Will Power

Navigating the Coaching Landscape with Jamey Schrier

Will Humphreys Season 1 Episode 10

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A Journey from Physical Therapy to Transformative Coaching

Ever wondered how the right mentor can guide you through profound career changes? In this episode, we welcome Jamey Schrier, founder of Practice Freedom U, who shares his journey from owning a successful physical therapy business to becoming a dedicated coach. Jamey's inspiring story offers insights on pursuing your true passions, facing challenges head-on, and the transformative power of genuine coaching.

Key Takeaways:

  • The Coaching Journey
  • Navigating the Coaching Marketplace
  • Standing Out in the Coaching Field
  • Redefining Leadership
  • The Coaching Process
  • Investing in Yourself

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Speaker 1:

Hey there, rock stars. Today's episode has Jamie Schreier. He is the founder, pioneer, of Practice Freedom U. It's a coaching company that works in the healthcare space. He specializes in physical therapy at least initially, because that's what he is, but he has worked in multiple sectors in the outpatient medical space and he is going to explain from a place of experience and power what to look for in a coach. We're going to talk about what coaching is. We're going to talk about common pitfalls that clients make. We're talking about the market, because it's very ethereal, this whole coaching space. For a lot of people it's like snake oil, right? They hear coaching and they're like, yeah, what is that? And many people might even be open to it. But since it's not well-defined, since the industry is so just unclear as to what it really is, people oftentimes gravitate towards the companies that market themselves better, not knowing that the person they're hiring may only be playing the piano two lessons ahead of them instead of hiring a master pianist. So in this episode I'm excited for you to learn about coaching from a master.

Speaker 1:

Remember I don't bring anyone onto the show unless I fully endorse and support them. I get zero money. If you end up working with people. I don't have any type of relationships with that, but what I want, what I really want, is for you to be successful, and, in my experience, you have to have a coach. You have to have somebody. I've never gone a year in the last 20 years without a coach, and this is a coach that I highly recommend. So, guys, tune in, listen for all the nuances of what he's saying about leadership. In between all this, this is an individual who will teach you about yourself while he's teaching about what to look for in your next coach. Enjoy.

Speaker 2:

I didn't know what a webinar was. Never heard of it, and this was 11, 12 years ago, something like that. And I went on a webinar and I shared my story. I had slides at the time and I kind of related it because I was being told, you have to relate your story. So I related it to McDonald's, Like what can you learn from McDonald's? So you know, I talked about my story and what I did, and then the systems and all that kind of stuff and I loved it and I was like, wow, this is really cool. And then that was it.

Speaker 2:

A few days later, somebody reached out and somebody else reached out and somebody else said can you help me? That wasn't my intention. I didn't want to start a coachee business. I just was sharing my story and I said sure, and I started working with them. I didn't have a website, I didn't even have a name. I just said sure and I just started working with them. I didn't even know what to charge. And the more and more I loved it, the less and less I started to pay attention to my business. That was actually paying the bills.

Speaker 1:

So the biggest mistake you've made was coaching, but it was born out of kind of just what's needed and wanted. You were on a webinar and people started asking for your help and, without paying attention, you were just leaning more into coaching and I leaned more into coaching and I started ignoring my other business.

Speaker 2:

But I was so excited for this business that's kind of a negative thing that ended up being fine. But then I started building the coaching business, trying to keep the other one afloat. But what was interesting is my Schreyer Physical Therapy business. I never had the same level of passion that I had with coaching. Right from the beginning I liked it, I loved it, I loved helping people, I loved the idea of the business of it. But I realized I loved almost like coaching. I just loved explaining and helping people understand and move them along. So coaching was more of a real way of doing that, a direct way of doing that, versus through helping people with their physical or limitations or helping my staff with their stuff. So much so I ended up selling my other business and moved my entire livelihood into this unknown coaching internet world that I really had no idea about, making no money, starting from scratch.

