Private practice is rewarding work — but it can also feel like a constant sprint. Between managing a caseload, supporting families, staying current on evidence-based practices, and running the business side of things, it's easy to slip into autopilot. You find yourself doing things the way you've always done them, not because they're working, but because there's never a moment to pause and ask if they still should be.
That's where a seasonal reset comes in.
Spring is a natural time to take stock. The pace picks up, schedules shift, and the energy of a new season invites reflection. For private practice speech-language pathologists, a spring reset isn't about overhauling everything. It's about giving yourself permission to look up from the day-to-day and ask: is my practice set up to serve my clients and myself well right now?
April Anderson, MA, CCC-SLP, IBCLC shares five practical areas every private practice owner should revisit each spring — from the policies that protect your time to the vision that keeps your work meaningful.
5 Things Every Private Practice Owner Should Review
1. Your Policies & Boundaries
Policies tend to drift over time. Maybe you've been flexible "just this once"... and now it's become the norm.
Review these areas and ask whether they are being consistently enforced and whether they still reflect your current capacity and business model:
- Cancellation policy
- Payment timelines
- Late arrivals
- Make-up sessions
- Communication boundaries
Boundaries protect both you and the families you serve. Clear policies allow you to focus on the therapy — and not on the paperwork. Currently, I wear many hats in my business: admin support, scheduler, billing manager, and most importantly, therapist.
Making sure the backbone of my business runs smoothly, and that current and new families understand the expectations, is the foundation needed for successful therapy sessions.
April Anderson, MA, CCC-SLP, IBCLC2. Your Caseload Flow
If you work with clients in natural environments such as home, daycares, and schools, you know that sometimes scheduling therapy can feel like a game of Tetris. Every quarter, assess the logistics of your schedule and ask:
- Is this therapy time working for the client?
- Am I maximizing my time by seeing clients who live near each other on the same days?
- Am I giving myself time for breaks, lunch, or paperwork?
When our schedule runs more efficiently, we are able to maximize our week — not just to see more clients, but to make sure we are taking care of our own mental health needs (and not unnecessarily driving zigzags during the day).
3. Your Clinical Toolbox
Are you missing pieces to games? Have you still not gotten around to ordering those new flashcards? Are you and your clients feeling bored or uninspired by your materials? It may be time to spring clean your clinical toolbox.
Focus on these areas:
- Discarding broken or unusable items in your toy kit
- Organizing or grouping together similar items
- Creating "kits" that target similar goals or for specific clients
- Adding new materials through garage sales, consignment shops, or online sales
- Rotating out materials to avoid overuse
The first step in a productive therapy session is gaining the engagement of the client. Identify what is working for your clients (and what's not) and streamline the mental load of choosing materials for each therapy session.
4. Your Systems & Workflow
Behind every successful business is a system supporting it. This spring, review:
- Intake process: Is it streamlined or clunky?
- Documentation: Are notes efficient and consistent?
- Client communication: Automated or time consuming?
Small system improvements can dramatically reduce mental load. Maybe it's time to hire an administrative assistant to take over some tasks or dedicate days/times to handle things yourself.
5. Your Vision for the Rest of the Year
We often set goals in January and then never revisit them. Now is the time to ask:
- What felt aligned at the start of the year?
- What feels different now?
- What do I want the next 3 or 6 months to look like?
Maybe you want:
- Fewer clients at higher rates
- More screenings or group therapy
- To expand feeding services
- To dedicate Fridays for admin or family time (this one is a game changer)
Your practice should evolve as you do. There's no one size-fits-all private practice. From social media to dedicated professionals, there is a wealth of resources available to target every goal.
Small Adjustments, Big Reward
Spring isn't about doing more. It's about doing what matters more intentionally. You most likely don't need a full rebrand, new website, or dramatic pivot.
Sometimes a spring reset is simply:
- Tightening one boundary
- Updating one form
- Raising one rate
- Saying no to one misaligned referral
Small adjustments add up to a bigger reward — a productive business owner, and a successful private practice. So open the windows, review what's working, release what's not, and let a spring reset inspire you through the rest of the year.
TalkTools® Resources for Private Practice SLPs
ASHA Practice Management resources →