Business of Aesthetics Podcast Show

Business of Aesthetics

The Business of Aesthetics (BOA) podcast show continues to inspire and help our community of aesthetic doctors grow their practices. We bring outstanding leaders in Dermatology, Plastic Surgery, and Aesthetics together to not just achieve more but experience fulfillment in their practice.

  1. 2D AGO

    Why Providers Hate Selling, Fixing the 'Retail Gap,' and Operationalizing High-Margin Revenue

    In this episode, host Don Adeesha joins Laura Crowley, CEO of Laura Janet & Co, to tackle the "retail gap" in aesthetic practices. Laura explains why the best clinical providers often struggle with retail sales, feeling that it compromises their clinical integrity. She shares how to psychologically rewire a team to reframe product recommendations from a commercial upsell to a necessary part of patient advocacy and optimal medical results. Laura breaks down the operational failures that cause half of your patients to leave empty-handed, advocating for retail integration that starts with pre-appointment paperwork. She details how to fix the consultation and checkout process by presenting a comprehensive written treatment plan and then simply "stopping talking" to avoid over-explaining the price. Beyond tactics, she warns against just throwing commission at low sales, instead emphasizing financial transparency, regular one-on-ones, and targeted product education to foster an ownership culture among staff. Finally, Laura encourages owners to embrace employee personal branding as a powerful marketing tool rather than fearing patient theft. For owners trapped in the treatment room, she shares her blueprint for stepping back: delegating low-hanging tasks to an assistant, building Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs), and dedicating non-negotiable "CEO hours" to strategically work on the business instead of in it.

    35 min
  2. FEB 10

    Building a 'Practice Within a Practice,' Leveraging Academic Authority, and The Economics of Retention

    In this episode, host Don Adeesha joins Dr. Milind Kachare, a plastic surgeon at Nayak Plastic Surgery, to dissect the "high-performance associate" model. Dr. Kachare explains his "practice within a practice" approach, detailing how he carved out a distinct Breast and Body lane within a predominantly facial surgery ecosystem. He shares the critical preparatory steps he took before day one, including establishing specific protocols and consents, to ensure he could generate his own leads rather than relying solely on the founder's overflow. Dr. Kachare breaks down how to leverage academic weight in a market saturated with social media trends. He argues that while patients may not count publications, they value the translation of that data into understandable safety assurances. He illustrates this with a dramatic case study involving a gunshot wound to an implant, showing how evidence-based storytelling can prove product integrity and empower patients to make decisions, ultimately justifying premium positioning. Finally, the discussion turns to recruitment and culture, exploring why top talent chooses long-term commitment over short-term stepping stones. Dr. Kachare highlights the importance of transparency and the "green flag" of a founder who prioritizes legacy over quick monetary gains. He urges associates to adopt an owner's mindset by evaluating equipment purchases through the lens of ROI and viewing board certification as a strategic investment in the practice's brand equity.

    36 min
  3. FEB 3

    The Business of Neuro-Aesthetics: Systematizing Gut Health Protocols, Integrating 'Internal' Diagnostics, and Structuring Clinical Performance Guarantees

    In this episode, host Don Adeesha sits down with Sonja Landtrachtinger, CEO of Beauty Zentrum Group, to address the frustration of the "non-responder" - the patient who undergoes treatments but fails to see results. Sonja argues that clinics typically blame the device when they should be blaming the biology, specifically the gut-skin connection. She details her business model based on neuroaesthetics, where she treats the nervous system, gut microbiome, and microcirculation to resolve internal bottlenecks before attempting to fix external beauty. Sonja breaks down her "Skin Proof Method," a system that combines AI skin analysis with dried blood microbiome testing to generate hyper-personalized treatment plans. She explains how this data-driven approach operationalizes the sales process, empowering her staff to sell complex, invisible treatments without feeling "pushy" because the AI provides the prescription. This rigorous diagnostic process allows her to offer a money-back guarantee on results - a rarity in the industry - while commanding prices between €800 and €2,500 for six-month transformation packages. Finally, Sonja explores the rising phenomenon of "Cortisol Face," explaining how chronic stress physically blocks aesthetic efficacy and how her clinic uses sensory cues like sound and lighting to shift patients out of fight-or-flight mode. She advocates for "Honest Aesthetics," sharing why she refuses service to clients seeking unrealistic, filter-based results, and urges clinic owners to trust their gut instinct to innovate, even when the industry says it cannot be done.

