How to Build Your Practice โ€” WellSourced Certified Practitioner
โ† Dashboard How to Build Your Practice
WellSourced Certified Practitioner
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WellSourced
โœฆ WellSourced Certified Practitioner

How to Build Your Practice

Getting started as a WellSourced Certified Peptide Educator
The most important thing: You don't need everything figured out before you start. Get your first three clients, do exceptional work, collect their feedback, and refine from there. Clarity comes from action, not planning.

Week 1 โ€” Foundation

Week 2 โ€” First Clients

Month 1โ€“2 โ€” Growth

Focus on 1โ€“2 channels done consistently rather than all channels done poorly.

Highest ROI
Personal Network (Referrals)
Your warmest leads are already around you. Most practitioners fill their first 10 slots from personal outreach alone.
How: Text 20 people who care about their health. "Hey, I just got certified as a peptide educator. Would you know anyone curious about this space?" No pitch. Just opening doors.
High ROI
Instagram / Threads
Visual platform with strong wellness communities. Reels and carousels about peptide education get organic reach.
How: 3 posts/week. Formats: "Did you know [peptide fact]?", FAQ carousels, behind-the-scenes of your learning. Link booking in bio. Don't make medical claims.
High ROI
LinkedIn
Underused by wellness practitioners. High-income professionals seeking performance optimization are active here.
How: Weekly posts on longevity, cognitive performance, GLP-1 science, or peptide research trends. Connect with functional medicine doctors, executive coaches, and health-focused HR leads.
Medium ROI
Short-Form Video (YouTube Shorts / TikTok)
Massive discovery potential. Educational content on peptides regularly goes viral in wellness communities.
How: 60-second explainers ("What is BPC-157?", "Peptides vs. HGH โ€” the difference explained"). Low production quality is fine. Consistency beats polish.
Medium ROI
Podcast Guesting
Established audiences who trust the host. One good episode can drive clients for months.
How: Pitch yourself to 10 longevity, biohacking, or wellness podcasts. Your angle: "WellSourced Certified Educator โ€” accessible, evidence-based guide to peptides." Many shows love expert guests.
Medium ROI
Functional Medicine Referrals
Physicians who don't have time to educate patients on peptides will refer to you. Warm, qualified leads.
How: Reach out to functional medicine clinics, integrative MDs, and longevity-focused physicians. Offer to share a brief overview of your services and discuss a referral relationship.

What to post and how to stay compliant. Your content should educate, not prescribe.

Content TypeExample TopicsCompliance Notes
Peptide explainers "What is BPC-157 and what does the research say?", "The difference between GH and GH secretagogues" Cite research, state FDA status, add educational disclaimer
Myth-busting "Peptides are just for bodybuilders โ€” myth", "5 misconceptions about semaglutide" Acknowledge both sides; include evidence
Process / education "What happens in a peptide education session", "Why I became a WellSourced Certified Educator" Personal story โ€” minimal compliance risk
Client stories (with permission) "My client came in skeptical about peptides โ€” here's what they learned" Focus on learning outcomes, not health outcomes. No medical claims.
Research updates "New study on GLP-1s and cardiovascular outcomes", "What the CARE-HF trial means for TB4" Summarize findings accurately; add "more research needed" context
FAQs "Top 5 questions about peptide sourcing", "Is [peptide] right for me? How to decide" Answer educationally; always end with "consult your physician"

Your network is your net worth. A small, trusted referral network is worth more than 10,000 Instagram followers.

This keeps you legal, ethical, and protected. Review before you launch.

โš ๏ธ Critical โ€” Before You See Clients
  • Never diagnose, prescribe, or recommend specific treatments โ€” you are an educator, not a clinician
  • Use the Client Intake Form with its consent and disclaimer section on every new client
  • State clearly in all client communications that your services are "educational, not medical advice"
  • Do not make FDA efficacy claims for non-approved research compounds
  • Do not represent peptides as "safe" without qualifying context (safety depends on sourcing, individual health, etc.)
๐Ÿ”ต Marketing Compliance
  • Don't imply your services can treat, cure, or prevent any disease or condition
  • Testimonials must not include medical claims โ€” keep to learning outcomes
  • If using "before and after" content, ensure it's about education (knowledge, clarity) not health outcomes
  • FTC disclosure: if you recommend any products with affiliate links, disclose the relationship
  • Don't use titles like "Dr." or claim licensure you don't have
๐ŸŸข Recommended Best Practices
  • Consider professional liability insurance (wellness educators โ€” available from companies like PHLY, Philadelphia Insurance)
  • Keep client records (intake forms, session notes) for at least 3 years
  • Review WellSourced's research library updates quarterly โ€” the science moves fast
  • Have a referral list of functional medicine physicians you trust for clients who need clinical care