Seventy3

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06/06/2026

As solo clinicians we’ve been forced to accept all the extra work is just “part of the job.”

In reality it’s an endless list of extra jobs that have been done the same way for years by systems not designed for how we work.

Treat the client.

Write the notes.

Send the exercises.

Follow up.

Request the review.

Learn Zapier.

Build the automations.

Manage the diary.

Answer enquiries.

Chase old clients.

Update Zapier.

Learn Email marketing.

Update Mailchimp.

Learn another platform.

And somehow still be fully present with the person in front of you.

At some point we stopped questioning it.

We just adapted to broken systems.

The irony is, most of us didn’t get into this profession because we wanted to become administrators.

We became clinicians because we wanted to help people.

The technology exists now to remove a lot of that friction.

To let you stay present during treatment while the admin happens in the background.

Not to replace clinician but to give us our more time and more bandwidth so we can give our all to our clients.

That’s the idea behind Seventy3 OS.

Not another tool.

A simpler way of running a clinic.
A better way of running a clinic.

Waitlist now open
30 founding members
Link in the

At some point we all start adding things.A booking system.An exercise platform.A CRM.An email platform.An automation too...
05/06/2026

At some point we all start adding things.

A booking system.

An exercise platform.

A CRM.

An email platform.

An automation tool.

An AI tool.

Another AI tool.

Before long, you’ve got six tabs open, six logins and a business that only works because you’re holding it together.

The irony?

Most of us got into this profession to help people.

Not to spend our evenings managing software.

The answer isn’t more.

It’s less.

Less complexity.

Less friction.

Less things to remember.

Less things depending on you.

That’s why I built Seventy3 OS.

If you’re a clinician, which slide hit hardest?

04/06/2026

I used to post a lot of immediate before and afters on my page. I don’t as much anymore because I no longer view making someone feel better immediately as an achievement.

It’s the bare minimum. The most basic, baseline short term goal anyone should be able to get.

When John first came to visit me in January with drop foot we spoke about realistic goals. I was confident I’d be able to help and didn’t want to do a disservice by promising a quick fix.

The first video of him on the left walking is actually at the end of our first session. He could barely walk when he came to see me. His wife had to drop him off and we took several breaks even when inside the building. He was hobbling before the appointment and it didn’t sit right with me to capture a person at their most vulnerable just to make an immediate before and after post.

Here’s John’s story and progression over 3 visits between January and May.

He’d been dealing with a long-term back injury for years, but things had recently progressed to the point of developing drop foot.

Initially, he was taking codeine, gabapentin and naproxen daily. The pain was one thing. The brain fog, loss of independence and inability to move normally were another.

When I first said the clinic was on the fourth floor (there is lifts btw) he still genuinely wondered how he was going to make it.

He couldn’t sit comfortably.
He couldn’t stand comfortably.
He couldn’t walk properly.
He couldn’t function the way he wanted to.

Over the next few months, we worked together as a team. Not just inside the clinic, because that’s not where the ‘fix’ happens. But in a structured exercise programme.

Today, his range of movement is better. He’s no longer relying on medication every day and he’s been able to gradually return to doing more of the things that matter to him.

The goal was never simply to get out of pain.
The goal was to help him reclaim confidence in his body and regain the freedom that had slowly been taken away.

Thank you for trusting the process, John, and for making the 3-hour round trip every time.

Seventy3
The fascia-first system

02/06/2026

I’ve been quietly building OS in the background for months.

Researching, refining and reinvesting to build something truly different.

This is a video Mads, my wife, re-recorded late at night.

The day before a 5am drive to the Glasgow clinic.

The original professionally shot one just didn’t capture it right. Why am I sharing this?

Because as self-employed solo clinicians, there’s so much that goes on in the background.

Things that take up time and energy.
Things that don’t work out the first time round. New problems to solve on a daily basis.

But we keep going.

The problem with this mindset is that
we can easily ‘keep going’ into our personal lives.

