Flying by the Seat of My Over-Functioning Pants
Taking on too much can be a natural instinct. Reining in your over-functioning process can help you find your flow.
As part of my liaison role with Associated Bodywork & Massage Professionals (ABMP), I spend a significant amount of time traveling to massage therapy schools across the country speaking to students who are about to graduate and supporting their transition from student to professional. When I mention that the massage profession has a vast array of employment opportunities, students light up with interest, as if a great secret is about to be revealed. While entry-level massage programs teach the essential starting points for a career in massage therapy, there are many ways new therapists can use their skills, knowledge, and interests to be of service to others in ways they may have not learned or imagined.
Designing the perfect massage job is a fun, creative, and self-explorative process. Whether right out of school or already in practice, you can find your niche within the massage profession that brings your gifts into their fullest light. Here are 20 questions to help anyone find that niche.

The most obvious and general questions to ask yourself are:
If you answered yes to most of the above questions, self-employment is a great option for you. If you answered no, you will likely be happier letting someone else do the marketing, scheduling, bookkeeping, policy creation, and business management, and be best suited as an employee focusing your effort toward your hands-on work.
Keep in mind you can do a blend of both as you test the waters. Just be sure you discuss any restrictions or agreements with your employer, such as noncompete clauses that require you to market to clients outside a specific distance away from your place of employment.
There are many environments in which you can provide massage therapy. It is a perfect complement to the medical/clinical environment and is also perfect as an ongoing wellness practice purely for relaxation and stress relief. Following are some questions to help you determine which appeals to you most.
If the medical/clinic environment speaks to you, you can seek out work at a chiropractic office, massage clinic, physician's office, nursing home, hospice care, pain management clinic, physical therapy office, rehabilitative center, hospital, sports medicine clinic, or with a sports team. If the wellness environment sounds more pleasing, you can find work at a day spa, cruise ship, yoga studio, resort spa, hot spring spa, or beauty salon.
For each environment, you will likely want to continue your education to prepare for specialized offerings. For example, in the wellness environment, you might offer hot stone massage, body wraps, paraffin treatments, and body scrubs. If you work in a medical office, you will want additional training in anatomy, physiology, specific injury techniques, SOAP charting, medical terminology, and insurance billing. The bottom line is, if the tasks within the environment call to you, follow the call.
Massage therapists have something to offer just about anyone. You may decide you want to work with a variety of client types, or you may choose to make a difference for a special population. As you read through the following list, notice if any of these tug at your heart and create a spark of excitement.
Are you interested in specialization for any of these groups?
Several of these special populations are untapped—or better said, untouched. We have great gifts to offer, and the benefits are very rewarding for client and therapist alike.
Sometimes it is difficult to know if you will like a job until you are in it. Job-shadowing and informational interviews are great ways to try a job on for size to see if it fits before making a commitment. Contact someone who does the kind of work you are drawn to and ask if you can do one or both of these activities with them. Job-shadowing involves spending a day alongside the massage therapist observing what they do and how they work with their clients and other team members. An informational interview involves asking questions about their day-to-day work, what they like about it, what the drawbacks are, and if they can offer advice about how to enter into the chosen environment.
What will best serve you, your life, your passion for massage and bodywork, and your ongoing journey as a professional therapist? Is your current career path tailored to your evolving personal interests and goals? You are the designer of your life and your career, so ask these questions to ensure you are designing a career you love. After all, when you love what you do, it no longer becomes work. It becomes service to your clients and to you!
Taking on too much can be a natural instinct. Reining in your over-functioning process can help you find your flow.
To align your practice with your passions, values, and strengths, create your idea of the perfect client who describes your niche.
Leslie DeJesus's Afro-Caribbean background played a role in her becoming a massage therapist.
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