🔒 I value your privacy and will never share your contact information. By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive an invitation to join my course, Money Skills for Group Practice Owners and to get tips and advice on building a healthy relationship with your private practice finances. I will never share your personal information including you email, and you can unsubscribe at any time – Linzy

You love being a group practice owner… some days.

You can really see how your group practice is meeting the needs in your community, filling a gap by providing specialized services that just wouldn’t be there otherwise.

You’re making a bigger impact than you ever could on your own, and you feel proud thinking about the dozens of lives that are positively impacted by your team each week.

You get to enjoy the community you’ve built – mentoring other therapists or practitioners, having a team who share your vision and values, and generally just having colleagues so you’re not working on your own anymore.

You get to wear different hats – being a leader, mentor, and administrator, and not having to be a full-time therapist anymore. You get to use your different talents, and enjoy that variety. Plus, you don’t need to rely on seeing clients to get paid – you’ve built something bigger than a one-on-one business. You can see the fruits of your labor, and feel pride in all you’ve built.

Some days, you’re not sure if you made the right decision by starting a group practice. 
It feels heavy, carrying the weight of not just your own paycheck, but having to pay a whole team. You worry about money often. You hold your breath when you go to run payroll, not always sure if the money will be there.
It’s a lot of work. Like, a LOT.
There are so many moving parts between all the admin, managing other therapists and practitioners with their various personalities, and having to chase people and put out fires (insurance money not showing up, grumpy clients, clinical notes not getting done.) Sometimes you feel like you’re working harder than ever. This is not the “passive income” you dreamt about when you started your group practice.
The revolving door of employees is
exhausting.
Just when you feel like everything is going well, you get a resignation letter (or two.) Your stomach drops as you think about the big hit to your revenue, all the resources you spent on that therapist, and all the time and energy it’s going to take to find and train someone new and fill their caseload.
It’s hard to take an actual break, and hard to set boundaries
around your work.
Sometimes your practice and your personal life feel all bound up together. You think about your business all the time. You find yourself working evenings and weekends. You can’t imagine being able to take a vacation and really walk away from it, because you know something would come up and you’d have to jump back in. Your business is deeply a part of you, and sometimes that’s a bit much.
You may still be relying on your own client income in order to be able to be paid well. Or you’re getting paid last, and even making less money than you used to make in full-time client work. Either way, when you think about all the work you do, and the hours you put in, you shudder to think of how much you’re being paid an hour to run your group practice.
Those are numbers you’d just rather not know.

And these ups and downs come often. The good moments or days are immediately followed by something bad happening. Your practice feels like an emotional and financial roller coaster, which is not at all what you were going for when you set out.

I want you to know that you can absolutely have a group practice that you love and that serves your community, without feeling weighed down and resentful from all the financial responsibility and uncertainty.

✅ You can learn to understand the important numbers that make or break your group practice, so you can see yourself making grounded, strategic decisions on a daily basis that create financial stability and get money working for you in all the right places.

✅ You can be paid well for your work and leadership in your group practice, not just for the client-facing work you’re still doing. 

✅ You can have calm-inducing buffers in all the right places (and in a few short months, too!) so you no longer need to worry about money being there when you need it.

teaches you the financial and CFO mindset skills to make all of this possible. 

🎯 This course focuses on the financial nitty-gritty that other group practice building supports miss, teaching you how to deeply understand your group practice numbers so you can make great strategic decisions that will take the roller coaster feeling out of group practice ownership. 

 🎯 You will learn all the important numbers and systems that make or break your group practice machine, and get the information and support to make the key changes that will give you the financial results you want.

Lots of therapist-coaches are teaching Chief Executive Officer (CEO) skills, but those only take you so far. 

Sure, it’s great to delegate your bookkeeping or have your admin track some KPIs, but if you don’t understand those numbers and how they work, then you can’t be the financial leader your group practice needs. 

And if you’re not the financial leader, no one else is either. Your business is simply lacking this essential skill set altogether.

As your practice grows, you need next-level financial skills.

You need CFO skills – Chief Financial Officer skills – that allow you to set up the numbers and financial systems properly in your business, understand what your numbers are telling you, and take strategic action to keep your practice finances healthy. 

