
Jeremy on Marketing Podcast Ep67 | Febrary Pep Talk
It's the first week of March. You open your revenue dashboard, and February looks soft.
And every year, clinic owners send the same message: "Jeremy, what's going on? New Year's resolution people are everywhere, but February revenue was low."
Jeremy's response is always the same:
How many days were you actually open?
Because February is short. Fewer working days often explains the entire dip.
๐ Episode Topics- Why February often "underperforms" on paper
- The difference between lagging vs leading indicators
- How to compare months correctly (hint: per-day metrics)
- The biggest mistake owners make when February looks down
- How to think like a CEO instead of reacting emotionally
Jeremy defines a lagging indicator as a metric that reflects past activity.
Revenue is not telling you what's happening right now. It's reflecting:
- Leads from the last 30โ60 days
- Conversions from January
- Marketing decisions made back in Q4
So when February revenue dips, most of the time nothing is "broken." You're just looking in the rearview mirror.
โ What to Watch Instead: Leading IndicatorsIf you want to know how healthy your clinic is, look at what's happening now:
- Leads in the last 7 days vs your weekly average
- Speed-to-lead (how fast you respond)
- Eval-to-package conversion over the last 30 days
- Total reach-outs and follow-up activity
Revenue is the scoreboard. Activity is the game.
๐ The Simple Math of a Short MonthIf you compare January to February without accounting for working days, you're setting yourself up to spiral.
Example from the episode:
- If your clinic averages $6,000 per working day
- And February has 2 fewer working days
- That's $12,000 "missing" with no real change in performance
In many regions, February also includes travel, school breaks, weather disruptions, and cancellations, which magnify the perception of a "down month."
๐ซ The Real Danger: OvercorrectingJeremy's biggest warning is that February being down isn't the problem.
The problem is what owners do next.
When clinic owners panic, they often:
- Pull ad spend
- Cut marketing
- Start discounting
- Tighten up in the wrong places
Do not make permanent decisions based on temporary data.
Marketing is a long game. If you pull marketing because of a short month, you create a worse March, then panic again, then spiral.
๐งฑ Emotional Volatility Is Part of OwnershipOwning a clinic is emotionally volatile.
One week you feel unstoppable. The next week you're googling "Is my PT market saturated?"
The goal isn't to be numb. It's to be steady.
Don't let one month define your confidence.
๐ Think Quarterly, Not MonthlyJeremy shares he barely looks at months anymore. He tracks on a quarterly basis.
Monthly numbers can swing heavily, especially if you sell packages and collect cash in bursts while fulfilling later.
Use monthly data only to confirm you're still on track for your quarter.
โ The TakeawayIf your clinic is fundamentally sound:
- Leads are coming in
- Follow-up is aggressive and consistent
- Conversions are strong
- Marketing is running
Then February is just February.
The clinics that win don't freak out in February.
They build in February.
๐ฅ Final ReminderTake a breath.
Check your daily numbers.
Stop staring at the monthly dashboard.
Go sell five more packages. You'll feel better immediately.
