How to Start a Speech-Language Pathologist (SLP) Private Practice

A female speech-language pathologist wonders how to start an SLP private practice

Wondering about the steps to start your own speech-language pathologist (SLP) private practice?

While most SLPs start out in skilled nursing facilities, schools, or hospitals, many go on to establish their own private practices.

Running your own SLP private practice can provide greater career freedom along with higher earning potential.

So, what’s stopping you from starting your own practice

We spoke with three speech-language pathologists who made the leap. 

Here’s how they did it and the advice they’d give other SLPs thinking about starting a private practice.

Become your own boss

One of the most significant perks of starting an SLP private practice is getting to run things your way. It’s not just about the ability to call the shots and set your own schedule for speech language-pathology. Private practice also offered them the opportunity to help clients in a more effective way.

Katie made the decision to stop working in a skilled nursing facility due to concerns about unethical client treatment. In addition, she was frustrated by constantly being told that she wasn’t allowed to order the tests that her clients needed due to the facility’s budget. 

The last straw came when Katie was denied services that she felt her clients needed three times in one day. That was the day she decided to start her own practice.

Miki faced similar frustrations through her work at various healthcare facilities. After getting involved with a mastermind class, however, she found the confidence she needed to start her own private practice while still working full time at an acute care hospital. 

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In fact, both she and Katie started their practices just four years into their careers as SLPs. It’s never “too early” to set out on your own.

For Emily, a move to a new city was the catalyst for establishing an SLP private practice. As a new mom, she decided that the freedom of making her own schedule would be life-changing not only for her, but for her family. Plus, she found that her area was lacking an SLP specializing in brain injuries. She became her own boss and was able to help a specific population in need of expert SLP services. 

Find your niche

If there was one common theme in our interviews with private practice SLPs, it’s this: “You have to find your niche in your community.” 

As mentioned earlier, Emily established her niche with brain injury clients. Katie found that she was the only private practice SLP in her area to work solely with adults, while Miki discovered that her bilingual talents were ideally suited to working with children whose first language is Japanese.

In some cases, SLPs stumble into their niche by chance. Maybe they work with a certain client type and find that’s where they really excel, or perhaps someone suggests that they focus on a particular specialty. If you don’t find your niche naturally, you’ll have to do some digging to figure out what sets you apart and what your community needs. 

Not sure which specialty is right for you? 

A good place to start is the ASHA ProFind tool. Search your area to find out what services SLPs are offering. You may uncover a niche that’s been overlooked, giving you the opportunity to bring something unique to your community.

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Market yourself

Transitions are to be expected when going from skilled nursing facility employee to self-employed SLP private practice owner. 

However, one of the most critical tasks when starting your own SLP private practice is learning how to market yourself.

As an employee at an educational or healthcare facility, the clients come to you. 

But, with a private practice, you need to make your presence known and give clients a reason to choose you.

Step one is listing yourself on ASHA ProFind, which Emily found to be incredibly effective. Before she was even ready to accept clients, she already had people reaching out to her who found her from this listing.

For Miki, she leveraged her unique skill set in finding clients for her private practice. The Japanese community has a site like Craigslist where she posted about the services she offered. 

Katie decided to take a multi-pronged marketing approach that involved speaking at support groups, starting a local Facebook group, and encouraging word-of-mouth marketing from her clients. In the future, she’s also planning to create marketing materials that she can distribute directly to doctors to increase referrals.

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Practice Management Software for SLPs

Streamline your business with SimplePractice’s easy, efficient, and time-saving speech therapy practice management software that includes SLP billing, appointment scheduling, telehealth, online intake forms, and more.

You can try SimplePractice EHR and practice management software for SLPs when you sign up for a free 30-day trial. No credit card needed.

READ NEXT: How to Be a Culturally Responsive Speech-Language Pathologist

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