Taking time away from the people and things we love, outside of our love for the clinical work.

If you’re a solo clinician, you know the
feeling - Busy clinic day done, home, trying to switch off, but the admin’s still running in your head.

That’s why I built Seventy3 OS.

The waitlist is now open.
30 founding members
Link in bio.

01/06/2026

There’s no shortage of AI receptionists right now.

The problem?

Most aren’t built for clinicians.

Sure, they can answer calls but that’s not enough. Some offer a sync to diary feature but we don’t use Google calendar, we have booking systems.

And then what about taking the deposit and syncing to our client-facing diary in real time?

The custom-built options that do this properly with GDPR compliance quickly become very expensive. £90+ per month and still with usage or software restrictions.

I built the solution inside Seventy3 OS

Not as another clunky tool that doesn’t quite fit your work flow but an intentionally designed feature to support the needs of busy solo clinicians.

Seventy3 OS is the system that runs your clinic in the background.

I’ll be sharing more over the next few weeks.

Waitlist opens tomorrow at 6pm.
30 founding members.

Snippets from my last 1-1 in person mentorship today.On a personal level this is a huge moment for me. I have very high ...
15/04/2026

Snippets from my last 1-1 in person mentorship today.

On a personal level this is a huge moment for me. I have very high standards for everything I do and wanted to ensure the mentorships meet and exceed this.

After years of refining systems and structures I’m now ready to make a bigger impact. To help more therapists operate at a higher level. To think better, to work better and to continue raising the standard for themselves and their clients.

The Seventy3 system has elevated therapists across the UK. Therapists who weren’t lacking knowledge or effort but lacking:
A clear clinical framework A way to think, not just treat Systems to actually grow their business

Later this year, over a 3 day period this is exactly what the Seventy3 clinical immersion will teach to 6 therapists only.

You’ll leave seeing the body in a different way and equipped with the tools to get better client results immediately.

2 spots are already taken. Only 4 spots remain.

Price for this intake: £4500
Next intake: £5000

If you’re ready to operate at a higher level with systems, DM ‘immersion’

Most therapists don’t need new techniques. You need better systems. Dylan started with:• 27 followers  • No clinic  • No...
11/04/2026

Most therapists don’t need new techniques.
You need better systems.

Dylan started with:
• 27 followers
• No clinic
• No clients

Within a few months:
• 30+ clients per week
• 2k+ weeks
• a system running in the background

Same person.
Different system.

This is exactly what I help therapists across the UK build inside Seventy3.

DM ‘system’ if you’re interested in learning the Seventy3 system

11/03/2026

For months this client had been struggling with shoulder pain and a progressively worsening loss of range of motion.

She had already seen several therapists.

Nothing had helped.

By the time she came in, this was as far as she could lift her arm.

The issue wasn’t effort, mobility drills, or strengthening.

The real problem was how load was being distributed through the thoracic spine and rib cage.

When those structures stop moving well, the shoulder often ends up taking stress it was never designed to handle.

Once movement and load distribution were restored through the thoracic spine, the shoulder could move freely again.

Full range of motion returned — without pain.

Cases like this are a reminder that the area of pain isn’t always the place you need to treat.

This is the type of clinical reasoning I teach therapists inside the Seventy3 system.

Understanding where the real problem sits in the system often changes everything.

Most people think fascia is just a wrapping around muscles.It’s not.Fascia forms a glide system throughout the body.Laye...
08/03/2026

Most people think fascia is just a wrapping around muscles.

It’s not.

Fascia forms a glide system throughout the body.
Layers of tissue slide across each other so movement and force can transfer smoothly.

When this glide is reduced:
• movement becomes less efficient
• load shifts into the wrong areas
• stiffness and discomfort begin to appear.

Over time the body compensates, often creating pain away from the original restriction.

The goal of Seventy3 isn’t to “break tissue”.

It’s to restore how the system moves, distributes load, and transfers force.

When glide improves, movement improves.

Reset. Rewire. Rebuild.

Address

Manchester

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