The Niche Conversation Nobody Had With You in Grad School
Let’s be honest, most of us came out of graduate school fluent in clinical language and completely underprepared for the business of practice. We knew our modalities. We knew how to build rapport, write a note, sit with discomfort. What nobody taught us was how to describe what we do in a way that actually lands with the people we’re trying to reach.
So we defaulted to the safe answer: “I see a wide range of clients.”
And here’s what I want to say about that, therapist to therapist: that answer is costing you. Not just clients, though it’s costing you those too. It’s costing you clarity. It’s costing you energy. It’s quietly contributing to a kind of burnout that doesn’t get named as often as it should.
The Burnout Nobody Talks About
We talk about burnout in the context of too many clients, too many notes, too little time. And yes, that’s real.
But there’s another version of burnout that lives in the absence of a niche. It’s the burnout that comes from working without a thread connecting your caseload. Every session is a different clinical puzzle. Every intake is a fresh assessment of fit because you’ve never defined what fit actually means for you. There’s no momentum. No compounding expertise. No sense that you’re building something that belongs to you.
When you work in your niche, when your clients share themes, patterns, experiences, something shifts. You recognize things faster. You intervene with more confidence. The work has a rhythm. And that rhythm is energizing in a way that scattered caseloads just aren’t.
That’s what I wanted to talk about in Episode 3. Not just the marketing benefits of having a niche (though those are real and significant) but the clinical and personal sustainability that comes from working in alignment with who you actually are.
The Reframe That Changes Everything
The biggest shift I offer in this episode is this one:
A niche is not a cage. A niche is a lens.
A cage limits you. A lens clarifies. And that distinction matters, because most of the resistance therapists feel around niching is actually fear of being caged — fear of turning people away, fear of missing out, fear of committing to something that might not fit forever.
But here’s the thing: your niche is not a declaration. It’s not something you etch in stone and never revisit. It’s a working hypothesis. And like any good scientist, your job is to test it, gather data, and refine it over time.
There is no form you submit to your licensing board declaring your clinical specialty. Your niche is allowed to evolve as you grow — because you are evolving. The therapist you are at year two of private practice is not who you’ll be at year eight. Your life, your training, your experiences all give you new lenses. Your niche should reflect that.
What I’ve Seen in Consultation
I share two case studies in the episode that I think you’ll recognize yourself in.
One is a therapist who insisted she was a generalist. When we actually looked at her caseload, nearly all of her long-term clients — the ones who stayed, referred, and wrote glowing reviews — were first-generation professionals navigating imposter syndrome, family pressure, and the grief of cultural disconnection. She had never marketed to that population. She hadn’t even named it.
But her own identity and experiences had been quietly attracting people who felt seen by something in her language. Her niche already existed. It just hadn’t been claimed yet.
And when we looked at those clients’ outcomes compared to others on her caseload? Longer retention, stronger alliance, faster movement. The sessions were alive in a way the others weren’t.
That’s not an accident. That’s alignment.
The Language Shift That Matters Most
Here’s something I say in the episode that I want to put in writing because I think it’s worth sitting with:
Clients don’t search for modalities. They search for relief.
They’re not Googling “EMDR therapist near me” (well, some are — but they’re already pretty far down the decision path). Most people are searching for someone who understands what they’re going through. Someone whose words make them feel seen before they ever pick up the phone.
So the work isn’t just identifying your niche. It’s translating your clinical expertise into the language your ideal client is already thinking in. Not “I specialize in perinatal mental health” but “I help new parents navigate the identity shifts, the anxiety, and the relationship strain that nobody warned them about.”
Same specialty. Completely different impact.
The Lab Assignment
At the end of every episode, I give you something to actually do. This week’s assignment:
Write three “I help” statements.“I help [who] navigate [what] so they can [outcome].”
Say each one out loud. Not in your head, actually say them. Notice which one feels most true in your body. Not the most polished. Not the most impressive. The one that feels real.
Then share one somewhere this week. Your bio. An Instagram caption. A consultation group. You don’t have to commit forever. You’re running an experiment.
Listen to Episode 3
If any of this landed, the full episode is going to go even deeper. I walk through the complete 4-step formula, break down exactly how to use language that stays specific without feeling exclusive, and share what it actually looks like to hold a niche with flexibility over time.
Episode 3 is available now on Substack, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.
And if this is resonating with you, forward it to a therapist friend who’s still in the “I see a wide range of clients” phase. This is exactly what they need to hear.
See you in the lab.
— Asia
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit privatepracticelab.substack.com [https://privatepracticelab.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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