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Your Quick Guide to: Health Coach Careers and Job Opportunities

I believe it more and more every day: health coaching will play a critical role in the future of medicine and the reinvention of healthcare—and I’m not alone in that belief. Health coaching is playing a critical role in the future of medicine and the reinvention of healthcare. Health coaching is now a $6 billion market.

Still, it’s a relatively new industry, and I often get questions about the career prospects for a health coach. Read on to get answers to your questions and learn more about the job opportunities available for health coaches.  


What Are the Potential Job Opportunities for Health Coaches?

The great news about working in an emerging field like health coaching is you have a lot of flexibility to design a career that leverages your past experience, builds on your individual strengths, and fits your lifestyle.

In fact, there are more ways to configure your career than we can cover here, so let’s focus on three of the most common paths that health coaches take in building a rewarding and meaningful career: full-time employment, collaboration with clinicians, and private practice.

1. Full-Time Employment

Health coach speaking with client

Health coaches are employed in a variety of settings:

  • Private clinics like my clinic, the California Center for Functional Medicine (CCFM)
  • Institutional clinics like the Mayo Clinic and the Cleveland Clinic
  • Wellness programs in larger corporations (Fitbit, Google, Zappos, Motley Fool, etc.)
  • Primary care groups like Iora Health
  • Health and wellness companies, including health coaching companies

They’re employed by schools that are teaching health coaching or universities that have health coaching programs. They’re employed increasingly by corporations. Close to 46 percent of businesses offer wellness programs, many of which employ health coaches. (1)  

A number of full-time opportunities are out there. But at the same time, it’s important to understand that if you graduate from any health coach program, whether that’s the ADAPT Health Coach Training Program or another program, the job market for employment as a health coach is still growing, and that’s why many coaches end up working in another career path: private practice

2. Private Practice

Many coaches are drawn to the idea of being their own boss, setting their own hours, and focusing on a specific type of clientele. This path is a great choice for someone with an entrepreneurial spirit or some past experience with managing a business. It’s a worthy goal for any health coach. Building a successful business can be a challenging and sometimes humbling endeavor. But like other achievements in your life, your hard work reaps the rewards. 

While building up to a full private practice, many health coaches follow a career path that includes some combination of private practice and employment or collaboration with a clinic. For example, a health coach might take on private clients and also do some work with a Functional Medicine practitioner. That hybrid career path is more typical for what things might look like as a new or even seasoned health coach. That’s why it’s so essential for a health coach training program to offer guidance in professional development and tips on how to build up a practice and collaborate with practitioners.

Health coach speaking with doctor

3. Partnering with Clinics and Practitioners

Health coaches and clinicians work together in a couple of ways (and with different clinicians, it works differently). In some cases, the health coach does the initial intake with the patient. The health coach gets to know the patient, and the patient gets comfortable with the health coach. The clinician would handle the clinical workup and the lab testing, and the health coach may or may not be present for that. 

Then, the health coach would handle follow-ups and help to implement the treatment plan and support the client with the diet, lifestyle, and behavior interventions that the clinician recommended. The health coach also has access to all of the patient’s information, so there’s a consistency of care. 

The health coach and the clinicians would also communicate on a regular basis. At CCFM, we use an internal chat tool where we’re always discussing patients in a confidential way. That allows for a lot of collaboration between the health coaches and all of the practitioners at CCFM.

In other cases, the clinician does the intake, and then, after completing a treatment plan that involves lifestyle and diet changes, they pass the client on to the health coach to work with them regularly, over time, to implement the changes.

Can Health Coaches Work with Private and Public Entities?

It’s a very exciting time right now to be in this field. There are lots of opportunities to work with large-scale, private companies and public entities like municipal departments. 

At CCFM, we completed a pilot program with the Berkeley Fire Department using health coaching interventions to improve the health of their new recruits, reduce injuries, and decrease burnout. Among a group of around 10 people, they collectively lost about 30 or 40 pounds, and they were enormously happy with the results.

Health coaches can also work with management consultants who partner with large, global corporations. Many large-scale employers are looking to incorporate health coaching-based interventions among their workforce as part of their wellness programs. Corporate wellness—a booming industry all on its own—is expected to grow to a $13 billion market by 2023, so these opportunities are likely to continue. (2

Can You Create Your Own Career Path as a Health Coach?

You can absolutely create your own career path and even mix health coaching with other healthcare specializations like physical therapy or nutrition. Health coaching improves outcomes for patients suffering from chronic illnesses like obesity, diabetes, high cholesterol, and depression. (3, 4, 5, 6, 7) Health coach training also improves outcomes for a variety of health professionals—even doctors who are trained in health coaching will have better results with their patients. Nurse practitioners and physician assistants certainly could benefit from health coaching because of the support role they often play, in addition to their role as clinicians in their own right.

For those of you who are often working on the front lines with patients on behavior change, like physical therapists and personal trainers, it’s ideal to learn health coaching and core coaching skills. As I’m sure you’ve already found out, you’re dealing with some of the same issues that a health coach or a nutritionist faces in terms of ambivalence: people being at different stages of change or people not being able to access the motivation they need to follow through with their program.

I think you’ll find that if you learn and incorporate health coaching into your approach, you’ll be much more successful as a physical therapist, trainer, or other healthcare provider.

