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Hey there.
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Welcome back to Marketing Therapy.
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Today I want to talk about something.
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I've been noticing everywhere, and I see a
lot of people talking about, particularly
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in the online space, but I think is
truly expanding to just about every
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place we make decisions about our money.
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So not just online business, not
just online therapy, but all of
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the in-person things we do too.
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And it's called the trust recession.
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Here's what this term means.
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It means that as consumers.
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Every single one of us are more skeptical
than we have ever been when it comes
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to making decisions about our money.
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Now, there are a couple reasons
for this trust recession.
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Sometimes it's because
we've actually been burned.
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We bought a program that
didn't live up to its promises.
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Are we paid for a service that
didn't actually solve the problem?
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It said it would.
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We invested in something.
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And the goal we were hoping for
just wasn't fulfilled for whatever
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reason, but other times it's
not about one bad experience.
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And this is why this is truly a
universal experience right now,
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because it's just the world we live in.
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We are all skeptical
about everything, right?
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We double check every review.
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We hesitate before we pull out our
credit cards for that online purchase.
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We question if what we're seeing
online is real or ai, and that level of
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skepticism doesn't just show up when we
are shopping for shoes or being served an
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Instagram ad for this thing that they know
you'll like or signing up for a course.
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It really flows into how we make all of
our money decisions, including whether
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or not to reach out to a therapist.
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So this trust recession, it
matters very, very much to you,
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the private practice owner.
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Now, therapy is different
than most purchases, right?
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That's safe to say because therapy
doesn't work without trust.
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So it makes sense then that
in a trust recession, we need
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to be particularly mindful.
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Therapy isn't effective unless the
relationship itself actually feels real.
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And your clients, they can't
experience change unless they believe
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the process is going to help them.
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If they believe the person sitting
across from them either on a couch or a
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screen, is worth actually opening up to.
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And that's why I think this
conversation matters so much for
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therapists in particular, because
for a long time, the mindset around
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marketing for therapists was, if I
just hang a shingle, I get the PLLC.
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I check the marketing box, the
clients will come, and that may have
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worked in the past, but for lots
of reasons, and we've tackled some
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of those here on marketing therapy.
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But in this episode, particularly as
it relates to the trust recession,
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that's not how it works anymore.
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Trust is at an all time low.
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Your client's trust is at an all
time low, not just in therapy, but
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across the board just universally.
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That means that therapists are being
forced to prioritize, cultivating trust
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in ways maybe they didn't have to before.
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Now.
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The good news, of course, is that
success is still very much possible.
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I see therapists filling their
caseloads every single day.
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It's just that the path there
looks different than it did
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even just a few years ago.
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Here's the thing that's really
important to understand here before
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we get into the trust recession and
what you can do to fill it, I need
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you to understand that being visible.
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Is not the same as being trusted.
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You may have heard before of the concept
called the know, like, and trust factor.
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This is a universal term used across
all industries, meaning that we don't
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make decisions about our money unless
we first know someone, and then we like
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them and then we ultimately trust them.
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It's only when we've checked
all three boxes know, like, and
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trust that we decide to proceed.
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Now therapists are very,
very good at trust building.
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You do that for a living, my friend.
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That's the work you do every
single day in the therapy room.
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You sit with people, you build
rapport, you create safety.
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You help people feel understood.
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Now, on this podcast, we talk
a lot about visibility, and the
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reason is because so often it's
something that therapists forget.
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They forget that piece.
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Because you can't be trusted
if you're not first known.
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And sometimes therapists forget that their
ongoing marketing lifestyle and marketing
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routine has to include that visibility
piece because of course, if nobody knows
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you exist, nobody can reach out to you.
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But here's what's different in
this trust recession today, it
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is not enough to just be known.
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Trust has to begin before the
therapeutic relationship ever does.
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Your marketing itself has to begin
the work of cultivating trust, and
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that's a really big shift because
in the past it may have been enough
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to just check the marketing box,
list yourself on site today, throw
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together a website, tell a few friends.
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You're taking clients.
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But today, your potential clients are
weighing their options differently.
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In fact, in our state of the industry
survey at the end of:
2024
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for the second year in a row that many
clinicians are noticing their clients
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doing more, quote unquote, shopping
around engaging in more consults, taking
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longer to make decisions that reinforces
this idea that they are weighing their
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options in ways they didn't used to.
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Your clients are more
cautious and more skeptical.
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They're not just asking, is
there a therapist out there?
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I can see who has availability?
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They're asking, do I believe
this person can actually help me?
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You might be familiar.
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In Nashville, we have a lot
of those injury lawyer ads.
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Commercials, billboards.
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They even sponsor like NASCAR
cars and things like that.
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Imagine a therapist who's
everywhere in their community,
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their face is on a billboard.