Speaker 2:

And my kids were, let's say, 11 years ago. My son was nine, my daughter was seven, so I did this right in the middle of their years. My wife doesn't work, she takes care of the family, so that's the. What mistake did I make? That turned out well. That was a really tough way of introducing myself to holy moly this better work. I don't have a plan B. I just got rid of my plan B when I sold my business and, by the way, it wasn't enough to retire on. It's basically paid for the kids' college is what I ended up with.

Speaker 1:

So that is crazy, because the idea that I have is that you're running this business, you're starting this organic side hustle, and this is back before coaching became more prevalent in our space, in the medical space. Now there's tons of coaches.

Speaker 2:

Nobody was really coaching.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. So what was in your mind, jamie, in your head, when you're in that position of like, oh I love doing this on the side, it's not like there was a lot to model, so it wasn't like there was other coaches and pricing, so you're pioneering in the physical therapy space how to coach. But what was it that? Finally was like well, I'm just going to go all in on this and sell that.

Speaker 2:

I did not make the mistake that I did in physical therapy, waiting years and years and years to finally ask for help and to get help in the form of coaching. I hired a coach very quickly after I started dabbling in this and said I really love this. I mean, it just feels right, it feels who I am. So I tapped into just what, naturally, was my unique ability or gift or whatever you want to call that thing. That is just you, and I said I want to make this into something, but I don't know what I'm doing. But I know there's people out there. So I met my first coach, jesse, and he's the one that helped me with the pricing. He helped me with architecting all this knowledge I had into something that could be used right.

Speaker 2:

This was the introduction of a product, right the 12, the typical 12 module course with the videos. But they weren't as easy to do as they are now. So you had to put some money up. Understand it. No one knew what I was doing. I didn't know what I was doing, so the more I did it. Well, I just loved it. I loved the whole idea of it. I didn't understand it, I didn't understand internet marketing, but I loved just helping guide people and using my experience and using just what I'm good at with people and understanding people. So I went outside the profession because there really wasn't a time here doing what I was doing. So most of my training came with other industries that were much further ahead. Coaching was much more prevalent than it is. We're just kind of catching up to that now. You know, 10 years later.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, totally Well, it's interesting. I think what's cool is that you obviously practice what you preach. First of all, you get you. You are a student of coaching. Therefore, I think that's important when people are looking for coaches, because I've had in my journey a ton of different types of coaches and I'd love to get your opinion on just the coaching space in general, because you know, when people haven't been coached or they haven't like forked over a lot of money, they don't understand why they would want, why that's important to do. Like they think it's a little snake oily. Do you know what I mean? And I would say I would say this I think there are coaches that are a little snake oily. Like I look, and I'm not, I've I've had coaches over 20 in the last 10 years, so it's it's one of those where I think it'd be really cool to hear from an expert like your thoughts on that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's a really great question and I've done a lot of thinking and contemplating and speaking to people around that being kind of the OG, which is kind of funny. I'm the OG in coaching and I've been doing it 11 years and it's like wow, it's taken that long for us to even adopt this idea of getting help in our business, even though it was already there before. It just wasn't a thing. Now everything's called coaching, nobody even mentors anymore, but coaching. Everything's now coaching. That's the buzzword, which of course, confuses and dilutes the marketplace, the same thing as the word physical therapy. It confuses the marketplace because there's so many different versions and types that when I say it I mean it a certain way, but someone else might mean it differently, and confusion is not a good thing in the marketplace. So I think, when it comes to coaches, there are coaches and there are marketers who coach.

Speaker 2:

One of the shows I love watching is PTI. Pardon the interruption, I've been watching it for forever. It takes place here in DC and one of the guys. Every time there's some story around marketing it always goes oh, there's the marketers ruining the world again. Marketing is the greatest thing in the world, but they can also just ruin shit. It's just such a psychological spin that marketing is, and I love some of those aspects of marketing, but there's marketers that are looking for a solution to a problem. So they see a problem.

Speaker 2:

People want coaching.

