kyliexkryptonite
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akb said:I am hoping to attract a slightly new "target-market" clientele as my business direction shifts. As much as I love my evening clients, I am hoping that some of them don't switch to daytime so that my niche market can fill up my 15 appointments a week.
Akb's quote is from the "Evening Hours" thread. I think it's a great discussion of its own, so I decided to start a new thread, where we can share advice for transitioning our practices to include new modalities.
Lymph drainage therapy is my new specialty. When I decided I wanted to dedicate more of my work hours to this modality, I did three things:
1. I made up some attractive brochures that described LDT, and I displayed these on the shelf in the "client corner" of the treatment room. (This is the same shelf where my clients set their watch and jewelry, so everyone saw these brochures.) Most of my clients commented on the new brochure and took a copy home. After reading the brochure, many clients asked more questions about the modality. Usually after those conversations, they'd schedule a session to "try it out." For some, this conversation took place immediately. For others, they waited a month or two to ask about it. Clients also passed these brochures onto friends and family, and I got many referrals accordingly.
2. The second thing I did was include 5 minutes of Lymphatic work in everyone's massage. I included it right before the neck massage and told them I was trying a new technique which boosted the immune system and had a side-benefit of relaxing the muscles, making the massage more effective. Both are true statements, and it gave them a chance to experience the work without investing money or time in a separate appointment. Since it was just 5 minutes, no one worried that they'd be sacrificing their massage time. Then, after the massage, I asked them if they noticed a difference, and if they liked the difference. The majority of my clients liked this addition and asked it be included in their massage from now on. Many became curious enough to ask that more lymphatic work be included in future sessions. Now, 90% of my massage appointments include at least some lymphatic work. Many clients do a combination lymph-massage session, with 30 minutes of LDT followed by an hour massage. And some clients have switched over to LDT completely.
3. The last thing I did was focus all advertising on my new specialty. For the record, I do minimal advertising anyway. Mostly, I just display brochures in the health food stores. I pulled my massage brochures and replaced them with lymphatic brochures. Because my schedule's very busy, I now refer massage calls to other therapists, saving open appointments for people calling for lymphatic work.
The result: my practice is now 40% lymph drainage therapy. It's only been a few months since I took the steps mentioned above, and none of it was high-pressure tactics. I just let my clients know about the new modality and gave them the chance to try it. Similarly, I let my community know this new modality was available. The response was immediate. I think my ideal schedule would be 50% LDT & 50% massage. I'm getting closer to that goal every week.
Does anyone else have experience transitioning current clients to a new modality?
Akb, is it an option for you to transition your evening clients not just to daytime, but also to your new niche modality?