Being a “General Practitioner” Advisor is a Bad Career Choice

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Many of the advisors I coach and mentor are familiar with how I refer to doctors as the ideal business model.

It’s because doctors:

  • Never have to chase business; their patients come to them.
  • Are problem-centric, not solution-centric and never have to sell anything.
  • Have an endless supply of inbound leads.

But within the doctor-patient model there’s a finer distinction – it’s the difference between general practitioners (GPs) and specialists.

A GP is an all-arounder in terms of expertise.

They deal with common, everyday issues faced by the general public, and 90% of the time those issues can be solved with generic, readily available over-the-counter solutions.

That’s why general practitioners have standard fees and you have direct access to them.

But when someone has a problem that is more nuanced and requires in-depth knowledge and focus, what happens?

They go see a specialist.

A specialist is a different doctor altogether.