Speaker 2:

I will create the solution for coaching or for helping someone in their business, saying I'm going to solve that problem, whereas someone like myself and there's other people out there I lived this, I was the person dealing with this and then I figured out how to use my knowledge because, again, not everyone has the same problems I have and I certainly won't want to teach someone what I did if it's not appropriate for them.

Speaker 2:

It's a different type of coaching. What I did if it's not appropriate for them, it's a different type of coaching. By the way, but I learned the aspects of how do then I market and show up and communicate the problems that are people having and then, obviously, the solution that we have for people if it makes sense. So there's just a different perspective that people have and it's really tough to discern the difference Because really good marketers and I'm not here to put down marketers, but they can really make things confusing because they can address every single problem you ever have to almost make it sound like this is a turnkey, automatic, and it's going to work for you, and come on. It's a different. It's going to work for you, and come on.

Speaker 1:

It's a different. It's a totally different focus, right Like a marketer. And so when someone's starting a coaching program, for example, maybe they haven't done the thing that they're coaching on, which happens. Tim Ferriss, I love what he says about finding a coach. There's two things. You're looking for Someone who's either done the thing that you want to do, shown that they can do it, or shown that they've helped other people do the thing that you want to do. So it's a real results-driven kind of approach to finding the right coach. And when you have someone who's like, the analogy I give is a coach who just knows two or three lessons ahead of you, you don't know that it's only two or three lessons versus a master pianist.

Speaker 2:

Right, and so I call that the weekend coach. Right On the weekend they took a class and they're next Monday talking about the class that they took, which will work to a certain extent, because to me, that's like superficial type of coaching. There's a depth in coaching, like a real depth, and that comes from a place of transformation and it comes from a place of the solution to every problem in your practice, in your business. Is you? That's not a cliche. This is your vision. You made up this business. It didn't exist before you decided to open it. Hey, this is your vision. You made up this business. It didn't exist before you decided to open it. And everything that you do how you communicate, how you create your vision and your values, and how you structure your business and create your pricing, how you communicate your business on your website and the marketing and meetings that's all you. So everyone that's working for you is a reflection of that. So the solution will always be something along the lines as how you're showing up what you believe in.

Speaker 2:

So this is the work that I did from the very beginning as a coach, when I had really no clients. I had like a few clients and my coach has asked me Jamie, what's this about? For you, the world doesn't need another coach. Your people in your industry don't need you as a coach per se. So what's this about for you? The world doesn't need another coach. Your people in your industry don't need you as a coach per se. So what's this about? When you are successful, when you are coaching dozens and dozens of people, when you're transforming their lives, what is that about? So he was putting me in a space that I was like nowhere near in my mind, that I was like nowhere near in my mind, but without doing that work, I couldn't reverse, engineer it and start creating and developing my message, my quote brand, which would then separate me to anyone else in the market. I didn't understand any of that at the time. It wasn't until later I knew what was going on, but at the time I did know what I was doing was really cool. It felt right. It wasn't the hey, teach me how to be a successful coach, can you do it in 30 days? Because I really need it done in 30 days, because my family I can't feed them right now. I didn't want to sacrifice what I was trying to build for. I just wanted to make a few bucks.

Speaker 2:

So I think a lot of it has to do with the person that's looking for the coach. What are your values? What are you about? Because, at the end of the day, I'm looking for someone as a coach, looking for a client. I'm looking for someone that we have shared values, and integrity is a huge value.

Speaker 2:

Walking the talk. If they're not willing to do that meaning they're going to walk the talk with their team, they're going to show vulnerability because to me vulnerability is a superpower Then this isn't going to work. If they're looking for the quick hey, just tell me what to do, let me just go do it. Just give me the five steps. I know for myself that doesn't work for me. So the question is the more they're clear on who they are, they then can attract law of attraction. They will attract that coach. They'll know their antenna will be up, their bullshit meter will be up. If they don't do that work, they're just a prey. They're just in the shark infested waters and they are going to get completely gobbled up by the 15 ads that they get per minute, all saying the things that they want to hear. And then they write a check and then they realize later on oh my God, that didn't work. And now, not only are they in their worst place, they don't trust anybody. So now coaching doesn't work or that doesn't work.

