
Nursing builds a number of valuable skills, including practical judgment and patient care experience. These skills stay with a person well beyond the bedside.
Nurses are recognizing this more than ever and are now transitioning into consulting. They’re building practices to teach others what their clinical careers have given them.
Going from clinical nursing to consulting practice may sound overwhelming. But it’s navigable and smooth if you know what you should focus on.
What Nurse Consulting Involves
The nurse consulting field is too broad, and an aspiring nurse must know what it actually encompasses. Legal nursing is an area in which nurses review medical records and assess insurance contexts. It is one of the most established practice areas.
Similarly, experienced nurses also build practices around case management consulting, risk management, policy development, and healthcare organization advisory work.
So what is the right area? It comes down to your clinical background and where your experience can give you credibility. Your journey will be more effective if you start with a clear picture of your niche.
The Business Side Is as Important as the Clinical Side
Most nurses underestimate this difference. Clinical expertise is no doubt important, but running a practice requires business skills that training doesn’t usually cover.
You must know how to price your service, structure client engagement, and manage invoicing and contracts. You should know the complexities of the administrative side of your practice so you fully know what’s going on.
You can work with a business mentor (or take courses) during the early stage of building. It will help you see business issues before they even appear.
Building Credibility in Your Chosen Area
People who hire a consultant usually need proven expertise in a specified area, and that credibility takes effort.
Always get relevant certifications as they’ll strengthen your position. The Legal Nurse Consultant Certified credential carries significant weight with attorneys. Similarly, you can also publish articles and speak at relevant events to build your authority.
Networking within your target client community is also important. Attorneys, insurance professionals, and healthcare administrators are all potential clients, as they would regularly need your expertise.
Doing all that puts you in proximity to the people who need what you offer.
Managing the Transition from Employment to Practice
If you’re a nurse thinking about making this leap, you shouldn’t think about doing it overnight. You may already be working in a nursing role, and building a consulting practice on the side will take time and effort. You’ll first have to develop your client base and refine your service offering before you finally start generating revenue.
But when your consulting income is consistent enough to support all your needs, you can then make a full transition. Of course, the situation looks different for every nurse. But having a clear financial threshold in mind from the beginning gives your transition a concrete goal to work towards.
If you want to make your nurse consulting practice successful, you need to earn clinical credibility and business acumen in parallel. Treat both the consulting and clinical practice with the same rigor, and you’ll grow by leaps and bounds.