and groups on LinkedIn and Google+, too!

Got questions?  Bring ‘em with you to The Knowledge Market!  I look forward to talking with you there!

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9 Lessons On Nicheing From a Rehabilitation Counselor – Evaluations And Assessments

Oct
26
2011

Rehabilitation Counselor, Jennifer Houck’s comments caught my eye on one of my favorite discussion lists when she wrote:

In my counseling program I had a Image of Trees on a Green Fieldfantastic assessment class . . . . I graduated with the credentials to order, administer and interpret a wide variety of testing instruments. My private practice is mostly doing evaluations.” [My emphasis, not Jennie's.] (Lesson #1 – When choosing a graduate program, look for one that will let you do the maximum number of of things related to your profession.  Jennie’s program prepared her to order, administer and interpret assessment tools.  Not all programs do.)

I can’t imagine a counseling masters without an assessment course! Now in my particular case I fell head over heels in love with assessment so went on the take assessment courses in education, special education and psychology.”  (Lesson #2 – Trust that what you love is part of the equation to building a strong referral base.  It worked for me and it worked for Jennie!)”

Now that is definitely a niche!  So I contacted her to learn how she ended up in a private practice focusing primarily on assessments and this is what she said:

Contacts I made in graduate school via internships and field works!” (Lesson #3 – It’s never too early to start networking.  Who to network with in graduate school?  Your peer and professors, of course!)

In my rehab counseling masters I had two field work experiences, one with a state agency and one with a community college. I split my 600 internship between a different department in the same state agency and a federal agency. ” (Lesson #4 – Graduate school is the perfect time to sample different things – different work sites, different populations, different theories and interventions. By changing things up, you’ll be better able to mix and match contacts, work experiences, and clinical skills later on. This flexibility will pay dividends when you decide to reinvent yourself in private practice.)

From these four experiences I received a state contract, a federal contract and a part time job with the college upon graduation.” (Lesson #5- Those who are willing to diversify their practices are the very ones that thrive.)

I began attending the state annual conference in my second year of graduate school – nearly 20 years ago.  I met people and because I had an unusual niche interest people noticed me.” (Lessons #6 and #7 – Smart counselors get involved at the state level in their professional associations and the ways you are different are the ways matter.)

Over the years I’ve made contacts at various conferences and training opportunities which have led to more contracts and referrals . . . . “  (Lesson #8 – The strategic never stops . . . and when you’ve got all the clients you want, that’s when you need to tout your services most heavily.)

I actually do no marketing. It’s a failing of mine. Everything was so easy in the beginning that I never needed to market myself. Counselors within the agencies compare notes so word spread that I produced a quality product . . . . “  (Lesson #9 – Jennifer Houck knows how to seed, nurture and build a private practice!)

Jennifer is an excellent example of how to “listen” for your own calling to a particular niche.  She kept her eyes and ears open – to both her own heart’s desire during her graduate training and also to the opportunities that presented themselves once she had graduated.

If you are having difficulty figuring out your heartwork and niche, consider hiring me or another professional to help you focus your work and your message.  The results really do pay off in private practice!

[ Jennifer Houck, MS, MSE, EDS, CRC, CVE, LMSW (IA) is the Director of Lyric Counseling Services where she is a Vocational Evaluator and Rehabilitation Counselor.  You may contact her at PO Box 21248, Des Moines, IA. 50321-9405 or JennieAdagio@mchsi.com.  Her phone number is (515) 974-1415]

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