Stop Guessing. Start Thinking.

The 6 principles that separate practitioners who get results from those who just follow protocols and hope for the best.

You can have all the certifications in the world.

You can run every test. Stock your shelves with the best supplements. Memorize every protocol.

But if you don't know how to actually think through a case? You're guessing. And guessing doesn't get results.

Here's what I've learned after 20+ years in practice and hundreds of cases that humbled me, surprised me, and taught me something new:

The best clinicians aren't the ones who know the most. They're the ones who think the best.

They ask better questions. They look past the obvious answer. They treat systems, not symptoms. And they're willing to admit when they got it wrong - so they can get it right.

I've distilled what I've learned into six principles. They're not protocols. They're not shortcuts. They're the mindset shifts that changed how I practice and they can change how you practice too.

Send Me the 6 Principles!

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What's Inside:

  • Principle #1: Why the obvious answer is almost always wrong and what to ask instead
  • Principle #2: Where the most important information is hiding (hint: it's not in the chief complaint)
  • Principle #3: How to listen to your patient without letting their theory drive your thinking
  • Principle #4: Why protocols fail and what to do instead
  • Principle #5: The counterintuitive skill of knowing when to stop intervening
  • Principle #6: The one quality that separates good clinicians from great ones
Ronda Nelson Branding

Hey, I'm Ronda Nelson.

I'm a clinical practitioner, herbal medicine nerd, and the host of The Clinical Entrepreneur podcast. I've been in practice for over 20 years - and I've spent a good chunk of that time teaching practitioners how to get better results, both clinically and financially.

I created this guide because I've seen too many smart, well-trained practitioners stay stuck - not because they don't know enough, but because they don't know how to think through a case. That's what this is for.

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