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Busy but Broke? Fix the Real Bottlenecks
Are you seeing 25–30 patients a day—and still not building wealth?
In this episode, Don shares a listener win from Australia using “Good–Better–Best” treatment sheets, then dives into a bigger issue: why some podiatrists producing $300K–$500K still feel financially stuck. The problem isn’t always volume—it’s structure, service mix, and scheduling strategy.
He outlines three practical levers: packaging treatment options to reduce decision fatigue, consolidating low-revenue routine care into dedicated blocks, and increasing in-house, revenue-generating services. He also shares a marketing update on urgent care referral postcards—and the importance of tracking every campaign with dedicated numbers.
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Timestamps (Total: 13:54)
[00:00] Listener Win: $1,600 from One Treatment Sheet
Jackson implements a Good–Better–Best format and closes a comprehensive $1,600 care plan.
[01:30] Three Treatment Sheet Models
Checklist prescribing, Phase 1/Phase 2 (insurance → non-covered), and Good–Better–Best packaging.
[03:30] Why Packages Reduce Decision Fatigue
Bundling services simplifies patient decisions and increases case acceptance.
[05:00] Busy but Broke: The $300K–$500K Trap
High daily volume doesn’t equal profitability—especially if everything is insurance-dependent.
[06:30] Strategy #1: Block Your “Low-Value” Visits
Consolidate routine nail care into a half or full dedicated day (e.g., “Toenail Fridays”) to protect higher-value clinic time.
[08:30] Strategy #2: Increase Revenue per Patient Ethically
Incorporate shockwave, orthotics, AFOs, regenerative options, in-house imaging, and other services instead of sending them out.
[10:40] Strategy #3: Tighten Follow-Ups and Use 10-Minute Slots
Reduce unnecessary follow-ups and book simple cases efficiently to free 20-minute slots for higher-value visits.
[12:00] Urgent Care Marketing Update
Distributing urgent care postcards to shoe stores—and the key lesson: always use tracking phone numbers to measure ROI.
[13:10] Final Encouragement and Sharing Wins
Invite listeners to share successful systems and marketing ideas.
⸻
Key Takeaway
If you’re busy but not profitable, fix structure—not effort: package treatments, consolidate low-revenue visits, increase in-house services, and track every marketing initiative.
⸻
Conclusion
What’s one bottleneck in your practice right now—case acceptance, scheduling, service mix, or tracking? Identify it, adjust one system this month, and measure the result.
If you’ve implemented something that worked, share it. Your win could help another podiatrist move closer to the million-dollar mark and beyond.
By Don Pelto, DPM5
1515 ratings
Busy but Broke? Fix the Real Bottlenecks
Are you seeing 25–30 patients a day—and still not building wealth?
In this episode, Don shares a listener win from Australia using “Good–Better–Best” treatment sheets, then dives into a bigger issue: why some podiatrists producing $300K–$500K still feel financially stuck. The problem isn’t always volume—it’s structure, service mix, and scheduling strategy.
He outlines three practical levers: packaging treatment options to reduce decision fatigue, consolidating low-revenue routine care into dedicated blocks, and increasing in-house, revenue-generating services. He also shares a marketing update on urgent care referral postcards—and the importance of tracking every campaign with dedicated numbers.
⸻
Timestamps (Total: 13:54)
[00:00] Listener Win: $1,600 from One Treatment Sheet
Jackson implements a Good–Better–Best format and closes a comprehensive $1,600 care plan.
[01:30] Three Treatment Sheet Models
Checklist prescribing, Phase 1/Phase 2 (insurance → non-covered), and Good–Better–Best packaging.
[03:30] Why Packages Reduce Decision Fatigue
Bundling services simplifies patient decisions and increases case acceptance.
[05:00] Busy but Broke: The $300K–$500K Trap
High daily volume doesn’t equal profitability—especially if everything is insurance-dependent.
[06:30] Strategy #1: Block Your “Low-Value” Visits
Consolidate routine nail care into a half or full dedicated day (e.g., “Toenail Fridays”) to protect higher-value clinic time.
[08:30] Strategy #2: Increase Revenue per Patient Ethically
Incorporate shockwave, orthotics, AFOs, regenerative options, in-house imaging, and other services instead of sending them out.
[10:40] Strategy #3: Tighten Follow-Ups and Use 10-Minute Slots
Reduce unnecessary follow-ups and book simple cases efficiently to free 20-minute slots for higher-value visits.
[12:00] Urgent Care Marketing Update
Distributing urgent care postcards to shoe stores—and the key lesson: always use tracking phone numbers to measure ROI.
[13:10] Final Encouragement and Sharing Wins
Invite listeners to share successful systems and marketing ideas.
⸻
Key Takeaway
If you’re busy but not profitable, fix structure—not effort: package treatments, consolidate low-revenue visits, increase in-house services, and track every marketing initiative.
⸻
Conclusion
What’s one bottleneck in your practice right now—case acceptance, scheduling, service mix, or tracking? Identify it, adjust one system this month, and measure the result.
If you’ve implemented something that worked, share it. Your win could help another podiatrist move closer to the million-dollar mark and beyond.

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