Hi, 12-year massage veteran in Louisiana here. A few things I've tried: chair massage booths at Women's Conference (tip: share the booth with a local chiro and nutritionist to save money and increase audience interest)(tip#2: request a booth position nearest the traffic from workshop doors (foot of interior stairs) then place your chair AT the foot of the stairs and be a traffic-stopper! When they find out what's holding them up, they'll all want one!); county fair (massage the local tourism/anticrime/antidrug/school mascots in costume and have a friend take pictures for your print ads and website); car/truck/cycle show (tradeout massage gift certificates with the organizers for your booth rent; massage the photographer's wife at the next booth and she'll drag women to your table/chair! do ear candling, too and make $20/30mins!); non-profit org client resource fair (offer to do a mini massage workshop at the fair as well; print massage research abstracts and articles from the web (check out Touch Research Institute), make a newsletter and print TONS of copies - booth visitors love to thumb through this while they wait their turn and will ask you to speak at their club meetings. Be sure to read your research as they will ask pointed questions about particular conditions); corporate mini-health fairs (sponsored by local refinery and casino for their employees - get another therapist to help you as there will be too many people for you to rub them all. Have a drawing box for gift certificates, then do a joint follow-up flyer (both your names, credentials, specialties, phone numbers and locations) to the mailing list you got in your box.); senior olympics (local and state level)(ask to join the massage team. When they tell you there isn't one, offer to be the team coordinator and be sure to give your colleagues that come to help you as much notice as possible, and print thousands - I'm not kidding! - of copies of your team's roster with all their names, specialties, contact info, and have highlighters for each therapist to mark their name when they hand it to the booth visitors afterward. Get chiros and nutritionists and team members to sponsor your roster by selling 10 business card size ads on the other side to help defray your printing costs. be sure to put that particular senior olympics' logo on each side at the top with their basic event dates and locations - for example May 5-12 at Crosslands State University, Osborn, MI, keep it short - and organizer's contact info.). Drop your business card in those free lunch fishbowl drawings at restaurants all over town and the briefcase at your local office supply store - make customers out of the managers! Get a copy of the Chamber of Commerce's Clubs & Organizations and Major Employers booklets. Call the club program directors and get a spot speaking to their people about your favorite subject - massage! Call the major employers' human resources department and ask if you could drop off copies of your newsletter to be distributed to their employees through their internal mail system (ask how many copies you'll need to bring) or write an article on wellness for their company newsletter or speak to their employees' group or do a massage demo on a casual Friday in a breakroom. Drop off copies of your newsletter when you do your banking, go to the doctor's office, the beautician, the post office or grocery shopping. Drop them off in campus offices, local public and private schools (pre-K, elementary, secondary, vocational, etc.). Teacher Appreciation Week is in April. Do a special promotion for teachers that month. Followup with School's Out (May, December) and Back to School (August-September, January) when moms are exhausted from all that shopping and the holidays. Call the school board and get the report card schedule and do a report card reward promotion with other local merchants - kids need massage too! Do a mass mailing with your leftovers of that massage research newsletter - go to the Chamber of Commerce, get a peek at their copy of Cole's Directory (names and addresses of folks in your town, ranked by level of income!) and mail to your clients of choice. If you have a local pre-sort service, use them to get a lower postal rate - they already have the mass mailing permits that get you the lower rates and will even sell you a mailing list and add you to another mailing of theirs to help your mail volume qualify for reduced rates. Mail your newsletter to doctors, lawyers, accountants, beauty salons, people who need to be kneaded work everywhere and this will land on their desks and in their breakrooms! Also mail newsletters and gift certificates to folks mentioned in your local paper's Business Notes section for their recent achievements. Last but not least, remember to email your newsletter to as many as gave you their addresses on those drawing slips, and get email addresses on new client history forms - to save money and the environment. I've got loads more ideas from over the years, but that's enough for now. Best wishes and remember - you make your own luck by getting out there and meeting your clients where they're at! Once you touch them, they'll come to you.