Speaker 1:

Just like physical therapy didn't work. What's funny.

Speaker 2:

Will is. It's the same thing, totally it's the same story. How do people choose you when all therapists sound the same, when all coaches sound the same? How are you standing out? Because?

Speaker 1:

if you're applying those in your business, then it's easy then to know what you are and who you're about and then be able to connect with the coach. Yeah, and to your point, using marketing as an interesting differentiator to help people see what's clear and what's real. Look at chiropractic medicine how they'll advertise and market so much better than physical therapy companies. They are so much better at the marketing side because marketers have a different aim. Marketers are all about creating clarity of value to get what Like a click through, to get that call to action, whereas what you're talking about is like understanding. Well, you're really talking about authenticity. Again, you know there's a lot of things that, like you when I talk to you, is there anything else? Well, that's a defining thing for you that I've come to learn as a coach. Authenticity is key, so much so that you even were telling me before we hit record and I was wishing I'd hit it. Is that this, this idea that, like you, also sometimes stay away from using words like leadership? Yeah, so talk into me about that.

Speaker 2:

Well, you were asking me. You were like Jamie, I'm going to ask you the question what is your view on leadership? And I said, well, that'd be a great question. I don't try to use the word leadership a lot. In fact, I really don't try to use the buzzwords that other people are using. Maybe it's something contrary in me, I don't know, but when I hear of leadership, I hear of more of like an academic term, like an appropriate term used in the academic world, and although I grew up in academia, I went through schooling, I got more darn initials and certifications after my name than I ever thought, and I respect learning, I respect knowledge, I respect that and that we are also in business. We are in the business of physical therapy and a lot of those things that we've learned and the way that we learn do not apply in the world of business.

Speaker 2:

So this idea of leadership, what is leadership? Leadership Will is how you show up. That's leadership. How do you show up? How do you show up in a staff meeting? How do you show up to your team? How do you show up every day to your patients? How do you show up with a referral source meeting? How do you communicate? What are you telling your people without saying a word? Who are you? What are you about? You see, that's leadership.

Speaker 2:

And the people that have done that type of work, because it's work. You're not just born as a leader. Yeah right, leaders are created. Some people may have that work and you show up. People resonate Not everybody, but that's okay, we're not looking for everybody. People resonate with you and when people resonate with you, you are, in essence, leading them, because if you don't have any people following you, you're not a very good leader, because, as the old game is, it is called follow the leader. Leader doesn't mean you have to be this alpha type barking order, barking like that and obviously leadership isn't being this passive type. Leadership is being the you that you could be if you could just be you.

Speaker 1:

Jamie, what I love about that and Rockstar is what I want you to hear, and that is what, if you could just be you, jamie, what I love about that and Rockstar is what I want you to hear and that is what Jamie was saying earlier. The best coaches that I've ever had and I say this very powerfully, that Jamie is in the upper echelon for my multiple coaches' experiences in the highest level of coaching is that the best coaches? They aren't about making you better in the sense that you're broken. That's the big thing that I experienced with some of my coaches, jamie, was that I had coaches who were very big on it being about them. I had more than one coach say hey, will I believe in you with me behind you? I hated that. It was so much. It was always about them. It came back.

Speaker 1:

So what I've noticed is that earlier, like these are more established coaches who charge tons of money, but the ones who I appreciated also charged a lot because when I paid, I paid attention. But those coaches were about peeling away what was getting in my way. It was about exposing the leader within, and I love what you said about everyone can be a leader. That's Theodore Roosevelt, like that's proven that leader. That's Theodore Roosevelt. That's proven that leaders are made, not born. I think some people have more of a natural set of skill sets that might make them feel like they're natural leaders. But what I have found those guys? They hit a ceiling really fast because they get self-involved and a little bit arrogant, and arrogance is the antithesis of leadership. Confidence is powerful, but arrogance and self-centeredness. Leaders are about giving.