These kinds of nitty-gritty financial skills are a topic many other therapist-coaches have told me they’re happy to leave to me. It’s not everyone’s cup of tea to educate therapists on the mathy and financial side of practice, but it certainly is mine. And I do love tea.

So here’s a quick-ish who-am-I, while we’re on the topic.

Hi, my name is Linzy Bonham and I’m a therapist turned business and money coach. A friend once introduced me as “the perfect mix of spreadsheet and heart” and I take that as a big compliment.

As the daughter of an accountant, I inherited a good dose of bookkeeping-brain. I’m like half therapist, half bookkeeper. So when I went into private practice I dug right into all the ways to build a healthy business that pays for my life and always has extra money in the bank.

I also saw my super-skilled colleagues struggle with the money side of business. Some had even left private practice, or were avoiding starting one, because the money side was too stressful. 

So I put my lucky combination of people and money skills together, and Money Nuts & Bolts was born. Eventually I closed my practice to focus on teaching finances to therapists full-time.

Through my foundational course Money Skills for Therapists I have supported more than 450 therapists over the last 5 years in going from money confusion and shame to calm and confidence.

Over time, I have been able to sit with dozens of group practice owners and their numbers, helping them understand the workings of the machines they’ve built and the possibilities their numbers hold, and guiding them in making the strategic moves to transform their group practice finances and their relationship with money. 

I have also scaled my own business, gradually figuring out what it takes to financially thrive while leading and managing a team. I have learned first-hand what metrics to track for a business’ financial health, and what buffers to build.

I’ve also honed my skills that got me into this work in the first place – teaching finances in a way that’s accessible and creating beautiful, easy-to-use financial tools that can help non-mathy therapists really understand their numbers, often for the first time.

 I know that group practice owners have the ability to create healthy and sustainable group practices, but so often that is not the case. Why? Because group practice owners aren’t being taught the knowledge and skills to really step into the CFO role and own the financial side of their practice. I’m here to change that. 

No one else is teaching money to therapists like I am. Why? Because I’m me – a people-loving, feelings-loving AND spreadsheet-loving therapist-y nerd who can switch gears between depthful coaching, math, and technical support in the blink of an eye.  

I get excited about the numbers and spreadsheets that make visible the inner workings of our businesses, and as my students start to integrate the skills I teach them, they get excited too.

My students tell me that they appreciate my ability to connect with them and their unique stories and needs, while also keeping them focused and making progress on the money-related tasks and learning that they’d often rather avoid forever more.

Now I’m focusing my nuanced and financially literate approach on this next level of private practice – group practice, and would love to have my financial and coaching skills completely change your relationship with your group practice finances, transforming you into the empowered CFO of your practice.

“Group practice finances are complicated. I spent years underpaying myself while struggling to understand my numbers. I was making decisions based on fear rather than data because I didn’t have a solid understanding of my group practice financial landscape.

Enter Linzy Bonham!

Simply put, Linzy is a magician. She has the rare talent of being able to explain numbers and spreadsheets in a way I can actually understand.

My work with Linzy has empowered me to take financial control of my 7-figure group practice! Most importantly, her systems will help you understand how much you can afford to pay your team well without sacrificing your own paycheck.

Honestly, this program is so thorough and comprehensive, it should be required coursework for any therapist growing a group practice business. If you’re ready to become an empowered CFO, join Money Skills for Group Practice Owners as soon as possible!”

“Before working with Linzy my relationship with money was very chaotic. There was a lot of anxiety and insecurity because I had no idea where my money was going. Money has always been the thing that I was most disempowered with.

Now I feel much more grounded. In terms of making good decisions, I feel like I have a couple of really solid tools that are in my repertoire that I feel really competent using. The numbers aren’t scary. They’re not overwhelming. I can sit down and even if I don’t like what I see at that particular time, I can put it into a larger context.

I would want to tell my past self: once you have these skills, you’re going to feel so much more confident to move forward sooner than you thought you ever could. Also being in a small group of really fantastic women, having those people to bounce ideas off is really helpful. It’s lonely to be a CEO.

