I get asked with some regularity what it looks like to scale a one-on-one coaching practice — usually by coaches who don't want a membership or a group program, but who also don't want to feel trapped by their business model. In this episode I work through what scaling actually is, the ways a one-on-one coach can genuinely do it, and why moving to groups isn't scaling at all. It's starting a second business.
[00:00] Why the scaling question is inevitable, even for coaches drawn to the simplicity of one-on-one
[01:21] Accepting the constraints of a business model as a key to being happy in it
[01:47] A working definition: to scale is to get more output from a single unit of input than you got before
[02:13] The most basic form of scale in a coaching practice — charge more for the same hour
[02:54] Why "raise your rates" is the cheapest business advice anyone can give
[03:32] The other version of scale: hold income constant, reduce the hours
[03:51] The question I ask first: what problem are you actually trying to solve? Income? Hours? Burnout? One draining client?
[05:23] Scaling by reducing the other inputs — marketing time and administrative time
[05:55] Why paid advertising is an expensive way to grow a one-on-one practice: higher no-show rates, lower close rates
[07:31] The apparent inefficiency of organic, relationship-driven client acquisition — and why it's actually more efficient
[08:12] "Charging what you're worth": what you're worth is exactly what people are willing to pay you
[09:00] The strongest signal it's time to raise your rate — demand in excess of the time you want to make available
[09:45] Scale is supported by demand. The scale conversation comes after the demand conversation
[11:02] The caveat: because coaching value is perceived, a higher price can create its own demand — at least in the short term
[12:05] But can you sustain demand at $1,000 an hour? The questions that decides it
[13:26] Why I don't think moving to groups, memberships, or courses is scaling a one-on-one practice
[14:27] It's starting a new business that runs in parallel — with some real spillover benefits
[15:57] Why the second, third, and fourth launches feel exponentially harder than the first
[17:09] The three Rs that sustain and scale a one-on-one practice: relationships, renewals, rate increases
[17:34] What sustains a group practice or membership? Marketing, marketing, marketing
[17:58] Where the coach's mind goes first — scaling the delivery — and why that's the solvable part
[19:43] The real bottleneck is demand generation. To sustain enrollment, the coach almost has to stop being a coach
[21:04] Running both at once: two businesses, two sets of marketing, two sets of delivery
[22:29] Why your one-on-one hour starts to feel more and more costly to you
[23:20] Anyone who tells you the transition is smooth and reduces your workload isn't quite right
[25:07] The dip: output shrinks relative to input before it grows — and some coaches selling you the path are still in it
[26:33] The simplicity and elegance of the one-on-one practice are really hard to beat, including financially
[28:21] The equalizing effect: similar compensation, more churn, more activity, more stuff
[29:51] Why we don't hear from the coaches who actually scale one-on-one — the quiet minority
[31:38] The mental and emotional discipline of letting the world be noisy around you
[33:14] I'm not anti-group. I'm anti-claims that groups are easier and deliver more dollars per hour
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