CODING CLINICAL CULTURE by SomeplaceGood.

The Other Side of $1.39 Million - What the US Market Actually Told Me

23 min · 19 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio The Other Side of $1.39 Million - What the US Market Actually Told Me

Descripción

Last week, Emma put the US medspa market on a pedestal. Then people inside the market pushed back. This episode sits with the complexity — volatile revenue, the autonomy trap inside franchise models, and why the thing Australian clinics do best is exactly what the US model can't scale. Three actionable takeaways, zero backtracking.

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27 episodios

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Anti-ageing language is costing you clients. Here's what a 20-year-old brand decision tells you about the next move for your clinic. The beauty industry has been fighting biology for decades. Fight ageing. Reverse the clock. Correct, repair, restore. And clinicians have been saying these words too — in consultations, on websites, in the content they post every week — without stopping to ask whether those words are actually working for their clients or against them. Here's what a trip to Los Angeles and a visit to one of the most scientifically rigorous skincare labs in the world made absolutely clear to me: the brands that are winning in 2026 are the ones that stopped fighting biology and started working with it. Not reversal. Not restoration. Renewal. More than 20 years ago, Dr Howard Murad started formulating for hormonally ageing skin. He named his retinol range Youth Renewal. In 2026, that original idea — biology is always renewing, even when it slows — is the entire future direction of the brand. The science was always there. The story is finally catching up. And that gap between science and story? It exists in your clinic too. In this episode, Emma Hindmarsh Conan unpacks what Murad's global rebrand signals for skin clinics and clinical beauty professionals in Australia — and what you can do about it this week. What's covered: Why renewal language works with your client's psychology where anti-ageing language works against it What happens when a heritage brand's science finally gets the story it deserves — and what that means for how you talk about your own expertise The difference between a client list and a community, and why it matters more than you think How to anchor your entire clinic communication around one idea — and why one thing told with depth beats ten things told loosely 3 specific actions to take this week: your language audit, your hero concept, and your community starting point This episode is for skin therapists, facialists, aestheticians, and clinic owners who are ready to stop using language that makes their clients feel anxious about their skin — and start building the kind of authority that makes clients stay. Coding Clinical Culture is the podcast for clinical skin professionals who want to turn industry trends into clinic action. Hosted by Emma Hindmarsh Conan, founder of SomeplaceGood.Pro. Find more at someplacegood.pro

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