Speaker 2:

For sure. You bring up a great point too, because I think of some of the coaches I've had and some of the people that I've coached and some of the amazing people that have developed working together and some of the most amazing successful business owners and I mean success all levels, yes, financial success and money, time freedom, but also just impact impact in their lives, purpose in their life, in their families. Right, we're talking about people that were no confidence, a lot of them female, because I know there's that, oh well, it's easier to be a male leader. These are females. I'm talking about A little bit passive, a little bit shy, and they're asking me Jamie, can I really do this? And I say, absolutely, you can do this.

Speaker 2:

And you're going to have to overcome some of your own bullshit, like this self-talk that you're not enough, like this other self-talk. So we're diving into the deeper of this isn't therapy. I'm not going in their past, in their childhood, but I am talking about how they're showing up right now and saying look, do you have humility? Do you have vulnerability? Yes, I can be vulnerable, I could, because that's a superpower. But can you speak confidently? Well, I can. I just probably need more training. Good, because we're going to do training on that. Can you be empathetic? Yes, I could be empathetic. Can you be stern if you have to? Can you be consistent? Can you manage the emotions that are going to sometimes grab you and shake you around and you're going to want to just get rid of everybody and fire everybody and go on a cocoon and pretend it all goes away? Can you stay in the fire? I'll be here for you in whatever capacity I need to be, but can you stay in the fire, because those are the only people I've ever known that are truly successful in any measure? Is they stay in the fire until they move out? Because that is the definition of true leadership and true success. It's not well. I don't want it to be difficult. I do want it to be difficult because I want to keep the other ones that don't belong their way and I want to be proud of what I've done. And you can't be proud of what you've done unless you put the damn work in to do it.

Speaker 2:

And there are people I mean. There's someone I have I've had her on my monthly masterclass and, man, she was in debt, she was drowning, she was the breadwinner of her family. We're talking in debt hundreds of thousands of dollars and dropping $42,000 a month just in interest, on the crazy. Two years later she's pulling in a million dollars a year. A million real money. No, bullshit, I don't bullshit Real money. I've seen the accounts. We've talked about it. She got a $5 million business at 20% profit in two years. I look at her and I'm like that's a leader, that's someone to look up to. Now she might give me some praise and stuff that. And I'm like that's a leader, that's someone to look up to. Now she might give me some praise and stuff that, and I accept that. Right, I'm not going to not allow her to. But the reality is she was willing to do what it takes to do it.

Speaker 2:

And that's the question that your audience, each person, has to ask themselves you wanting what you want?

Speaker 2:

That's not the question. You can get it, no question about it. Maybe not with the model you have. If you have a business, hey, you got to make sure that your model is profitable, right. But assuming you have a profitable model and assuming there's an audience that could benefit from your services, which I imagine there is, everything else is just about you. And if you take that attitude and lean into that and, of course, find the person that can help you because you're going to get there faster, with less bumps and bruises, oh man, that's the impact that can change your life and your family's life and your staff and your community. And we need more people like that, because Vs aren't doing that. It's the main street small private practice owner that is changing, truly changing people's lives and changing our world. That's why I do what I do, because it's so important for those people to be successful and there's no reason why they can't, except they just don't know how to do it and they don't know who they have to become to do it.

Speaker 1:

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Speaker 1:

I love the limiting self-beliefs that you mentioned, like I'm not enough, when people hear about, like what's the deep work? It's insecurities, it's the fears. Yeah, you know those types of things. So, tommy, you hit something. I want to ask you, jamie, what is the difference between coaching and counseling? I think that's where a lot of people get like into this space of I don't need it. There's a lot of taboo around that.

Speaker 2:

So what's the difference? And I talk a lot about that because some people feel you know, coaching is getting help and many of us when we were in school, right our upbringing, we didn't really get help right. We just studied harder, we sacrificed more and we did well. So we think we can work harder and that will solve our problems in our business. And of course we realize it doesn't. So coaching and like counseling, like that kind of therapy counseling and I we have actually clients we work with in the mental health space and they would agree with me.

