Are your chiropractic systems solid on paper but still not getting results? In this episode, we break down why motivation, not tools is the missing link in most practices. This deep dive explores the concept of “co-pilot foundations”—a leadership framework that helps chiropractors recruit, align, and retain high-performing team members who truly take ownership of the practice. You’ll learn how to craft a clear, memorable mission statement, create a compelling vision your entire team buys into, and operationalize both so they don’t become forgotten wall art. We also unpack real chiropractic mission examples, practical team exercises, and daily leadership habits that turn overwhelmed solo practitioners into confident leaders flying alongside motivated co-pilots. If you’re tired of resistance, staff burnout, and carrying everything yourself, this episode gives you a proven path forward.
What You’ll Learn in This Episode:
Key Takeaway:
Your practice doesn’t stall because you lack talent or tools—it stalls when your team lacks alignment, ownership, and belief. When your mission and vision are lived daily, motivation replaces resistance and progress accelerates.
Action Steps:
Schedule a dedicated team session this week to:
Consistency, not intensity, is what makes this work.
🔹 Book a free, no-obligation strategy call with Dr. George Birnbach and the Five Star Management team to implement these concepts in your practice: https://myfivestar.com/work-with-us/
🔹 Subscribe to The Successful Chiro for more focused leadership, growth, and systems insights
🔹 Share this episode with your team and start the mission & vision conversation together
Welcome to the Chiropractic Deep Dive, a critical part of the Successful Chiro Podcast. It's great to be back. It is, and you know, if you are running a practice, you know that feeling, right? The daily grind, it can sometimes feel less like you're flying and more like you're, I don't know, swimming through trickle.
Oh, that's the perfect way to put it. And that feeling, that resistance is exactly what we're here to eliminate today. Absolutely. This deep dive is brought to you by Five Star Management, a chiropractic consulting company that's really dedicated to helping leaders like you achieve your practice dreams.
We believe that, uh, lasting growth, it starts with a motivational core. That's exactly why our mission today is to dig into the blueprints laid out by Dr. Noel Lloyd in his recent Zoom session on what he calls co-pilot foundations, right? This isn't just theory, it's a system designed to help you, the busy chiropractor, build that internal framework you need to recruit, and maybe more importantly, retain high performing team members.
And we've seen this core problem play out thousands of times. You are an incredible chiropractor. You've got huge patient volume, maybe even bigger dreams, but you're still just one person. You're doing it all. You're handling the management, the complex training, the marketing, all while adjusting patients all day long.
And the result, it's that growing list, isn't it? That list of critical items that just never get done. The things that actually move your practice forward, and that list leads to frustration and eventually. It leads to discouragement. That's the symptom we're going after. Exactly. Absolutely. So, Dr. Lloyd's whole goal here is to turn those overwhelmed solo practitioners into leaders who have true co-pilots flying alongside them, sharing the burden, sharing the burden, and really driving specific projects forward.
Okay. Let's unpack that term co-pilot, because it's much more than just, you know, a fancy word for an employee. What separates a team member? From a true copilot, I mean, a copilot is someone who truly understands a specific project, a piece of the practice operations. Maybe it's community outreach, maybe it's the new patient flow, right?
And they are actively, almost autonomously flying that project with the doctor. They have real ownership. So the goal isn't just filling a role. It's about recruiting the human being into the entire identity of the practice. Dr. Lloyd wants us recruiting team members to the practice's, mission, vision, purpose, goals, and process.
Wow. Yeah, it's comprehensive. It sounds like a lot. It has to be, and the way we measure success here is actually pretty straightforward. Dr. Lloyd set two clear yardstick. First, each team member knows the practice mission and has their heart invested in it, not just their head, their heart, exactly. And second, they know the practice vision and the specific goals, and they know exactly how their daily tasks help get all that important stuff done.
You know, here's the foundational insight from Dr. Lloyd that just stopped the entire zoom cold for me. He said, great tools, great systems, and even great training are absolutely useless without motivation. It's the truth of his wet cement analogy. Mm-hmm. If that motivation is missing, even simple tasks feel like you're running through wet cement.
You put in a massive amount of effort, but you get almost no forward movement. So when a doctor misses this step, they hire for skills, but they ignore that motivational core. What's the first practical symptom they usually see in their staff beyond just slowness? It's that moment of resistance, that subtle pushback you get when you introduce a new system or a new piece of equipment.
Okay. If a team member is motivated by the core mission. They see that new system as a tool to advance the purpose. If they're not, they just see it as an obstacle, an administrative burden, or just more work. And that resistance stalls the entire practice completely. That makes perfect sense. The systems aren't the problem.
