Written By The Art Of Business Content Team
Social media is one of the most powerful tools therapists have for connection and visibility. But without the right structure, even the most well-meaning posts can fall flat. From unclear CTAs (Call To Action) to inconsistent posting, we’ve seen it all.
Here are 10 common therapy practice marketing mistakes—and the social media tips for therapists that will help you fix them today using a strong private practice social media strategy.
You’re not just sharing quotes—you’re building a brand. Without structure, consistency suffers, and your content won’t support your growth goals.
Fix: Create a monthly content calendar based on 2-3 goals—visibility, education, conversion. Tools like ClickUp help streamline your process.
Set theme days to guide your creation process. For example: Monday = Mindset, Wednesday = FAQ, Friday = Promo. This keeps your content flow simple and organized
Your niche is your power.
Fix: Speak to a specific audience—”millennial women managing anxiety” or “BIPOC parents seeking trauma recovery”. Strong niches make for stronger messaging in your private practice social media strategy.
Check for language alignment. The words you use should mirror how your ideal client speaks. Use client language from consult calls to inform captions and headlines
Video boosts visibility, increases trust, and builds authority. Yet many therapists feel awkward on camera.
Fix: Start small with Stories, Reels, or pre-recorded video tips. Bonus: you don’t need to dance. Just be you.
Use captioned videos. Most viewers scroll with sound off—tools like CapCut or Instagram’s built-in captions can help you increase accessibility
You can’t improve what you don’t measure.
Fix: Instagram Insights and Pinterest Analytics help determine what content performs best. Schedule a monthly review.
Track saves and shares. They’re a stronger sign of value than likes. Use this insight to plan future content.
Content that teaches too much, too fast can overwhelm your audience.
Fix: Alternate tips with storytelling. Frame psychoeducation in a relatable way. Remember: you’re not writing a textbook.
Try carousel posts. Use 3–5 slides to break down content into digestible steps: “What is it?” → “Why it matters” → “How to respond.”
Random colours and inconsistent visuals erode trust.
Fix: Use Canva Pro to create 3-4 templates for posts. Keep colours, fonts, and design consistent across platforms.
Audit your Instagram grid every 2 weeks. Is it clear what you offer and who you help? Make sure your visuals reinforce your niche.
Clinical copy often comes off cold.
Fix: Warm up your tone. Speak how you would in-session—gentle, real, clear. Use emojis where appropriate.
Use contractions and storytelling language. For example, instead of “Clients often experience…” say “Most people I work with tell me…”
Posting is just step one. Responding, interacting, and sharing make up the rest.
Fix: Schedule 15 minutes a day for comments, DMs, polls, or Story reactions.
Use question boxes weekly. Ask things like: “What’s the hardest part about starting therapy?” to spark real engagement and content ideas.
Value is great—but without action, your content stops short.
Fix: Use direct, conversational calls to action:
Vary CTA placement. Place it in the first line and the last—some users only read intros, while others scroll straight to the bottom. Tools like ManyChat can help you capture and respond to these touchpoints automatically, ensuring no opportunity is missed.
Many therapists abandon social media due to burnout or confusion.
Fix: Simplify. Commit to one post a week. Repurpose from your blog or email content. Done is better than perfect.
Create a “forever post” folder. These are timeless, evergreen content pieces (FAQs, values, common myths) you can reuse every 1–2 months.
Need support? Book a strategy session and build a social system that works—or kickstart your content with our Social in a Day intensive: a done-for-you strategy and content package, created in just one day.
These common myths can sabotage your momentum. The right private practice social media strategy clears away that noise.
Let’s recap a sustainable system that aligns with these social media tips for therapists:
Plan your content around your availability. Promote open slots or new offerings with urgency only when they’re truly available. This respects both ethics and transparency.
This system works whether you’re posting once a week or daily—it scales with your capacity.
One verified example comes from our client Sana Psychological, a trauma-focused therapy practice based in Alberta. After working with TAOB to refine their brand and implement a personalized private practice social media strategy, they achieved:
Our collaboration included:
When they came to TAOB, they were averaging around 4 new clients per month. With a values-aligned brand, optimized content, and clear calls to action, they’re now consistently seeing up to 16 new client inquiries per week.
Their success proves that when strategy is personalized, consistent, and aligned with your purpose, growth follows naturally. Social media works best when it works with your mission—not against it.
You became a therapist to create meaningful change—not to chase algorithms, trends, or engagement for the sake of it. But that doesn’t mean you should stay silent online. Your voice matters, and social media—when guided by a solid strategy—can be a powerful extension of your therapeutic mission.
By avoiding the most common therapy practice marketing mistakes and applying smart, personalized social media tips for therapists, you position your brand as trusted, consistent, and values-driven. You move from feeling scattered to feeling strategic. From invisible to impactful.
And best of all? You get to build a practice that attracts the right clients—those who are already aligned with your message before they ever contact you.
If you’re ready to create content that connects, builds community, and supports real growth—without burning yourself out—we’re here to help.
Book a free call with our team, and start building your private practice social media strategy.
Your message is too important to stay hidden. Let’s help you share it—ethically, clearly, and confidently.