Two Miles Away

Cindy

Two Miles Away is for solo massage therapists who are tired of posting generic wellness content and getting nothing back. Hosted by Cindy Slack - licensed massage therapist of 27 years and founder of Bodywork Media. Each episode is under 20 minutes and built around one idea: your location is your biggest marketing advantage. No influencer tactics. No viral chasing. Just practical, local-first strategies for filling your books with the clients who are already two miles away and looking for exactly what you do.

Episodes

  1. 1d ago

    TWO MILES AWAY | Episode 4: The PLACE Formula

    You've been using this formula since episode one. You just didn't know it had a name. If the last thing you posted on Instagram could've been posted by a massage therapist in Ohio, Oregon, or Florida... and nobody would know the difference... this episode is for you. Today I'm finally naming the thing I've been teaching you in pieces this whole show: PLACE. What PLACE Actually Stands For Profession, Location, Activity, Complaint, Emotion. Five ingredients. Without two or more of these, your content goes generic. It goes invisible. It becomes background noise. Here's why this matters so much for solo MTs specifically: we're not trying to go viral. We're not trying to reach someone in another state, another time zone. We're trying to reach one specific kind of person, doing one specific kind of thing, feeling one specific kind of way, within about two miles of our table. PLACE is the formula that makes sure your content is actually built to do that job (instead of just being content for content's sake). Breaking Down Each Letter P is for Profession and this is the client's profession, not yours. A nurse on her feet twelve hours a shift. A hairstylist hunched over a chair all day. A teacher bending down to kid-height forty times a day. Naming it makes the reader feel like you wrote the caption specifically for them, before they even get to the rest of it. L is for Location the one everyone skips because it feels too obvious. Except it's the single highest-leverage thing you can do. Naming your actual neighborhood is what gets you in front of someone searching "massage near me" right now, today, in pain, ready to book. (This is exactly what happened with Hillary's story back in episode one — her reel surfaced directly on her Google Business Profile because of how specifically she tied her content to her location. That wasn't luck. That was Location, done on purpose.) A is for Activity what is this person physically doing in their life that's causing them to need you? A runner. A new parent lifting a car seat forty times a day. A desk worker sitting nine hours straight. Activity turns "I do massage" into "I help people who [specific physical thing] feel human again." C is for Complaint the actual physical thing bothering them. Not "stress." Not "tension." Low back pain after long drives. Tight shoulders from breastfeeding. Headaches from jaw clenching. Vague complaints get vague attention. Specific complaints get oh my god, yes, that's me attention. E is for Emotion how they feel emotionally around the complaint. Frustrated nothing's worked. Embarrassed they're "too young" to feel this beat up. Relieved the second they get on the table. Emotion is what makes content feel human instead of an ad. Put all five together and instead of "Massage therapy offers many benefits," you get something like: "To the mom in [your neighborhood] who's been rocking a baby to sleep for six months straight and just realized her shoulder hasn't felt normal since... I see you. Let's fix that."That's not a caption. That's a conversation with one specific person. And PLACE isn't a one-time content idea, it's a lens. Every caption, every reel, every carousel runs through this filter from now on. This Week's One Thing Take whatever you already have scheduled to post next. Don't create something new, just grab what's sitting there. Run it through PLACE: Profession, Location, Activity, Complaint, Emotion. See which ones are missing. Fill them in. Post it and see what happens. Loved this episode? Comment TWOMILES on this week's post and I'll get you the cheat-sheet version. Next week: something I haven't talked about yet on this show. Make sure you're subscribed wherever you're listening. Find me on Instagram: @massage_marketing_done_for_you

  2. 3d ago

    TWO MILES AWAY | Episode 3: Your Location Is Your Niche

    TWO MILES AWAY | Episode 3: Your Location Is Your Niche Most massage therapists are being told to niche down by specialty - pick a modality, pick a client type, build your whole identity around it. But what if you already have a niche and just aren't using it? In this episode, Cindy makes the case that your location is your niche. Mainstream marketing advice is built for businesses that scale nationally, and that's not us. Solo MTs are competing for the attention of people within a five-mile radius, and most of them are already searching "massage near me." The client who's about to book with you isn't in another state... they're two miles away. What's in this episode: Why "niche down by specialty" advice doesn't actually apply to solo massage therapistsThe difference between competing globally vs. getting found locallyWhy your zip code might be the most powerful niche you already haveHow Google rewards specificity of place (sometimes more than service type)Why local content has dramatically less competition than broad wellness contentA real-world example of a massage therapist with great content who was completely unfindable by location, and what it cost herTip for This Week: Pull up your most recent social post or your Instagram bio and ask yourself: if a potential client saw this with zero context, would they know where you are? Not your website, not your booking link... the post itself. If the answer is no, that's your next fix. Add your city, your neighborhood, a local landmark, something that tells the algorithm and the human reading it exactly where you are. Find me on Instagram: @massage_marketing_done_for_you

About

Two Miles Away is for solo massage therapists who are tired of posting generic wellness content and getting nothing back. Hosted by Cindy Slack - licensed massage therapist of 27 years and founder of Bodywork Media. Each episode is under 20 minutes and built around one idea: your location is your biggest marketing advantage. No influencer tactics. No viral chasing. Just practical, local-first strategies for filling your books with the clients who are already two miles away and looking for exactly what you do.