The lack of alignment is, so the first critical action item is writing a practice mission statement that everyone can genuinely support. Exactly. The mission answers, the most fundamental questions. Yeah. What we do and why we even bother it defines the core function of the practice. Okay. Before we jump into the examples, what are the guardrails Dr.
Lloyd put in place? Because a poorly written mission statement can sometimes be worse than having none at all. Yeah, it can feel cynical. He laid out five, uh, indispensable guidelines. Let's start with the one that challenges most chiropractors, originality. Okay. You and your team have to write it. You cannot copy it from the clinic down the street.
It has to involve everyone full-time and part-time staff to make sure there's genuine ownership. That feels like a practical hurdle though. Is it realistic for a busy chiro to carve out time to write a mission with every single staff member? You'd say it's non-negotiable. Because without that buy-in, you've written your mission, not their mission.
The doctor can draft it. Sure. But the refinement, the final phrasing, that has to be a collective effort. If they don't feel like they helped birth it, they won't defend it. You got it. Okay. Point two, foundational. This means it has to speak to the core function of chiropractic care, right. Aligning with the philosophy.
Precisely. It can't be about increasing profit or buying some new gadget. It has to be rooted in the patient's benefit and the purpose of the adjustment itself. Third staff connected and authentic. How do we know if it's actually authentic? Authenticity is known when the practice lives consistent with the mission.
If your mission says you prioritize family wellness, but you're rushing every pediatric adjustment, the team knows it's a lie. They know it's a lie. It's the bridge between your words and your daily behavior. That's where the rubber meets the road. Okay, next is maybe the most practical one. Memorable. Dr.
Lloyd set a hard limit, 20 words or less. Why so short? Because if it's long, it's forgotten. If they have to look it up, they don't own it. The greatest missions are like slogans of belief. They have to be short enough to pass the final ultimate test, which is number five. Wearable. Ah, the ultimate test of pride.
Is it short enough to put on a t-shirt? And would your team actually wear that t-shirt in public? Exactly. If the team is embarrassed by it or if it needs a whole paragraph to explain, it just fails. It connects right back to that copilot ownership and pride. A copilot is proud of where they fly. To really drive this home,
Dr. Lloyd referenced some really powerful missions from outside our world. I mean, think about Google's mission, just 11 words to organize the world's information and make it universally acceptable and useful. It's an instruction manual and a purpose all in one. It is. And compare that to Microsoft, to empower every person and every organization on the planet to achieve more.
Who wouldn't want to be recruited to that? It's massive, but it's simple. My personal favorite was the coffee company example. To inspire and nurture the human spirit, one person, one cup, and one neighborhood at a time. That's beautiful. It tells the barista exactly how to treat the customer. If a coffee company can do that, a chiropractor whose work literally impacts nerve flow and quality of life certainly can, and the participants jumped right in with fantastic real world examples.
Let's talk about a few that passed that 20 word test, a participant, shared one: we help people do what they love pain-free with safe and effective Chiropractic care. What makes that so strong is how quickly it connects the clinical action, the safe and effective care with the emotional purpose.
Mm-hmm. Helping people do what they love. It's not just about removing pain, it's about restoring joy. Exactly. Another participant, shared one they developed as a team to empower families with chiropractic care so that they can live extraordinary lives. Short, emotional, powerful. I bet his team wanted those t-shirts.
No doubt. And then a participant offered a really foundational one to partner with each family in our community to live healthy lives without the use of drugs and surgery. In 19 words, it defines their whole philosophy. Okay, so these missions are great, but here's where the failure point usually happens. You hang it on the wall, you feel great for a week, and then.
It's forgotten. It becomes wallpaper. How do you move this from a framed document to daily action? This is where we have to bring in Vern Hamish's concept, the Rockefeller Habits. The core idea is simple. Leaders should repeat the vision and mission so often that the team actually starts to mock them.
Wait, mocking, that sounds counterproductive. That's the beauty of it. The deeper meaning is that repetition isn't a marketing exercise, it's a leadership responsibility. When the team can joke about the mission, it means they know it by heart. Ah, I see. It's become part of the culture. It's cultural background noise in the best possible way.
Yeah. The leader is making sure the big picture doesn't get lost in the day-to-day chaos, because in our industry, fighting fires and handling urgent details. It so easily displaces the long-term vision. Exactly. Consistency beats intensity every single time. If you only pull out the mission statement once a quarter, you're just reminding your team of the thing they forgot, and that just adds to the frustration.
One of the participants, admitted that she said they had a beautiful mission statement but, they just weren't using it, so how do we operationalize it? A participant gave a brilliant example of tying their mission right into their SOPs, right? Her practice's mission included the phrase provide extraordinary chiropractic care, and she talked about their big wow VIP greeting for new patients.