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Maybe they're on, you know,
serving up Instagram ads.
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Maybe they have a commercial.
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That'd be funny to think about.
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They go to every networking
event they can find.
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They're very visible.
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But if all they say is, I'm a
therapist, call me for a free consult.
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Like people might see them
over and over again and still
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not feel any real connection.
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Now, that's kind of a goofy example,
but that's what I mean by being visible
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is not the same as being trusted.
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Or this might hit a little closer to home.
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Think about a therapist who's
really great at building
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relationships, who enjoys that piece.
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They're showing up, they meet
people, they put in the work, but
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when someone asks what they do,
their answer is kind of vague.
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I work with individuals and
couples on a variety of issues.
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That's not enough for trust either
because people don't trust, quote
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unquote therapist, they trust this
is the person who helps new moms
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through postpartum depression, or this
is the therapist who brings couples
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back from the brink of divorce.
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I know you can see the
difference there, right?
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So visibility by itself is not
going to cut it in this climate.
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Because your clients are too skeptical
to reach out simply because you exist.
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Imagine that visibility is the door, but
trust is what's getting people to actually
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walk through it and engage with you.
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So in a trust recession, you really
have to be thinking about both.
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Now, when we think about bridging
that gap, if visibility isn't
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enough, what do we do here?
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One of the most powerful ways is through
something I call a trust transfer.
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Here's what that means.
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Person A, trusts person B.
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When person B recommends person C, some
of that trust automatically carries
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over and suddenly person A feels more
comfortable trusting person C, not
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because of anything person C did, yet.
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But simply because of the relationship
they already have with person B.
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Okay, so A trust B and B recommends C.
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And all of a sudden, even though
A doesn't know C, A trusts C.
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Isn't that wild?
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That is trust transfer.
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Now, let me be really clear.
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This is not manipulative.
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This is not exploitative.
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It is incredibly natural.
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It's how we have always
made decisions as humans.
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If you think about your own
life, you probably rely on
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trust transfers all the time.
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You try a new restaurant because your
friend swears by it, or you hire a
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contractor for your bathroom project
because your neighbor says he was amazing.
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You're gonna love him.
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You watch a show because your
sister said it was her favorite.
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All of those are trust transfers
and therapy is no different.
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Imagine this scenario.
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You are in the thick of postpartum.
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You are in that foggy first 12
weeks struggling with postpartum
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depression, and your best friend
tells you you need to call Bethany.
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She was incredible and exactly what
I needed at that time in my life.
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Your level of trust in Bethany.
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Is going to be totally different than
if you stumbled across her profile
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on site today because you already
trust your friend and now that
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trust has been extended to Bethany.
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That's why trust transfer is so
powerful in a skeptical marketplace
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like the one we're in right now.
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When you're marketing to a cold audience,
people who have never heard of you before.
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Your marketing has to do a ton of heavy
lifting, and it's capable of that.
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There are absolutely going to
be people that have never heard
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of you before that decide.
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You're the therapist they're
looking for, no doubt.
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But in that scenario, your
marketing has to warm them up.
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It has to convince them
that you're trustworthy.
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It has to move them all the way
from, I have no idea who you are to.
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I'm ready to pay your full fee.
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And that's a long journey,
especially right now.
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When you leverage trust transfer,
you're not starting at zero.
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You're effectively already halfway there.
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So part of that heavy lifting has
already been done by someone else simply
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through the nature of relationship.
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Now, as I mentioned, not all of your
marketing is gonna work this way.
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Of course, there are times people
are gonna find you cold Google
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directories, your website, whatever.
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But when you have opportunities
to borrow trust, it can
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accelerate the entire process.
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And in today's climate where clients are
more skeptical than ever, anything you can
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do to build trust earlier and faster is
going to serve you well in the long run.
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That's the power of trust transfer.
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It helps you cut through the
skepticism and really shorten the gap
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between stranger and my therapist.
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Really stepping into a relationship
that already feels warmer and safer.
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Now, once you start looking for
trust transfers, you're gonna
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start to see them everywhere.
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The first is professional
referrals, and this is probably
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the one therapists think of first.
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A pediatrician recommends you to a parent.
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A school counselor suggests
your name to a family.
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A pastor says, I know someone
who can help with that.
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And it doesn't even have to be
other professionals in the mental
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health space or what have you.
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It could be a yoga instructor who
says, if you're working through
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trauma, you should call Liz or a
chiropractor who notices anxiety showing
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up and saying, there's a therapist.
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I really trust with this.
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All of these are incredibly
powerful because the client already
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has trust in that professional.
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And when their name gets attached
to yours, trust transfers over.
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Here's another category.
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I call it borrowed authority, and
sometimes this one can get overlooked.
