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I rent a set of offices with a waiting room, bathroom and two therapist's rooms, one of which I sublet to someone with a totally separate massage business. We've been in the space 4 months, our lease will be renewed in two more months. I'm doing "fine" ... my business is ramping up slowly but consistently (20 new clients in the last 2 months, most of whom have become repeats). I need to get out there more and ramp up faster, but that's a topic for another day...
Anyway, my subletter is not doing so well and he told me this week that he will likely not renew his sublease with me at the end of this year (two months). He asked if he could share his space with another therapist to lower his costs. I'm not sure if my landlord will allow it, and even more importantly, I'm not sure if it's the best thing for me to agree to. Naturally, I care about the quality of the people who share my space and I don't think I know anyone he's considering inviting into his space.
Furthermore, I'm thinking the better move for me would be to find someone with another non-massage specialty to rent the space and we can perhaps build off each other. But which specialties compliment massage well? It has to be something that's relatively quiet (the therapy rooms share a wall) and can fit within a roughly 9x11 room. The complimentary practice has to be legitimate enough not to tarnish my credibility (no astrologists, etc.). I'd love to work towards putting together a wellness center as there are two unrented rooms adjacent to my space that might be good for a chiropractor (there is a locked door off my waiting room that leads into the other two, and they also have outside doors and a second bathroom).
Before I worry about expanding into those two empty rooms, I have to fill the space my fellow therapist may be vacating! So far it seems an acupuncturist or accupressurist might be good. I thought perhaps a nutritionist or life coach might work, but then there's lots of talking and maybe unpleasant emotions being expressed, so I'm ruling those out.
Anyone have suggestions on specialists that would compliment massage? Beyond another occupant, what other things could I do with the vacant room to make money? I thought about using it for retail, but I'm only there by appointment and there's no other walk-through traffic.
(And then there's the whole hurdle of finding the right person with the right specialty who happens to be looking for space in my small town ... )
Anyway, my subletter is not doing so well and he told me this week that he will likely not renew his sublease with me at the end of this year (two months). He asked if he could share his space with another therapist to lower his costs. I'm not sure if my landlord will allow it, and even more importantly, I'm not sure if it's the best thing for me to agree to. Naturally, I care about the quality of the people who share my space and I don't think I know anyone he's considering inviting into his space.
Furthermore, I'm thinking the better move for me would be to find someone with another non-massage specialty to rent the space and we can perhaps build off each other. But which specialties compliment massage well? It has to be something that's relatively quiet (the therapy rooms share a wall) and can fit within a roughly 9x11 room. The complimentary practice has to be legitimate enough not to tarnish my credibility (no astrologists, etc.). I'd love to work towards putting together a wellness center as there are two unrented rooms adjacent to my space that might be good for a chiropractor (there is a locked door off my waiting room that leads into the other two, and they also have outside doors and a second bathroom).
Before I worry about expanding into those two empty rooms, I have to fill the space my fellow therapist may be vacating! So far it seems an acupuncturist or accupressurist might be good. I thought perhaps a nutritionist or life coach might work, but then there's lots of talking and maybe unpleasant emotions being expressed, so I'm ruling those out.
Anyone have suggestions on specialists that would compliment massage? Beyond another occupant, what other things could I do with the vacant room to make money? I thought about using it for retail, but I'm only there by appointment and there's no other walk-through traffic.
(And then there's the whole hurdle of finding the right person with the right specialty who happens to be looking for space in my small town ... )