Clinical Boss Podcast

What Can I Sell as a Clinician? How to Find the Offer You Already Have

Mellanie Page Episode 1

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0:00 | 6:26

Most clinicians think they have to invent something brand new before they can build an online business. So they wait for the clever idea that never comes, and they stay exactly where they are. This episode is about the opposite: the offer you already have and just haven't noticed yet.

Host Mellanie Page (BCBA, MBA) shares how her own OBM offer was hiding in plain sight, in the questions people kept asking her to answer for free, and walks through the three places a sellable offer almost always hides for licensed clinicians (BCBAs, SLPs, OTs, therapists, and allied health professionals):

  • The questions people bring you on repeat (that is a market quietly raising its hand)
  • The expertise that got so easy you stopped noticing it (obvious to you, valuable to them)
  • The skill you use in one setting that a brand-new audience would pay to learn

You'll finish with a five-minute exercise to surface the raw material for your first online course, coaching offer, CEU, or community, and the mindset shift from "I have nothing to sell" to "I have too much, I just haven't packaged it yet."

Chapters:
00:00 How my real offer was hiding in plain sight
01:21 What this episode is about
01:50 The misconception that keeps clinicians stuck
02:21 The three places your offer hides
02:24 One: the questions people keep asking you
03:06 Two: the expertise that got so easy you stopped noticing
03:40 Three: the skill a new audience would pay for
04:48 Your five-minute exercise
05:43 Find your offer's shape: the Expert Era Quiz
06:18 Next episode: how to choose which offer to build first

Not sure what shape your offer should take? Take the free Expert Era Quiz at clinicalboss.com/quiz to find out whether you're built to sell a course, a coaching offer, a CEU, or a community. About two minutes.

Next episode: once you realize you have more than one offer, how do you decide which one to build first?

Take the free Expert Era Quiz at clinicalboss.com/quiz. New episodes weekly, follow so you don't miss one.

SPEAKER_00

I first got into OBM. I thought I'd made it. I was consulting with businesses. I was doing CEU presentations. The work was good. The money was good. And I figured that was the thing. That was what I'd built. And then something started happening that I almost missed completely. After a couple of months, the questions started rolling in. Not about the consulting work itself, about me. How did you get into OBM? How are you landing these consulting opportunities? How did you even start doing this? One person, then another, then another. And because I am who I am, I answered every single one. I gave my time away, one quick pick-your-brain call and one long message at a time until I was so stretched I could barely keep up with the people I was helping for free. It took me embarrassingly long to see what was sitting right under my nose. The offer was never just the consulting. The offer was the thing everyone kept asking me to explain how to do what I do. I had this framework I'd been using to succeed in industries right next to ours, and I could package it and teach other professionals how to become OBM practitioners themselves. The demand had been knocking on my door for months. I'd just been opening it for free every time. This is the Clinical Boss Podcast. I'm Melanie Page, and today I want to show you something that is very likely already true for you, and you just haven't noticed it yet. You are probably sitting on an offer right now, not one you have to invent, one you already have. By the end of this episode, you'll know exactly where to look. This one's for the clinician who keeps thinking, I'd love to do this, but I don't have anything to sell yet. You almost certainly do. Let's start with the misconception that keeps good clinicians stuck for years. You think building an offer means inventing something new, the clever idea, the novel program, the thing nobody has done before. So you wait for lightning to strike and it doesn't, and you stay exactly where you are. That is not how this works. An offer almost never comes from invention, it comes from noticing. The raw material is already in your hands. You've just been standing too close to it to see it. So let me show you the three places it tends to hide. Number one, the questions you keep getting asked. This is the loudest signal and the one I personally ignored the longest. Pay attention to what people repeatedly come to you for. When the same question keeps landing in your lap, that is not people being needy. That is a market quietly raising its hand. And here's the tell that you're sitting on an unpackaged offer. You are answering those questions for free, one at a time, and calling it being helpful. Being helpful is wonderful, but if it's leaving you stretched thin, the demand is already there. You are just meeting it in the least scalable way humanly possible. Number two, the expertise you've stopped noticing because it got easy. This is a sneaky one. The things you're good at stop feeling impressive the moment they become easy for you. You think, oh, that's nothing. Everybody knows that. Everybody does not know that. You've just been doing it so long you've forgotten it is normal. The stuff you wave off as obvious is frequently the exact stuff someone else would pay to learn. So when you catch yourself saying, That's just what I do, stop right there. That sentence is almost always pointing straight at an offer. Number three, the thing you've used in one place that a brand new audience would pay for. This is the one that changed everything for me. I didn't invent a new framework. I took the one I'd already been using to win in industries next to ours, and I pointed it at a new audience, BCBAs who wanted to do what I was doing. Same expertise, new context. So ask yourself, is there something you already know how to do clinically in one setting that would be completely new and genuinely valuable to a different audience or in a different situation? Because moving what you know into a new context isn't serving up leftovers. It is often exactly where the best offers come from. Now, I'm not going to walk you through how to package that thing or validate it or price it today. That is its own process. And honestly, it depends on which direction you're building in. What I want you to walk away with right now is the awareness, the shift from I have nothing to sell to I have too much, I just haven't picked and packaged it yet. That shift is the whole game today. So before you turn this off, do three quick things, five minutes tops. One write down the three questions people bring to you the most, the ones you answer on repeat. Just yourself dismissing something. Every time you hear yourself say, that's nothing, or that's just what I do, write that thing down. That becomes your obvious to me valuable to them list. Three, name one audience or one situation different from where you work now, where what you already know would be brand new. Just one. You're not building it today. You're just proving to yourself it exists. Once you've got that raw material in front of you, the next question is what shape should it take? Because the same expertise can become a course, a coaching offer, a CEU, or a community. And the right answer is genuinely different for different people. That's what the Expert Era quiz is for. It's free, takes a couple of minutes, and can be found at clinicalboss.com slash quiz. So here's your takeaway. You are not missing an offer. You're probably overlooking three of them and handing at least one of them out for free. Your only job this week is to notice. But noticing creates a brand new problem, a good one. Once you realize you've got more than one thing you could build, how do you possibly pick which one to build first? Because trying to build all of them at once is the fastest way to build none of them. That's exactly where we're headed next episode. I'm Melanie. Go look under your own nose, and I'll see you next time.