by Rich Smith
Theirs was a chiropractic practice headed for total failure.
We were sailing a sinking ship, for sure confesses Oregon chiropractor Kristy Taylor, DC. Adds husband Robert Taylor, DC, Patients were few and far between. Those we did manage to attract, we weren't seeing them get anywhere near as well as we hoped. It was all so incredibly frustrating.
So poorly faring was the Taylors' Klamath Falls practice that they gave serious consideration to chucking their careers and starting over in a different line of work, possibly the restaurant business. At that point, just 2 years after launching their practice amid great expectations, even jobs as lowly waiters or dishwashers looked better by comparison to what they had going as chiropractors.
Then, out of sheer desperation , the Taylors gambled the last of their cash on the purchase of a surface EMG (sEMG) thermography device or a subluxation analysis system after hearing that this particular apparatus could not only help people get well, but also generate surprising numbers of satisfied-patient referrals.
To their delight, the system delivered as promised. In short order, the empty waiting rrom grew crowded. Eventually, the Taylors turned the financial corner, the impending demise of their practice averted.
By being able to offer subluxation scans and graphical reports-
Kristy says the subluxation system also helped resuscitate the practice by stimulating word-
Patients were taking their subluxation scans home and showing them around to family and friends, which led to a lot of positive discussion about health issued and, more specifically, about us, she says. It still does.
Restoring their practice Back to Health Alliance LLC to fiscal health also required that the Taylors look at themselves in a completely different light.
We learned that you have to change yourself from within if you want real success, says Kristy, referring to the instruction provided by coaches the two hired to help whip their practice into shape. We started working on areas of ourselves that needed to be changed. For example, in the past, we were reluctant to confront many of our patients with the hard truths they needed to hear in order to get on the path to good health. By failing to tell them those truths, we were selling ourselves short as practitioners and as human beings. We were also selling the profession short.
Another aspect of themselves the Taylors found necessary to change revolved around their general lack of courage where the setting of expectations was concerned. Says Robert Taylor, We've had to learn how to get beyond the fear of setting expectations that are high. As long as you are ready, willing and able to whatever it takes to satisfy an expectation, you will be okay. Nowadays, we aren't afraid to expect success either from ourselves or from our patients.
Success for the Taylors increasingly means moving toward a cash=based practice. Currently, out-
We tell our patients, look, there's no such thing as health insurance. Your plan is only going to cover you when you're sick or hurting, and that's not what chiropractic is all about. At least it's not where we're concerned.,. Robert says. The message we give everyone is that if you're concerned about your health, you need to come in more frequently than the 12 times a year your insurance company allows. You can only come in more frequently if you take financial responsibility yourself, and that means paying cash.
Regardless of how patients pay for services, the Taylors make a point of showering them with feelings of felicity. That is one more way they further the growth of their practice.
We really love our patients, says Kristy. And we go to great lengths to show how much we care. For example, If a patient informs us of a tragedy at home, we send flowers and condolences. Here in the office, I make it a point to give each of my patients a big hug when I greet them and again when they're leaving. I think people really appreciate that. There's no better way to communicate how much someone means to you than to give them a friendly hug. It makes them feel very good about coming to see you.
And if they feel good about you, they are bound to tell that to their friends and encourage them to drop by your office for treatment, she indicates.
A sizable number of Back to Health Chiropractic Alliance's patients are women in the
we're trying to build a wellness practice, and this if the demographic most receptive to the concept of preventive care, Robert explains.
About 2,000 patients are seen during the span of a month by the couple. Their goal is to double that volume within the next year.
Once the Taylors achieve their growth goal, it is possible they may expand further by franchising their system of care. This would entail creation of turnkey-practice packages sold to beginning (and even seasons) chiropractors who want the freedom and rewards of being in private practice but who also want to secure those blessings with the least time spent attending the school of hard knocks.
We think success as we've come to know it can be very easily reproduced, Kristy contends. We still have long way to go though before any of this is put into motion.
For now, the most pressing concern involves settling into their new 3,500 square foot facility. Until late in 2003, Back to Health Chiropractic Alliance operated from a leased space about half that size in a retail strip center.
Our new location is near the city's main hospital and is surrounded by offices occupied by medical doctors, says Robert. We think this will make us more accessible to prospective patients and will stimulate referrals from the medical community.
It will also give us extra room so that we can bring aboard other types of practitioners, starting with the additions of a naturopath. We see the advantage of having a naturopath with the ability to offer a different, enhanced approach toward wellness. As chiropractors, we basically take care of one thing, subluxations. A naturopath, on the other hand, can take care of a lot of other things that may not respond to chiropractic intervention.
It will make us more of a non-stop shop, he says.
(Already woven into the practice are pair of massage therapists.)
Still, in the view of the Taylors, the move counting for much more has been their fundamental shift from a painbased practice to one that is wellness-based.
That made all the difference in the world, say Robert. Because of that, and because we now have the right tools and attitudes, I can actually say I now wake up in the morning excited to go to work. We now have patients coming in and telling us they feel great and want to keep feeling great. We're only too happy to oblige.
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