The purpose of that greeting isn't just to be friendly, it's a measurable execution of their mission. The SOP for the front desk is tied directly to delivering that extraordinary experience. That linkage is phenomenal. It gives the daily checklist a purpose beyond just checking them in. And Dr. Lloyd offered an even simpler application for the daily huddle.
Instead of just reading the mission. Leaders should ask a team member, to explain what the mission looks like with a specific patient story. So like, explain what to empower families. To live extraordinary lives actually looks like it looks like Colleen and her baby Opal. Exactly. That transforms the abstract concept into a shared victory and injects immediate motivation into the team.
If they can't link the mission to a real patient, then it hasn't been embedded yet. Okay, so that covers the mission. What we do now, we have to transition to the vision. Vision answers the question. What does it look like when we're successfully doing what our mission talks about? The vision is the attractive, detailed picture of the future.
It has to pull you and your co-pilots toward it, you know, make the hard work feel worthwhile, and Dr. Lloyd gave specific instructions for this. It needs to be written in the first person, present time as if it's already happening. And crucially, it has to describe what the perfect practice looks like on a specific day.
You need tangible details. The full parking lot, the perfect patient flow. All the rooms are full. The energy in the reception area. Yeah. Use positive emotions and great numbers. Dr. Lloyd loves the vision of seeing a hundred patient visits on a busy day. Use benchmarks that are exciting and the scenes have to be attractive to everyone, not just the doctor's dream of buying a boat.
It has to appeal to the doctor, the associates, the staff, and even the patients. Once again, as for input from the entire team, if they can't see themselves in that attractive future, it's just the doctor's goal, not a shared vision. The vision section on the Zoom got really energetic that participants shared these fantastic snapshots.
They really did. One Snapshot was this rich, busy scene, two patients checking in and out every chiro, adjusting four patients on therapy tables. But his favorite part, I remember this one was. Patients preaching their testimony to other patients. That's the highest form of endorsement right there. Then they talked about standing room only SRO in the reception area with people happily lining up down the hall.
They emphasized that the line means excellence, not bad service. People want to be there. They're excited to wait. I loved another contribution, which was seeing the whole family in the office, babies and grandparents. That one image tells you everything about community trust and referrals. And they shared that in their perfect office, patients are engaging with each other and it is loud.
Yes, Dr. Lloyd loved that. He said he prefers a loud practice to a quiet, serious one. It should sound like a party, a community center for healing. That's such a great insight into culture. If it's too serious, the energy is low. A participant, drove that point home. She said if the team is laughing and having fun while they work, they will stay.
That's the ultimate retention tool. It leads to less churn, fewer headaches for the doctor. That's the payoff. It stops the vision from feeling like goody goody corporate jargon and starts feeling like this is the amazing place we're building together. So once you have this vision, how do you use it? Is it the same as the mission?
Pretty similar. You read it almost as frequently. But, leaders also need to use it in the moment. That's the key strategy. Dr. Lloyd highlighted. When the practice is running perfectly, the parking lot is full, the flow is smooth, the team is laughing. You point it out to a co-pilot, you just step back and say, look around.
This is what we visualized on paper. This is the vision and action. Are you having fun? And that reinforces the vision in real time. It cements their ownership in that success. Dr. Lloyd shared that at Five Star Management, they review their mission and vision and immediately illustrated with specific client stories as illustrated by what clients we know we like and we love.
It ties their motivation directly to the results they create for you, the chiropractor. This whole deep dive is about stopping that cycle of frustration, that growing list of undone items, and the solution is creating that strong motivational foundation. So your team wants to do the work, not because they have to, but because they believe in the future you're building.
So what does this all mean for you? The chiropractor listening right now? The immediate practical solution from the Zoom call is a mandated team exercise. A team exercise to construct the mission. Write the vision, share testimonies.
Lead your team through it this week. This is the action step you need to take. And as you move forward with that, here's a final provocative thought for you to consider. The value of your mission is best illustrated by the results of your patients. Hmm. How many patient success stories do you have ready right now to instantly illustrate your team's mission and vision?
How often are you asking your team members to share those stories? That constant testimony is what fuels motivation. That's it. That's the real takeaway. Stop running through, let cement and start flying with motivated copilots. If you're ready to take the next step, remember this deep dive was brought to you by Five Star Management and we really encourage you to book a free no obligation call with Dr.
George Birnbach. He and the team can help you transform these concepts into massive growth. You can find the link right there in the show notes, and please make sure you subscribe to the chiropractic deep dive for more targeted tips and guidance. Until next time, keep digging deep into your practice potential.
We'll catch you on the next deep dive journey.