Providers I know working with prenatal/postpartum Birth Centers, Chiros, midwives, doulas, lactation consultant, prenatal massage therapist, functional medicine, mental health dealing with postpartum depression, OB gYN Businesses: Those that hold community events for expectant or pregnant Moms, yoga studios, any gym but especially if caters to women, meal prep for toddlers, daycares, Community- mom facebook groups, running groups, women enterpreneur FB groups, MOPS, City Moms, Bloom
The ways I currently attract business with my practice is referrals from past clients that send me family or friends, referral from chiros, midwives, etc that know me, and google. Content on my website helps with the SEO that attracts people on google. Almost every new postpartum Mom I see tells me that they are following someone on youtube for exercises. IG would be the next.
Hannah is a 32 year old Mom, married with 3 kids, age 5, 3 and a 6 month old. She is a nurse making around $70K a year. She is very family oriented and spends alot of time with extended family, as well as rushing her 5 year old to activities such as soccer. She enjoys yoga and running. She is on IG, FB and Pinterest for ideas about crafts and cooking. She does yoga videos she sees on youtube. She has bought an online course for postpartum recovery. She is an emotional buyer as she wishes to "fix" her Diastasis and wants to stop leaking when she runs.
@Kevin McGovern As a mom of a travel baseball player myself, I have looked for programs to instill confidence in my son when it come to hitting. I have also looked into pitching programs. Travel Moms will spend crazy on their kid to try and help with thier performance. I did buy a program called BRX performance that has exercises for baseball players, but was hard to follow. I think throwing the word confidence in to your program would catch attention for the parents. They are the ones looking, not the kids. Then making it an easy program to follow focusing on one skill, to streamline the process would be good.