My biggest win is I’d say I’m at least three years ahead on my business goals. At least three years. Like, I did not picture myself having employees yet. My goal was to have one employee by next year, and now in a couple months’, there’s going to be six people in this office. That’s pretty crazy.”
Erin Iwanusa started her group practice organically. It was not planned, really, but she seized an opportunity. She is a self-described action-taker and during COVID, she saw the possibility of creating a machine that was bigger than her and that could run without her if need be.

Sounds great, right? Well yes …and no. At first, Erin did what she does best, diving in and learning as she went. But she kept going from one stressful payroll run to the next, holding her breath, always feeling just-this-close to being in the red. Here is what she shared after working with me on her group practice finances:

“I’ve become really clear on my values as a therapist and as a business owner, and how I utilize those as benefits for employees. I definitely see myself as a CEO. I feel that I’m making very grounded decisions in my business right now. I went from a scarcity mindset to an abundant mindset.

I am getting really, really clear on the big picture and what the next year will be. A big thing that’s changed is the buffer accounts, feeling really solid with 3 months worth of operating expenses and one pay period worth set aside.

Getting very clear on what my role is, being much more aligned with my values of home and connection, feeling much more connected to myself, much more connected to my spouse. Before it just felt like my whole life was work. And now I feel like I have a really nice balance.”

Money Skills for Group Practice Owners is a 6-month course with over 40 step-by-step lessons, and beautiful, comprehensive tools designed to help you become the empowered financial leader of your group practice.

Weekly calls alternate between coaching and co-working, to allow you to integrate and apply all you’re learning in the lessons to your own group practice.

Money Skills for Group Practice Owners is not a theory course. It will:

  • walk you through the process of deeply connecting with your motivations, goals and values,
  • help you understand your current numbers,
  • give you the tools and supports to make strategic changes in your group practice numbers, and
  • support you in building ongoing CFO habits so you’re never left looking at a nearly empty bank account or feeling like you’re doing all the work for none of the money again.

The next cohort of this six-month course starts in 2025.

Money Skills for Group Practice Owners walks you from start to finish through the mindset, systems, tools and key numbers that will help you become the empowered and competent CFO of your group practice.

Here are some of the practical and practice-changing lessons that will get you there:

If it looks like a lot, worry not. My gift as a teacher is to take information that may seem dense and intimidating and make it easy for you to understand.

Our seven (7) modules (each containing a handful of lessons) will be dripped out roughly monthly, so you will have a natural pace to work through all the lessons in a supportive, sustainable, metered way.

And speaking of supportive – here are the supports that are built into Money Skills for Group Practice Owners that will help you keep up your momentum and become an empowered CFO who can confidently steer your own ship:

What sets me apart from your typical, feelings-phobic financial professional is that I’m a therapist to my core. I’m great at meeting you where you’re at, really hearing what you’re saying, and helping you find the right way forward to make the big changes you need to make in your finances.

What sets me apart from other private practice consultants is that I help you dig deep into the numbers to understand what is and isn’t working in your finances. My jam is helping you build a sustainable, healthy financial machine in your private practice to become the CFO of your practice. No one else is teaching this.

So the group and 1:1 calls are where you’re going to get that access to me, my gentle humor and support, and my nerdy numbers brain to let you really apply what you’re learning to your own group practice.

I know that what you learn in this course is going to be valuable to you, both in terms of skills and knowledge, and also the way you’ll be able to make strategic financial decisions in your practice for decades to come.

So here is my guarantee to you: if you do the work, you’ll get the results.

Specifically, if six months after completing all the course lessons and learning all the tools you haven’t made back the cost in the course in either:

✔️ increased revenue to your group practice,

✔️ increased buffers in your practice,

✔️ increased tax money on hand for your quarterly payments,

✔️ or more money going home to you,

And if you don’t, I will refund you the full cost of the course.

That’s right. If you do the work, and don’t recoup the cost of the course within six months, you can turn your work in and get your money back.

The program is otherwise non-refundable. We don’t make it easy to quit, because learning financial skills takes dedication. And it literally pays to stick with it. I’m going to show up for you, and when you show up yourself too, you’re going to see yourself developing financial skills you never thought possible. Exciting, right?

