I’ve been checking out job ads for Toronto for the past month or so. Frustratingly, I have seen very few ads that make me want to apply to the clinic to work. It isn’t that there aren’t any ads; there are dozens of them! Craigslist, Kijiji, and the OMTA boards have multiple new entries for Toronto every week. Yet, so few of them seem like a good fit for me and my practice.

I’m no longer a new graduate and I feel I have some good skills to bring to the table. I went to a good massage school and finished near the top of my class, graduating with honours. I have taken extra courses in hot stone therapy, reiki, and structural myofascial therapy/structural integration. I have experience with rehabilitation after MVAs, and have handled all aspects of those cases (paperwork, billing, etc). On the administrative side, I helped open the last clinic I worked at in Ottawa. While I admit I did not do much of the ground work myself, I was there through the entire process. I am well aware of what it takes to open your own clinic, physically and financially. I have never had a receptionist and have had to handle that myself. I have a lot of experience with marketing and have good ideas on what works and what does not. I had nearly a full-time practice back in Ottawa, with a great client retention rate.

I think I have some great skills to bring to the table. So why is it that when I look around, I’m underwhelmed by most of the job ads?

Ultimately, here’s the issue: most of you are not hiring an RMT as an employee. An employee would mean you pay them an hourly wage or a salary (which they receive regardless of how many massages they do in a day!), handle tax deductions for them, and provide guaranteed vacation time, maternity leave, and so on. If you are not offering that, then what you are doing is entering into a business transaction with your RMTs. They are going to be providing a service out of your clinic, within certain boundaries as set out by your contract with them. You are not their ‘boss’ in the traditional sense of the word. You are essentially their landlord.

Therefore, when writing up your ads advertising clinic space for rent or on a percentage split basis, please keep in mind that I will be interviewing you as much as you will be interviewing me. I want to make sure what you are offering is a good business opportunity for me. I want to make sure that the clinic is somewhere I will be proud of working, somewhere that I will feel good about treating clients.

I know what I bring to the table. I know that I am a good therapist with good hands. Make your ad stand out by showing me what you bring. There are lots of clinics looking to bring in new RMTs. What makes your clinic different? Posting an ad that simply says ‘clinic looking for RMT, competitive split, please call!’ is not going to interest me. I know you do not have a strict word limit for your ad, so please, take the time and write something so I know a bit about who you are!

And one small pet peeve: most people who are looking for work don’t have access to a fax machine unless they pay for it. Allow people to apply via email. It just makes sense in 2008, you know?

Here’s hoping tomorrow’s job postings are more promising.

This entry was posted on Monday, February 11th, 2008 at 4:11 pm and is filed under Massage, Toronto. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.

3 Responses to “An open letter to clinic owners”

susan Says:

Don’t worry Candice. Wait unil the actual interviews. That is where the real fun beings. I’m a recent graduate and there are a lot of jobs out there. So it’s good to look closely and be picky, because the job interviews will reflect the job posting usually.

I went on a few amazing job interviews, but most were surprisingly insulting. Poor splits, messy record keeping, and interesting billing practices. I was surprised that clinic owners would suggest such things, are there really RMTs that would practice under these conditons? I hope not.

Good luck by the way!

Candice Says:

Hi Susan,

Having been through this process back in Ottawa as a new grad, I’ve certainly had my fair share of bad interviews! I really feel for you as a new grad; at least in my case I’ve had the experience before and know that certain things are really not for me.

I decided to go with a room rental instead of a percent split; just signed the contract today. It is more work, but I’ve got a fair bit of experience on the clinical management side of things, and I know I can make it work. That may be an option for someone such as yourself if you don’t mind the business management side of things.

Best of luck to you!

Nadine Therrien Says:

Well I am glad, and a little sad that this seams to be the reality across Canada. I am a RMT working in Edmonton, Alberta for the past 9 years. As a new grad I went on countless interviews, and even accepted a couple positions before finding a match for me. Unfortunately after 8 years in the same location, the building was sold and we had to move. A blessing as it turns out. I have recently opened out of my house and so far love it.

Dream it Do it
Nadine