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Niche Down Without Losing Revenue
Everyone says “niche down”—but what if 80% of your schedule is routine care?
In this episode, Don answers a practical question many podiatrists face: how do you transition from a generalist, routine-care-heavy practice into a more profitable niche without blowing up your schedule?
He outlines two paths. First, make routine care more profitable by expanding services around those patients. Second, strategically reduce routine care through block scheduling and focused marketing. The key isn’t abrupt change—it’s structured transition.
⸻
Timestamps (Total: 4:37)
[00:00] The Niche Dilemma
When most of your schedule is basic foot care, how does specialization realistically happen?
[00:40] Option 1: Make Routine Care More Profitable
Expand beyond nails: compression garments for edema, ABIs, annual diabetic foot exams, Onyfix, KeryFlex, matrixectomies, orthotics, and fat pad injections.
[01:45] Gradual Integration Strategy
Introduce higher-value services slowly within your existing routine-care base.
[02:15] Option 2: Reduce Routine Care Strategically
Block routine visits into one dedicated day or half-day (“Toenail Tuesday” model).
[02:50] Control Your Marketing Message
Advertise only what you want to see—plantar fasciitis, Achilles tendinitis, shockwave, orthotics—on your website, blog, and in-office materials.
[03:25] Make Low-Value Visits Less Convenient
Reduce unnecessary follow-ups (paronychia, matrixectomy, fracture care) and tighten post-op scheduling.
[04:00] Use Freed Time Intentionally
Spend more time on higher-value conditions, increase DME dispensing, and build systems around services you enjoy and that grow revenue.
⸻
Key Takeaway
You don’t niche down overnight—you control scheduling, tighten follow-ups, expand services strategically, and market only what you want to see.
⸻
Conclusion
If you’re stuck in a routine-care-heavy model, choose one lever this month: block scheduling, service expansion, or marketing repositioning. Small structural changes compound over time.
If you want the full framework for transitioning toward a $1M practice, review the Million Dollar Practice Formula and start implementing step by step.
By Don Pelto, DPM5
1515 ratings
Niche Down Without Losing Revenue
Everyone says “niche down”—but what if 80% of your schedule is routine care?
In this episode, Don answers a practical question many podiatrists face: how do you transition from a generalist, routine-care-heavy practice into a more profitable niche without blowing up your schedule?
He outlines two paths. First, make routine care more profitable by expanding services around those patients. Second, strategically reduce routine care through block scheduling and focused marketing. The key isn’t abrupt change—it’s structured transition.
⸻
Timestamps (Total: 4:37)
[00:00] The Niche Dilemma
When most of your schedule is basic foot care, how does specialization realistically happen?
[00:40] Option 1: Make Routine Care More Profitable
Expand beyond nails: compression garments for edema, ABIs, annual diabetic foot exams, Onyfix, KeryFlex, matrixectomies, orthotics, and fat pad injections.
[01:45] Gradual Integration Strategy
Introduce higher-value services slowly within your existing routine-care base.
[02:15] Option 2: Reduce Routine Care Strategically
Block routine visits into one dedicated day or half-day (“Toenail Tuesday” model).
[02:50] Control Your Marketing Message
Advertise only what you want to see—plantar fasciitis, Achilles tendinitis, shockwave, orthotics—on your website, blog, and in-office materials.
[03:25] Make Low-Value Visits Less Convenient
Reduce unnecessary follow-ups (paronychia, matrixectomy, fracture care) and tighten post-op scheduling.
[04:00] Use Freed Time Intentionally
Spend more time on higher-value conditions, increase DME dispensing, and build systems around services you enjoy and that grow revenue.
⸻
Key Takeaway
You don’t niche down overnight—you control scheduling, tighten follow-ups, expand services strategically, and market only what you want to see.
⸻
Conclusion
If you’re stuck in a routine-care-heavy model, choose one lever this month: block scheduling, service expansion, or marketing repositioning. Small structural changes compound over time.
If you want the full framework for transitioning toward a $1M practice, review the Million Dollar Practice Formula and start implementing step by step.

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