Are you ready to get off the emotional and financial roller coaster and become the empowered financial leader of your group practice?

Get on the waitlist now and be the first to hear when registration opens!

The next cohort of this six month program starts in 2025

FAQs
Yes! Money Skills for Group Practice Owners teaches you a whole new set of tools and skills to deeply understand your group practice numbers. The materials in this course are brand new, reflecting the complexities of group practice and the specific tools that you need at this higher, more complicated level.
I’ve been teaching finances to therapists since 2018, and have directly helped hundreds of therapists. My gift is making finances easy to understand, and that gift applies to solo practice, group practice, and scaled business offerings. By scaling my own business, I’ve learned how to manage complex finances and employees. I’ve also supported group practice owners in my previous programs, which inspired me to create Money Skills for Group Practice Owners and apply my natural skills for teaching finances to the group practice business model.
The live calls are a helpful part of the course in order to keep you moving through the lessons and building your new group practice CFO skills, and they’re also not essential to attend live. As the leader of your group practice, you always do have the opportunity to prioritize your CFO time and skill-building by making the calls work for you. But if you don’t attend live, all calls will be recorded and available afterward for you to listen to. There will always be questions asked by your fellow group practice owners that apply to you, so listening to call recordings like a podcast can help you feel connected and motivated.
If you haven’t started your group yet – or are just in the early stages with one or two part-time employees – this is your opportunity to get your group practice built properly from the very start. It’s always easier to set up something right in the first place, rather than having to fix it later. If you’re already thinking about the finances at this early stage of your practice, that’s amazing. It shows strategic thinking from the start. Doing this course now – before you accidentally set up a practice that doesn’t work financially – will literally pay off for years to come.
This course is for you if:
  • You have or are starting a group practice, and want your practice to be sustainable and pay you well for your financial leadership
  • You appreciate a mix of practical and emotional support to help you move forward in your business
  • You like to be surrounded by smart, ambitious women and non-binary folks who are mission-driven in their work and looking to create financial stability in their lives and the lives of the people they love
  • You love all the good parts of group practice and want to be able to keep running your group practice for years to come – as long as it feeds you, rather than sucking the emotional energy and money out of you
This course isn’t for you if:
  • You want to make as much money as you possibly can, regardless of the impact on your team
  • You hate swearing (really, I do swear a little sometimes – and I believe I do so tastefully and appropriately, for impact – but if that’s going to upset you you’re not gonna like it in the course)
  • You see other women and group practice owners as competition and won’t be able to genuinely celebrate others’ wins and gifts
  • You’re not willing to do the work to understand your own numbers and make the changes you need to make, and want someone else to come in and fix your group practice for you
For easy numbers, let’s say your group practice brings in $300,000 a year. Even though that’s a nice number, it always seems like money is tight, and you’re definitely not being paid well for your hard work and leadership.
So you register for Money Skills for Group Practice Owners, you dig in and start to understand your numbers. You start to see where you’re overspending, where your income splits aren’t working, where your policies are losing you money, and you make some tweaks here and there.
With all these small changes, if you improve how things are running financially by even 5%, that’s $15,000 per year of increased money in your group practice.
Does that go into buffers so you never have to worry about low balances again? Does that go to you, for a well-deserved raise? Do you use it to finally hire a social media manager and get that work off your plate? What you do with your extra money is all up to you – and by then, you’ll have all the strategy skills in place to use it well.
But I know you’ll be able to use your new insights and financial leadership skills to make even bigger strategic changes. If you improve your finances by 8%, that’s an extra $24,000 a year for you, or at 10% that’s $30,000 extra to use in your practice or to come home to you.
If your goal is even higher than a 10% improvement – or if you’re ready to double or triple the size of your practice – you’re going to learn the skills to strategically do that too, without spending money in all the wrong places, setting up your numbers so they will never work, or trying to grow too fast and running out of money.
Real growth and improvement is possible when you understand how to make strategic,
empowered financial decisions in your group practice every day.
Where that takes you financially is up to you.
You ready?

© 2024 Money Nuts & Bolts Inc.