Need a little extra help
ap2745 said:
I recently finished MT school and I am awaiting to take the NCE. I am also a PTA and I want to open my own practice. I've had enough of working under someone else's supervision. I found a great space, use to be a Psychologist clinic. It has 4 rooms and will be 385/mth- that includes utilites and janitorial services 3x/wk. The MD-that I worked with at the rehab center where I am employed PRN said that he could refer some clients to me, as well as talk to some other MDs about using my services. As well as some of the other hospital staff have stated they would come.I will be taking CEU's immediately in Fibromyalgia as well as Myofascial Techniques as I want to mainly work with pain relief/management. Long story short, not quite sure how to get started. My business class was two weeks and didn't learn anything. Will I need to get a Employee ID # since I would like to have a office assistant, the rehab center is letting me buy the old reception furniture since they recently remodeled. I am borrowing from my 401K to help get started. Looking at renter's insurance, I'm a member of AMTA and will be using there liability insurance. I have a family member that works at Office Depot and will be giving me a discount on cards and flyers. So, what else do I need to prepare?
Wow, that space and price sound GREAT, and overall it sounds like you've got a lot of good things falling into place.
Now you need a plan. Envision the practice you want to start with, and then what you would like it to become in 5-10 years. There are several books on setting up massage businesses, and many more on setting up different types of medical practices. As a PTA and NCTMB, you might combine both elements, or just focus on one. That's why you need to figure out what services you plan to offer and how you wish to structure them in your practice. How do you want to schedule your clients? How do you want them to find you? Will you offer insurance billing? Will you hire more MTs? If so, as employees or as ICs? Will you offer any non-massage (but perhaps related) services?
You also need to decide what kind of business you plan to be: Sole proprietor, LLC, S-Corp, etc. Each has pros and cons. Don't pick at random - research the differences and consider talking to a business counselor about which might best fit your plans. You can get free help from any SCORE chapter in your area. Some will even help you write up a business plan and teach you how to project expenses and income so you can reasonably estimate how different choices might impact your business. You need to know what kind of business you will be before you can register as a business with your state to get your Tax ID number. Learn about the reporting requirements for business taxes, payroll taxes, etc. Consider whether to have a bookkeeper/accountant and/or payroll service to help take care of these things.
Find out what kind of business/practice license(s) you need to have from your municipality, county, and state. Learn what kinds of insurance are required. Talk to a business insurance agent about what kind(s) of coverage you might need. Look at the building lease to see what kinds of damage would be taken care of by the landlord and which kinds would be your problem (hence requiring insurance). Your AMTA liability insurance only covers a small fraction of the issues that might arise, so getting a good business insurance policy is a must for the kind of space you describe, especially when you have employees/ICs there. Your personal AMTA coverage should also list your business as an "Additional Insured" and so should the policies of any MTs who share the space with you (whether as employees or ICs).
Do you plan to have music? How will you obtain it, and will it be the same throughout your business or different in each room? Having the same in all rooms means you need some speakers wired in, an amplifier to send music to those speakers, volume controls in each room, and a source of music. This is more difficult (initially) than having separate stereos in each room, but it works well in multi-therapist practices.
I could go on, but that's a good start... being a small business start-up is tough, but you will learn a LOT.
You have a LOT of work left to do, but it sounds like you have a great reason to do it! Best wishes for your success!