The Hidden Benefits of a Career in Health Coaching

Health coach speaking with client

Beyond the obvious satisfaction of making a difference in peoples’ lives and making a living doing something you are passionate about, there are a few less obvious but significant benefits to choosing a health coaching career.

Flexibility and Fit for Your Lifestyle

Even in our hyperconnected, digital world, there are still very few careers that allow you to make a good living “outside of the cubicle.” As a health coach, you have the freedom to create a career that gives you variety and allows you to spend some, or all, of your time working from home. You can work virtually, in person, or a combination of both. You can choose your own hours to some degree or choose the structure of a full-time position if that is a better fit for your life and personality. By mixing and matching clients and collaborations of various kinds, you can create multiple streams of income that give you more freedom, control, and satisfaction in your work.

Highly Portable Skills for the Future

The core coaching skills you learn as a health coach are skills that apply not only to changing behaviors related to diet, exercise, and health. The behavior coaching skills in the ADAPT Health Coach Training Program are useful in any environment with any kind of behavior change. This allows you even more flexibility in designing your career. Health coaches often own gyms or are chiropractors. They may also be life coaches or employee performance coaches in addition to health coaches. And, if you should ever decide to move away from a health focus, the skills you’ve learned will help you excel in a wide variety of contexts, making you a unique candidate for any future position you may decide to pursue.

Significant Positive Impact on Your Personal Life

Many of our students, when asked what surprised them the most about what they learned in our course, replied by saying that they did not realize the profound impact it would have on their personal development and personal relationships with their spouses, children, and friends.

Sarah Wilson

“I can’t recommend this program enough! It exceeded my expectations in so many ways. Not only have I delved deep within myself and established a daily mindfulness practice, but my relationships with my family have changed for the better and I am working on being more empathetic and non-judgmental.”

Sarah WilsonADAPT Health Coach Training Program Student

To be a great coach, you need to learn to “be.” These “being” skills, like journaling, meditation, and compassionate communication, can be life-changing for the coach, not just for their future clients.

One of the greatest things about being a health coach is that the coaching skill set covers so much ground and fills a gap in our healthcare system. In other words, . Coaches can work with clients on a wide variety of health concerns, with practitioners to support patients’ behavior change, and with a growing number of companies who are focusing on the health and healthcare costs of their employees.

How do you take advantage of these opportunities? Choose a coach training program that goes beyond core coaching skills and includes professional development. In the ADAPT Health Coach Training Program, our professional development curriculum walks you through different coaching business models, teaches you how to market yourself as a coach, and gives you the tools you need to start a successful coaching business. You also have the opportunity to be part of a Kresser Institute ecosystem that includes ADAPT-trained practitioners, many of whom are eager to work with ADAPT-trained health coaches.

Find out more about becoming a health coach with the ADAPT Health Coach Training Program.


Health Coach Career Outlook: What Does the Future Look Like for Full-Time Health Coaches?

I believe that there will be a growing number of full-time opportunities for health coaches in the future. In Unconventional Medicine, I outline my vision for the future of medicine that includes health coaches. I’ve heard from practitioners who have been inspired to hire health coaches and incorporate more of a Functional Medicine perspective into their approach after reading that book. 

Organizations like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Mayo Clinic, and Cleveland Clinic are all either using health coaches or have expressed that we need health coaching. Also, primary care groups like Iora Health are using health coaches to reverse type 2 diabetes. The National Board of Medical Examiners has stated that it recognizes that health coaching will be an important part of the solution. In both conventional medicine and integrative and Functional Medicine, a growing number of private clinics have also seen the light and are hiring more health coaches.

Health coaching is now a $6 billion market, and job growth for health coaches and other community health workers is expected to expand by 16 percent by 2026. (8, 9) It’s clear that we need health coaches, and the world is taking notice. Another indicator of the optimistic market for health coaches is the fact that we are seeing more and more niche specific organizations showing up like business accelerators, networking groups and public institutions that focus solely on integrating health coaching in various segments of our society.

I think we’re still in the earlier stages of this health coaching revolution, but it’s already accelerating quickly, and I expect that to continue.


Health Coaching Career: Where to Start?

Chances are, as you consider your next career move, it might be challenging to know what your future as a health coach would look like, but you probably know what you want it to feel like. 

As you begin to take the bold steps toward a new chapter, it is helpful—and a core tenet of health coaching—to focus on your strengths and values and formulate how they can propel your future. 

Ask yourself:

  • How can my natural gift for communication and listening serve others?
  • What new skills and expertise do I need to feel confident? 
  • Practice is the key to success. We get better by taking consistent action. Which health coach training program will enable me to hone my skills and build my confidence?
  • We are as successful as the people we surround ourselves with. Who do I want to align myself with? How will my connection to the training program I choose contribute to my ability to thrive?
  • How do my answers inform my next steps?

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  1. I am struggling to incorporate effective strategies as a health coach to appropriately connect with the medical community in my local area to “convince” them the opportunity and value health coaching can bring to their practice. What are strategies I can consider?

  2. I am a registered dietitian. We studied quite a bit about motivational interviewing and behavior change. Do we need the additional health coach training to go into the field?

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