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Borrowed authority is when you're
featured in a space where the
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audience already has trust.
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For example, if you are
invited onto a podcast.
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The listeners already trust the host.
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So by trusting the host,
they automatically extend
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some of that trust to you.
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Or if you're quoted in a local
article or invited to speak on a panel
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listed as a resource, maybe for a
nonprofit that's borrowed authority
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because you are stepping into someone
else's circle of credibility and
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carrying some of that trust with you.
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None of this requires you to be famous.
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You don't need national media,
although that is an option.
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You don't need 10,000 Instagram followers
if you don't want them or need them.
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Sometimes it literally is as simple as
one trusted professional saying your name.
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A final area of trust transfer
is colleague endorsements.
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Now, of course, therapists are not
going to be using client testimonials
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the way that other service providers
are able to, but you can share
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endorsements from other professionals.
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You know, that could look like a
colleague writing a short testimonial
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on your website, really specific to a
niche or area of specialty you have.
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It could just be someone from
your consultation group who
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says she's the therapist.
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I always think of when I have
tough couples cases, maybe a
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recommendation on LinkedIn.
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All forms of trust transfer because if
another therapist says, I vouch for her,
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that carries a whole lot of weight, right?
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Here are a couple real life
examples of these things.
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A school counselor tells a parent,
if your daughter is struggling
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with body image, call Dr.
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Smith.
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That parent trusts the
counselor, so now they trust Dr.
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Smith or a family lawyer shares your
blog post on LinkedIn with the caption.
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This is who I send my clients to.
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Suddenly everyone in her network that
saw that post sees you as credible.
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Or a local news segment features you
talking about back to school stress and
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parents watching think, well, if the news
station trusts her, I probably can too.
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See how that works.
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Trust transfer doesn't
happen in a single one way.
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It doesn't take a single form.
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It happens across relationships
and communities and platforms.
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And when you start to recognize all
the different places it can show up.
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Hopefully you realize that you
already have more opportunities
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available to you than you think.
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Now I wanna pause here and talk
about something really important
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because trust transfer is powerful.
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It can also backfire.
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Here's what I mean.
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Imagine a friend says to you,
you've gotta call this therapist.
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She's amazing.
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She helps me so much.
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You're interested, you're curious,
you're starting to feel a little hopeful
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that maybe this could be a good fit.
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So what do you do next?
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You look her up.
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That's what we all do.
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You check out a website and
what you find there doesn't
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match what you were told at all.
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It's generic or maybe outdated, not
specialized, unprofessional, whatever.
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That is a rupture of trust, and
in some ways it's even worse.
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Than if she had found you and never
heard your name before, because the
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stakes are higher with trust transfer.
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When someone refers a client to
you, they are handing you a gift.
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They're saying, this person trusts me
and I'm extending that trust to you.
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If your marketing does not rise to the
occasion, if it doesn't back up what was
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said about you, that trust evaporates and
that's more than a missed opportunity.
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It can be a massive letdown the client
was leaning toward yes already, and
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then the gap between what they expected
and what they saw was simply too big.
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This is why your client conversion
engine that we talk about
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all the time matters so much.
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Yes, networking and
referrals are critical.
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Yes, trust transfer accelerates
the process, but if you don't have
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something strong on the backend.
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A clear and specific and compelling way to
capture that trust and carry it forward.
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You're wasting the energy it took
to get referred in the first place.
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What does that look like in practice?
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It looks like being specific, not just,
I help individuals and couples, but
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I help high achieving professionals
recover from burnout, whatever it is.
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We've talked a lot about
specificity in recent episodes.
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It looks like positioning
yourself as a specialist.
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Not the generalist who can
work with anyone but the go-to
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therapist for this kind of problem.
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It looks like empathy, using language
that helps someone feel seen and
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heard even before they've met you.
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Because at the end of the day, trust
transfer is really just the beginning.
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It's your job to confirm
it, to build on it.
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To show in your marketing that
you are exactly the therapist this
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client was hoping you would be.
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When you do that, you're not only
honoring the referral, but you're
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honoring the client, and that is when
trust moves from something borrowed to
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something real that they have in you.
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Now, what can you actually
do to strengthen your own
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trust transfer pipeline?
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The first thing I'm gonna say is stop
making excuses for not networking.
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I know that's blunt, but I mean it.
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Besides your website, in this market,
networking is the only true non-negotiable
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in marketing your practice today.
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Absolutely.
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Everything else is optional, and
yet it is the strategy I hear the
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most pushback on from clinicians.
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I hear I'm an introvert or it makes me
uncomfortable, or the therapists I know
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are also trying to build their practices.
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They're not gonna send me clients
or I tried and it didn't work.
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If you've been in my world for a while,
you've heard me say this, I have yet
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to meet a fully booked private pay
clinician who is not well connected.
