Grow Your Practice Podcast
Register For Titans of Private Practice Live at https://titansofprivatepractice.com/ [https://titansofprivatepractice.com/] Learn more about Jag PT: www.jagpt.com/ [https://www.jagpt.com/] THE BIG OPPORTUNITY FOR PRIVATE PRACTICE PT Private practice physical therapy is changing fast. Between staffing challenges, reimbursement pressure, direct access opportunities, technology, AI, and rising patient expectations, today’s practice owners need more than clinical skill to succeed. They need leadership, business discipline, and a clear vision for how physical therapy fits into the future of healthcare. In this episode of the Grow Your Practice Podcast, Chad Madden sits down with John Gallucci, CEO of JAG Physical Therapy, to discuss the lessons behind building one of the most recognized physical therapy organizations in the country. Gallucci’s journey began with a single practice in West Orange, New Jersey. Today, JAG Physical Therapy operates 180 locations across four states, while maintaining a clinician-led culture and a strong community focus. ADAPTABILITY IS A LEADERSHIP SKILL One of Gallucci’s first recommendations for private practice owners is surprisingly simple: read Who Moved My Cheese? He gives the book to many of his leaders because it teaches adaptability, perspective, and emotional control. In an industry where change is constant, from payer relationships to staffing to patient expectations, the ability to stay calm and keep moving forward is essential. That same simplicity shows up in his favorite low-cost clinical tool: the Swiss ball. Gallucci reminds clinicians that physical therapy is a hands-on medical profession, and sometimes the best tools are the ones that allow providers to treat the whole body through movement, balance, strengthening, proprioception, and range of motion. Technology matters, but foundational clinical creativity still matters too. THE BUSINESS LESSON THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING A major turning point in Gallucci’s career came when he realized that being a great clinician was not the same as understanding the business of private practice. When he opened his first clinic, he had strong referral relationships and name recognition from his background in professional sports. But he quickly learned that if patients could not use their insurance in-network, many would not return after the first visit. That lesson reshaped his view of access. For Gallucci, being in-network is not just a business decision. It is a way to make quality physical therapy available to more people. BETTER SYSTEMS GIVE CLINICIANS MORE TIME WITH PATIENTS As JAG grew, two major investments helped support both providers and patients: a strong EMR and AI-enabled documentation support. Gallucci emphasizes that clinicians should spend their time treating patients, not drowning in notes. Better systems help reduce administrative burden, improve compliance, and give providers more time to focus on care. GROW YOUR PEOPLE OR RISK LOSING THEM The core of JAG’s growth strategy is not just technology. It is leadership development. Gallucci believes every employee should have the opportunity to grow personally, professionally, and financially. If someone leaves because they did not see a path forward, leadership needs to examine where it failed. That belief has shaped JAG’s investment in education, residency programs, leadership training, and multiple career pathways. NOT EVERY GREAT CLINICIAN WANTS TO MANAGE PEOPLE This is especially important for practice owners who assume the only growth path is management. Gallucci explains that not every clinician wants to become a clinical director or run people. Some want to advance clinically. By creating both leadership and advanced clinical pathways, practices can retain great people while honoring different career goals. ACCESS IS A GROWTH STRATEGY For new practice owners, Gallucci’s advice is direct: take deep breaths, expect imperfection, and keep going. Mistakes are part of entrepreneurship. What matters is whether you learn from them and continue to serve your community. He also challenges practice owners to stop thinking too small about access. A clinic that is only open two or three days a week may struggle to become a true healthcare resource. Accessibility, consistent hours, and availability are part of the practice’s value proposition. THE FUTURE OF PT IS DIRECT ACCESS AND MSK LEADERSHIP Looking ahead, Gallucci believes private practice physical therapy has a tremendous opportunity to become the primary entry point for musculoskeletal care. Direct access gives the profession a chance to lead, but only if practice owners educate their communities, market the value of PT, and advocate for the profession. REHABILITATION SHOULD LEAD BACK TO REAL LIFE His final insight points to the growing connection between rehabilitation and performance. Whether treating a professional athlete, a pickleball player, or a golfer recovering from knee surgery, physical therapists must think beyond basic recovery. The goal is not just walking pain-free. The goal is returning people safely to the demands of their lives, work, and sports. CONCLUSION: BUILD A PRACTICE THAT SERVES FIRST The message for practice owners is clear: build systems, grow leaders, improve access, and never forget that physical therapy is a people-centered profession. The practices that win in the next decade will be the ones that combine clinical excellence with leadership, adaptability, and a deep commitment to serving their communities.
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