Ep884 | Why Focusing On One Thing Will Change Your Clinic Podcast Por  arte de portada

Ep884 | Why Focusing On One Thing Will Change Your Clinic

Ep884 | Why Focusing On One Thing Will Change Your Clinic

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The One Thing Filter: How to Make Better Decisions as Your Clinic Grows In this episode of the PT Entrepreneur Podcast, Doc Danny shares a simple but powerful idea for clinic owners: pick one core outcome your business exists to create and use it as a filter for every major decision. As your team grows, choices get more complex — what to say yes to, what to ignore, who to hire, what projects to start. Danny breaks down how to choose your "one thing," why money has to be part of it, and how aligning your team around that filter makes leadership easier and your business more stable. In This Episode, You'll Learn: Why documentation is the #1 satisfaction killer for many clinicians — and how Claire can remove most of itWhy early-stage goals are simple (replace your income) and what changes once you get past survivalThe "what race are you running?" analogy and how it exposes mismatched decisionsHow to decide what you actually want your business to look like long termWhy "no money, no mission" matters, even for mission-driven clinic ownersHow PT Biz landed on its own "one thing": helping clients make more money in their clinicsHow to use a single filter to decide on hires, con-ed, software, space, and new projectsHow to get your whole team making decisions through the same lens instead of waiting on you Claire: Stop Letting Notes Crush Your Day Danny opens by talking about satisfaction surveys in our profession. Over and over, clinicians say the same thing: they hate writing notes. It is the part of the day that makes them want to quit, and it is the last thing they want to do when they get home. Claire is the AI scribe PT Biz built specifically for physical therapists. Think of it like having a meticulous student in the corner, capturing the details and drafting your notes so you can stay locked in on your patient. Trained on physical therapy workflows and languageDrafts notes for you so you are not catching up after hoursHelps you remove most of your documentation time and get your evenings back Try Claire free for 7 days: https://meetclaire.ai From Survival Mode to Strategy Early on, business decisions are simple. Your goal is clear: replace your job income so you can safely support yourself and your family. You are willing to work long hours and say yes to almost anything that moves revenue in the right direction. Once that need is met, the decisions get harder. Do you stay small? Do you grow? How big? What kind of life are you actually trying to build around this business? Danny points out that most owners never slow down to answer those questions. They are "jumping out of the plane and building the parachute on the way down," chasing whatever looks like opportunity without checking if it fits the life they want. What Race Are You Actually Running? To explain the problem, Danny uses an endurance analogy. Training for a 5k is very different from training for a marathon.Training for a 100-mile race is different again — in volume, intensity, nutrition, and time. A lot of owners, he says, are making decisions like they are running a 5k — short-term, fast payoff, quick bursts — when in reality they are trying to run a very long, very hard race. Their decisions and their true goals do not match. Get Clear on the Life You Want First Before you can pick a filter, you have to be honest about what you actually want. What do you want your business to look like 5–10 years from now?How big does it really need to be to support the life you want?What matters more to you: growth, time freedom, leadership, selling someday, or staying clinical? Danny suggests sitting down by yourself, and with your spouse or family if you have one, and talking through the kind of life you are trying to build. You might realize you do not need as big of a practice as you assumed — or that you are thinking too small for what you actually want. No Money, No Mission As mission-driven as PTs are, money still matters. Danny shares a lesson from when his wife ran a military nonprofit in Hawaii. Her boss used to repeat a simple phrase: "No money, no mission." If there is no revenue, there is no staff, no programs, no impact. Your clinic is a for-profit business, but the same rule applies. Without healthy revenue, you: Cannot provide for yourself or your family safelyCannot create good jobs with fair pay and benefitsCannot support your community or give back meaningfully Money is simply an exchange of value and trust. You have to get comfortable with it if you want your mission to survive. PT Biz's "One Thing" Filter At a recent planning retreat, the PT Biz leadership team spent hours wrestling with a single question: "What is the most important thing we do for our clients?" They help people with work–life balance, health, relationships, and dealing with the emotional weight of entrepreneurship. Those things matter. But when they drilled down to the one outcome everything else depends on, the answer was simple: The purpose of PT ...
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