OffIce said:
I book on the hour, time is money, you waste to much time if you have half an hour or even fifteen minutes in between. I over service my clients and this can all be done within the hour...people also feel special if someone else is waiting for you...the whole busy therapist thing!!
Might be just me, but I am resentful if I pay for an hour, and feel like I am rushed, with only 50 minutes or so hands-on. Especially if I am having a chronic pain issue and need to spend a couple minutes discussing the situation and I feel like the therapist is trying to hurry up and get me on the table because he only has 60 minutes on the dot to get me in, out, linens changed and ready for the next.
Also, I don't feel "special" if the next client is on my heels when I've booked an hour and barely been there an hour. I just feel stressed and rushed, and feel like I'm inconveniencing the therapist by expecting what I've paid for.
If I'm really only paying for 30-45 minutes, that would be a different story.
I don't think anyone who goes to a chain or spa where they book on the hour, every hour, comes away feeling "over serviced."
In my own practice, I allow 90 minutes for a 60 minute session. With assessment and a quick chat, a 58-60 minute massage, and giving them a couple of minutes to re-orient to the "real world," I usually have 10-15 minutes "downtime" before the next client, which I use to change sheets, drink some water, make notes, check email and maybe return a phone call. I often feel just a tad rushed trying to make sure I am simply waiting when the next person walks in the door, so they have my full attention.
If assessment takes longer, or if the client needs something new addressed in session, things occasionally end up feeling back-to-back, which is not the way I like to operate. However, leaving more time than that gives me odd start/stop times, or makes a 4 massage day = nearly 8 hours in the office, not counting lunch. bleh.