Speaker 2:

Counseling is looking at your past. Counseling is looking at your childhood and your relationships with your parents and all that type of stuff. Coaching is about looking at your present and your future. Now it may tap into the past. In other words, well, it seems like you this is what someone did to me, jamie it seems like you've hired or fired 25 people in the last year. Perhaps we explore what the heck is going on and fix that. So that's looking into the last year, but we weren't going back to my childhood.

Speaker 2:

Now some of that came up when we started talking about money and my first coach in the coaching business said Jamie, I want you to charge $5,000 for a two and a half day workshop that you're going to do and I go $5,000 for a two and a half day workshop that you're going to do and I go $5,000? I never charged more than $125 for a treatment. He was trying to help me get over all my money issues, but what he didn't do is sit back and say so what was the relationship with your mom like? Tell me more. No, no, he was just starting for. Okay, you got issues with money. We're going to start working now to get over them. So that's how I see that counseling in the past versus the coaching of where you are and where you want to go in the present and the future.

Speaker 1:

Got it and I'm guessing from your perspective, every single person you work with is a unique coaching path. There's no formula, correct, jamie? Or are there certain structures that you're like? Yep, I always offer accountability and I offer. Can you talk a little bit about what that?

Speaker 2:

looks like yeah, there's two things and I'll speak just in platitudes, but I'm doing that intentionally there's two things that every successful person, whether they're an athlete or a business person so I'm speaking in platitudes, no, I haven't talked to every single person, but I think you would agree with this. You need a roadmap, some type of plan, and you need execution of that plan. You do those two things, no-transcript. The roadmap is going to move you towards where you want to move. Now, if you have a terrible roadmap, okay, assuming you have a roadmap to the right place. So, with that said, the roadmap becomes the framework. It becomes. These are the steps needed. It doesn't mean it's a one, two, three, four and then you're there.

Speaker 2:

It doesn't work that synchronistically. Whatever it doesn't work that synchronistically, whatever it doesn't flow like that, you might start at step three and go back to step one and do that Like you might be going back and forth. But there has to be a framework, like we have the practice freedom method. It's a framework that we have, that we follow, but the implementation and the execution is where the coaching part comes in, because, left to ourselves, we only see things the way we see them. What if we're wrong. What if it isn't the way we are seeing it, based on our views and our experiences and our limiting beliefs. That's why every athlete has a coach. A lot of them have multiple coaches because you don't know what you don't know and you can't see what you can't see. So this is how I view coaching and I view our clients that we work with as like hey, what we have to do is first get clear on what is it that you want, where is it that you want to go? And then, based on the biggest challenges you have because there's a lot of things you're doing well create a plan, create a roadmap, just enough so to move forward. We don't need to create the 13 steps. Just create step number one or two and let's get going and then start guiding towards that.

Speaker 2:

Once you start doing it, things become more clear. You start getting more confidence. Confidence is a great thing, because confidence always comes with clarity. So one of our jobs as coaches is to help people get clear. When you're clear, you're more confident. When you're more confident, you take more action. When you're more confident, you handle the negatives of the business. You handle the setbacks and the pitfalls better. When you are not confident and Will. You and I have been not confident at many times in our life or in the last 24 hours. When a problem occurs and you're not in a good space, oh boy, reaction takes over. You make some bad decisions, you have some terrible self-talk. So it is important to have a path and a plan and, yes, I 100% believe it is important to have some type of guidance. You put those together with an audience of a solution that you provide, and we all have amazing solutions. It's a done deal. It is a done deal. The key, of course, is us. Everything else is there, thank you, of course is us. Everything else is there.

Speaker 1:

Thank you, Jamie. I love that. You know I can tell you from my personal experience you know, no matter, I've never regretted putting money into a coach. There's just a big difference, because when I put money into a coach, I'm committing to self-improvement, I'm committing to looking in a mirror to some degree that there has been a dramatic difference in my experience between the different types of coaches I've had.