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' cause here's the thing, not every client
is the right fit for every therapist.
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Maybe your colleague works with
kids, but gets inquiries from parents
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who really need help themselves.
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Maybe your peer loves working with
couples but doesn't wanna see individuals.
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Maybe they specialize in
trauma, they don't wanna take
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on high conflict divorce cases.
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You are not in competition with
every therapist around you.
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In fact, many of them can be some
of your strongest referral sources
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if you build those relationships.
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If you're looking for a
very first step, here it is.
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Start with people you
already know and trust.
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Building a trust transfer pipeline
does not mean having to cold call
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doctor's offices or drop in on
strangers you've never met before.
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Okay?
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It can be as simple as reaching out to
colleagues from grad school, reconnecting
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with someone from a consultation
group, letting your own providers know.
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Your kid's pediatrician, your ob,
your chiropractor, your massage
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therapist that you're taking
clients and who you work best with.
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Those conversations are low pressure
and they're natural because you
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already have trust with those people.
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If you want an even gentler entry
point, we'll say, here's my suggestion.
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Start connecting with
adjacent niche therapist.
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The examples I was just giving earlier
your colleague who works with kids but
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gets inquiries from parents or your
peer who loves working with couples
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but doesn't do individual work.
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Those are adjacent niche therapists.
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They're therapists who work with the same
client population or run into the same
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client population, but in a different way.
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So if you work with men, an adjacent
niche would be a couple's therapist.
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Or if you work with moms, an
adjacent niche therapist would
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be a child or teen specialist.
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If you work with trauma, an adjacent niche
would be someone focused specifically
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on substance use or eating disorders.
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When you connect with adjacent
niches, it really reduces that
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potential sense of competition.
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That can sometimes arise when you
feel like you're just talking to
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people who do similar work to you.
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You're not stepping on each other's toes.
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And instead, you can create a really
natural reciprocal two-way relationship
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where referrals can flow both directions.
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Here are a few concrete steps I
encourage you to take this week to
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start putting this concept into action.
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Make a list of five people in
your world who already trust you.
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Reach out to just one of them, not as
a pitch, but just as a reconnection.
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They came to mind and you
wanna know how they're doing.
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A quick update on what
it is that you're up to.
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Then consider joining one group
or community around you, either
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geographically or related to
your niche or area of specialty
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where trust already exists.
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Again, we're not going
into this to get referrals.
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We're simply going in to connect.
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This could be an alumni group.
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This could be a PTA, A professional
association, a local Facebook parenting
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group, whatever it might be, and just
start looking for opportunities to
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develop and cultivate relationship.
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Because trust obviously isn't gonna happen
if relationship isn't established first.
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Keep your eyes open for relationship.
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Start talking about the work that you do
more and your eyes will be opened to all
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of these opportunities for trust transfer
that you have probably been missing.
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You do not have to build
trust completely from scratch.
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This episode was about showing you
how you can step into places where
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trust already lives, and let some of
that transfer to you in an incredibly
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natural, ethical and authentic way.
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And you know, I talk about the
fact that our clients are more
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skeptical than they've ever been.
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And I wanna remind you
that skepticism isn't bad.
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It's healthy.
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We want clients to be thoughtful
about who they trust with their time
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and money, and deepest struggles.
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It doesn't mean that there aren't clients
out there who are gonna trust you.
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It just means you need
to help them get there.
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This is an opportunity, not a limitation.
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Because in today's market, you
know what the cool thing is?
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You don't have to be the first therapist
someone finds, because we know that
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they're gonna be doing some looking.
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It's about being the therapist who
stands out as the most trustworthy,
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the most compelling, the most
specific, the most connected.
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That's how you win right now,
and that is an opportunity.
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So here's what I want you to remember
as we close this episode out.
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You are already a
professional trust builder.
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You are incredibly gifted at that.
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It's what therapy is.
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It's what you do every
single day in the room.
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This is simply an invitation
to take that same skill and
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extend it into your marketing.
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To look at every part of your
marketing, your conversations, your
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networking, your website, your presence
as an opportunity to cultivate trust
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before you've even spoken to someone.
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Because in a trust recession, you're
clients are cautious and careful,
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and they're comparing and they're
skeptical, and that is not a bad thing.
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Your clients are weighing
their options carefully.
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And they're ultimately looking
for someone who feels real.
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And that's right where you can come in.
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If you can be the therapist who
shows up with clarity and empathy
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and specificity, if you can be the
therapist who makes people feel safe
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enough to say, I, this therapist
might get me, then you will stand out.
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It used to be about being the first
therapist someone came across.
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And now it's just about being
the therapist who inspires the
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most trust, and that is something
you are already equipped to do.
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Thanks for being here today.
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I'll see you in the next episode.