These days, many noble and once well-remunerated occupations, like journalism and magazine publishing (to name a couple that strike especially close to home here at the Networker), seem in danger of declining into economic irrelevancy. And, not to unduly shock anybody reading this, but the financial prospects of therapists don’t look too hot at the moment, either. Not only are we told there are way too many of us—600,000 mental health professionals nationwide—for the population to sustain, but managed care has done its best to shrivel whatever pittance we used to be able to count on for our services.
On top of this economic reality, therapists must come to grips with the fact that their client pool—the potential market for what they do—has changed, and changed dramatically. The old idea of therapy that many of us, at least those of us over 40, were taught to practice seems completely anachronistic in today’s culture. For most people who spend their days zipping at warp speed from stimulus to stimulus, thought to thought, traditional therapy—the prospect of spending years in weekly 50-minute sessions holding meandering conversations with a largely silent therapist to achieve insight and self-knowledge—sounds ridiculous, if not flat-out crazy. Who has the time? Who has the money? Who cares?
Many therapists still don’t get this. They know business is down, but they don’t know what to do about it. Besides putting up a website, they carry on as if it were 1980-something and their potential clients today were just like the clients who sought therapy three or more decades ago.
As the contributors to this issue make clear, people seeking therapy today are not the supplicants of yesteryear, who considered the therapist to be the expert on their mental life, expected him or her to be in charge, and more or less meekly acquiesced to the basic rules of the therapy game: they came on time, didn’t tell the therapist what to do, and didn’t ask embarrassing questions like “What can you offer me and how long will it take?”
In contrast, today’s therapy consumers are likely to “interview” different therapists before the first visit—the way you interview a potential employee, or grill a salesperson about the value of the product being sold. They announce ahead of time what problem they want to work on and how fast they want it resolved (often within a session or two). If they don’t like the answers they get, or don’t find the first session appealing or intriguing enough to try it at least once more, they walk, knowing full well that there are plenty of other fish in the therapy sea.
The crucial question that this issue poses is how exactly our practices need to change if we want to continue doing therapy for a living. Whatever our allegiance to our cherished theories and models, the time has come to reconsider how to attract and keep clients long enough to get the process off the ground and running. We must face the fact that in an age where virtually everything is for sale, we have to learn to sell what we can offer.
If we wish to stay professionally alive, it’s time we recognize that the idea that we must choose between being dedicated clinicians and being smart business people is a false one.
Rich Simon
Richard Simon, PhD, founded Psychotherapy Networker and served as the editor for more than 40 years. He received every major magazine industry honor, including the National Magazine Award. Rich passed away November 2020, and we honor his memory and contributions to the field every day.