Service versus boundaries

   

bear-juggle

  Life is busy. A report bubbled up last week about the ineffectiveness of multitasking, which seems to—hold on, let me finish this over here—be a semi-recurrent theme in the media on occasion. My response to the comment that multi-tasking is inefficient: “Okay, tell me how to avoid it.” It feels darn near impossible, doesn’t it? (Hold on for a second, I have to take this call!)         Okay, I’m back. What was I saying? Oh right, life is busy. I am now a slave to my calendar and Things. It has to be on my calendar, and if I need to do it, I need to put it on my Things to-do list. Email is the front door to my life, and my inbox is the foyer.   I’ve referenced this before: my to-do list includes “work on strategic planning,” “call Dad,” “complete the mailing,” “give heartworm medicine to the dogs,” and “write blog post” (check).   Is this the pace of your life, too? How about your clients’ lives?   Has the number of cancellations in your practice increased in the past few years? Have you updated your cancellation policy? Do you have a cancellation policy?   What’s the best way to handle a no-show or last-minute cancellation? Can you get away with charging someone when you don’t provide them service? How do you balance a commitment to serve and establish respect for your boundaries and policies?   There is a business maxim that states, “Policies cost money, customers make money.”   The bad news? There is no tidy answer at the end of this blog. I’d like to hear your thoughts about no-shows, cancellations, policies, time management, and heartworm pills. Okay, I gotta run to a meeting—    
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News

Tennessee Increases Minimum Education Hours

On April 16, Tennessee Governor Bill Lee signed into law House Bill 1610 and Senate Bill 1588, increasing the minimum massage curriculum hours that an applicant for massage licensure must complete at an approved school for massage, bodywork, or somatic therapy to be eligible for licensure under the Massage Licensure Act. Find out the new state minimum requirement.

Alaska Massage Board Remains Independent and Autonomous

Executive Order No. 129 sought to dissolve the Alaska Board of Massage Therapists and transfer its functions to the Department of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development (DCCED). The executive order was successfully overturned.

Gainful Employment Rules Compliance Updates

Over the past two weeks, the US Department of Education issued updates to the new “Gainful Employment” (GE) regulations for vocational programs published last fall. This web post addresses the updates to prepare school owners and educators ahead of the July 1, 2024, new GE rule effective date.

Blog

Avoid Pulling Clients' Hair

Massage therapy students practicing in a classroom.

It’s the finer details that matter in a massage therapy session, and unintentional hair pulling is a detail that carries more weight than you might think.

Faces of Bodywork: Adriane Maxwell

Massage therapist Adriane Maxwell stands in front of a palm tree.

Adriane Maxwell is the owner of One Healing Touch Reiki & Massage for Women in Charleston, South Carolina. Maxwell was featured in the May/June 2024 issue of Massage & Bodywork magazine in “Faces of Bodywork.”

Benefits

Podcast: Cancer, Clots, and COVID—A Complicated Client

A client was recently treated for colon cancer—and it didn’t go well. She had surgical complications, a bout of sepsis, and more. Is massage therapy safe? We discuss on this episode of “I Have a Client Who . . .” Pathology Conversations with Ruth Werner.

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