    41 min
  4. JAN 28

    The Business of Health Optimization: Scaling with White-Label IP, Packaging 'Outcome-Based' Longevity, and Building an Aspirational Brand

    In this episode, host Don Adeesha joins Carmen Stansbury, founder of Advanced Practice, to tackle the operational nightmare of adding a wellness division to an aesthetic clinic. Carmen explains that while the demand for longevity and metabolic health is exploding, building these clinical protocols from scratch often traps owners in a cycle of writing SOPs and hiring staff rather than generating revenue. She advocates for white-labeling clinical IP, a strategy that allows practices to bypass months of R&D and launch turnkey programs for weight loss, HRT, and gut health in as little as two weeks. Carmen distinguishes between "commoditized medicine", such as online prescription mills, and "high-value care," where clinicians act as health strategists analyzing a patient's holistic picture, including hormones and inflammation. She argues that to compete with digital providers, clinics must master "aspirational branding." Drawing on a "Gucci purse" analogy, she details how wellness clients purchase based on identity and lifestyle goals rather than medical necessity, urging owners to market vitality and optimization rather than just treating clinical symptoms. Finally, the conversation shifts to the future of the brick-and-mortar practice in 2026. Carmen outlines how physical locations can win by becoming "third spaces" that foster community and offer hands-on treatments, like hair restoration and red light therapy, that digital platforms cannot replicate. She shares her vision of moving from "hustle culture" to a "health ecosystem," utilizing automation to handle patient education and retention, effectively allowing owners to scale a profitable platform without burning out on fee-for-service churn.

    33 min
  5. JAN 20

    The Second Largest Expense: How to Turn Your Lease into a Profit Center and Avoid the 'Renewal Blind Spot' That Devalues Your Practice

    In this episode, host Don Adeesha joins Colin Carr, founder and CEO of CARR, to audit the second-largest expense on a practice's P&L: real estate. Colin challenges the assumption that rent is a fixed cost, arguing that a lease is actually a flexible financial instrument capable of funding renovations and boosting valuation. He exposes the hidden costs of the standard dual-agency model, explaining why unrepresented tenants frequently lose $200,000 to $400,000 by failing to understand landlord psychology and the "fear of loss" negotiation tactic. Colin breaks down the hidden opportunities in lease renewals, debunking the myth that loyal tenants aren't entitled to new concessions. He details how to reset escalating lease rates to market value and leverage long-term commitments to secure significant Tenant Improvement (TI) allowances, effectively getting the landlord to fund your next build-out. He also advises on the critical 12 to 18-month timeline required to maximize leverage, warning that starting too late forces owners into a position of weakness. Finally, Colin highlights the specific lease clauses that can instantly kill a private equity exit, specifically pointing to poorly written assignability rights. He contrasts old-school "gut feeling" site selection with modern patient heat-mapping data, allowing practices to identify "Blue Ocean" locations with high demand and low competition. He concludes by urging owners to stop treating real estate as a DIY project and to engage expert representation to protect their most valuable physical asset.

    39 min
  6. JAN 13

    Why Most Annual Goals Drift by March and How to Build an Execution Roadmap That Sticks

    In this episode, host Don Adeesha joins Kara McClanahan, VP of Operations for Genesis Lifestyle Medicine, to discuss why most aesthetic practice goals crumble by March. Kara introduces her "warts and all" operational audit, identifying the single most common blind spot owners ignore: staffing and performance management. She explains that this issue persists simply because it is uncomfortable to address, advocating for a "management by walkabout" approach where owners step out of the treatment room to truly understand the patient experience. Kara breaks down her methodology for "stress testing" growth goals, arguing that a revenue target without operational reality is just a wish. She illustrates this with the example of a plastic surgeon aiming for $500,000 in monthly fees without the necessary operating room capacity. She details how to "back into the math" by calculating the exact number of leads, consults, and clinical hours required based on conversion rates to ensure targets are statistically viable before communicating them to the team. Finally, Kara explores the Private Equity mindset, urging independent owners to adopt a non-emotional, analytical view of their business. She identifies the "silent metrics" that matter most, warning that payroll costs exceeding 30% of revenue signal a critical inefficiency. She concludes by advising on provider compensation, suggesting that incentives should drive behaviors like retention and reviews rather than just raw sales, aligning personal financial goals with the practice's long-term health.

    36 min
4.6
out of 5
26 Ratings

About

The Business of Aesthetics (BOA) podcast show continues to inspire and help our community of aesthetic doctors grow their practices. We bring outstanding leaders in Dermatology, Plastic Surgery, and Aesthetics together to not just achieve more but experience fulfillment in their practice.

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