Most therapists picture private practice as a solo act. You, your caseload, your name on the door. Allison and Amanda built theirs differently. They left insurance-panel group practice work to start a practice together in Dallas, and three years in, they have something neither of them thinks they could have built alone.
They did not start as a business partnership in any way anyone would recommend, and they will be the first to tell you that. What they did have was years of working alongside each other, a real friendship, a shared vision for the kind of therapy they wanted to do, and a willingness to spend their weekends figuring out the rest.
In this conversation, Kelly sits down with Allison and Amanda to trace the actual path: from meeting in an inpatient hospital, to years in a generalist group practice that discouraged niching, to four months of Saturdays spent building websites and filing LLC paperwork, to a practice now moving into couples intensives. We talk about why they chose partnership over going solo, the SEO learning curve, the mistakes and the overwork, and why riding the wave when your numbers dip is a skill, not a personality flaw.
If you are thinking about niching down, wondering whether to start a practice with a friend, or asking yourself whether now is even a good time to start a practice at all, this one is for you.
What You'll Hear
00:00 Why two therapists chose to start a practice together (and why going solo felt too scary) 02:47 The shared vision: leaving generalist group practice work behind to niche 03:53 Their two niches: couples and emerging adults, trauma and brainspotting 04:30 The four months of weekends spent building the practice from scratch 05:39 Where the early effort paid off: networking and the SEO learning curve 07:11 What stopped working, and knowing when to pull back from events 08:32 Mistakes, overwork, and the five minute rule 08:55 Riding the wave when your numbers dip 10:02 Yin and yang: how business partners fall into their strengths 11:17 Marketing as a group practice while staying clearly specialized 13:19 What they tell therapists who want to start a business with a friend 16:01 Moving into intensives and couples work with both clinicians in the room 16:23 Is now a good time to start a private practice? 22:14 Getting curious about the fear that holds therapists back
About Allison and Amanda
Allison and Amanda are licensed professional counselors and co-owners of Crescent Counseling, a group practice in Dallas, Texas. They met working in an inpatient hospital, spent years together in a generalist group practice, and three years ago started their own practice built around specialized, relationship-centered care. Allison works primarily with couples and emerging adults; Amanda focuses on trauma and brainspotting. Together they offer a couples integrated trauma therapy service with both clinicians in the room, and they are expanding into intensive work. Learn more at crescentcounselingdallas.com
Resources Mentioned
Want the Kind of Support Allison and Amanda Talk About?
Business School for Therapists is our flagship program for therapists ready to build a practice that supports the life they actually want. It is a blend of live coaching and self-paced curriculum, plus a community of clinicians who normalize niching, real fees, and clinical depth. Twenty years in, it is the work we wish someone had handed us when we were spending our own weekends figuring this out. Learn more: zynnyme.com
Listen, Subscribe, and Leave a Review
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/starting-a-counseling-practice-with-kelly/id1398391639
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7K8TQ13vJL4L3IvtWLLXV3
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Blog: zynnyme.com/blog
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