Speaker 1:

So what I've loved about today's discussion is that we've been able to talk about really what makes a client successful in terms of being coachable and willing to take action. We've talked about what to look for in a coach in terms of someone who's done it themselves or helped others. You've illustrated beautifully this idea and this architecture of what the coaching experience is like, and so obviously for me it's important for people. I don't bring people on the show unless I really believe in them, and you're a guy I just have so much belief in. I want people to if we're even on the fence about it, to reach out to you. So, Jamie, how do they get a hold of you?

Speaker 2:

Yeah. So the best thing to do is we have a quiz which you'll have in the show notes. It's the practice quiz and the quiz kind of gives you a self-reflection on your business. So I ask you like 30, I don't know 30 some questions. It doesn't take long, it takes like five minutes quick, but it lets you answer questions around the different aspects of your business, right? So there's seven different aspects of your business and when you get your score of your quiz you also then get very specific things that you can do based on where you are in your business. You have a $2 million business. You're going to do things different than if you have a $400,000 business, so that's the first place to start. And then from that you get an opportunity that, if you have a $400,000 business, so that's the first place to start, and then from that you get an opportunity that if you want to set up a call to kind of review that, to learn about coaching and what it can do and learn about your business, that will come with it. So that would be the first place to do is take the quiz and then, if it makes sense for you and the timing's right, give us a call and we can have a discussion.

Speaker 2:

There's a lot of people that aren't right for coaching, believe it or not. I might be one of the few, but when I get on a call like this, a discovery call, there's a lot of times that I say I don't think we're the right place for you. And I'll point you in the right direction. But you know what's funny, will, I did that when a patient came in a potential patient. I said based on what you have, I don't think we're the right place for you.

Speaker 2:

So not everyone is appropriate desperation and that's refreshing for a lot of people who are afraid to get on a call to speak to someone because they don't want to be sold. What to do? Write a check and then regret it and now they're worse off and they're more broke than they were when they started. That's the fear that's out there and unfortunately it's out there. So just look for a coach, look for someone that can just help you and guide you, someone that just feels right for you. I base a lot of things, will, on just the feel, because not everything can be justified in your head. There's a lot of senses we take that are just our intuition. So really make sure it feels right for you.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, rox, I don't know how to put into words what I'm feeling right now, other than just to say that, to trust the fact that I have had so much experience in coaching literally just so many coaches over the years that if you're looking for support, you're looking for Jamie and you're looking for Practice Freedom. U're looking for Jamie and you're looking for Practice Freedom U and their team, because they have so many powerful tools. But it's more than that. It's transformation, and I've seen multiple people that have gone through there. So many people go through their program, so many people go through their program who end up becoming coaches on their own, in their own way, like Jamie is a pioneer in the coaching space. And why not go to someone who's going to not try to sell you but just serve you, and serving doesn't always look like engaging you financially. So if you ever feel like you're being sold a product, if you ever feel like you're being pushed into a funnel, that might be your first indication. This is the experience that you're looking for. You're looking for remember, there's transaction and transformation. You're looking for transformation and Jamie does the transformation.

Speaker 1:

Um, a lot of great coaches can decent coaches can do transactional stuff that will get you one or two steps down the road, and they're great. I've done those before but when it comes to like turning decades into days, you got to go inward and you got to go to people like jamie at practice for you. So, jamie, thank you so much for being on the show. I can't wait to have you back. There's like eight things I wanted to like get into, but we're out of time, so we're going to have to only have to get you back and talk a little bit more about authenticity and just what gets in entrepreneurs ways and all these things. So thank you so much for being on the show.

Speaker 2:

You're so welcome, Will I appreciate it.

Speaker 1:

Thank you so much for taking the time to listen to today's episode. As a thank you, I have a gift. In today's show notes there's a link for you to join the Stress-Free PT newsletter. This is a comedy newsletter for anyone who works in healthcare and of course we're going to have comedy bits. We're going to have inspirational stories, leadership bits. It's going to be a weekly newsletter just to lighten your week, to help you do what you love with more passion. So click that link below and join that newsletter and we'll see you in our next episode.

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