If you’re running a small therapy practice, your setup probably looks something like this:
One tool for notes.
Another for scheduling.
Email for inquiries.
Maybe a spreadsheet to track leads.
And no clear way to see what’s actually working.
At some point, the question comes up:
Is there one platform that can handle both client management and marketing?
The short answer: yes — platforms like this do exist.
But it’s still important to understand what you actually need before choosing one.
What “Client Management + Marketing” Actually Means
Most therapists don’t need a full marketing suite.
What they really need is visibility into how clients move through their practice.
That includes:
Traditional tools tend to separate these functions.
EHRs handle clinical work.
Marketing tools focus on traffic.
Very few connect the full journey from inquiry → client.
That’s where newer platforms are starting to fill the gap.
Here are a few types of tools (and specific platforms) that small therapy practices often consider.
1. SimplePractice
EHR platforms like SimplePractice are essential for running the clinical side of your practice.
They handle:
Some EHRs include basic marketing features like a website builder or appointment requests.
But they’re not designed to track referral sources, conversion rates, or intake performance.
They manage care well, but not growth.
2. TherapyNotes
TherapyNotes is another widely used EHR.
It’s reliable for:
Like most EHRs, it focuses on what happens after a client is already booked.
If you’re trying to understand where clients come from or why inquiries don’t convert, you’ll need something beyond your EHR.
Some practices experiment with general CRMs like HubSpot.
These can help track:
But they’re not built for therapy workflows.
You’ll likely spend time adapting pipelines, customizing fields, and connecting multiple tools just to make it usable.
It can work, but it adds complexity.
Breksey is a platform designed to support this part of the process.
Instead of separating marketing and client management, Breksey focuses on the space in between: what happens after someone reaches out and before they become a client.
With Breksey, you can:
For most small practices, the simplest setup looks like this:
Trying to force one tool to do everything often creates more friction.
What matters is that your systems connect logically.
You should be able to answer:
If you can’t see that clearly, your marketing and client management are still disconnected.
If you’re evaluating tools, focus less on features and more on visibility.
You want a system that helps you understand:
We break this down further in our guide on what tools you actually need to run your therapy practice.
That’s what connects marketing to client management.
Final Thought
There isn’t one perfect platform that replaces everything.
But there are better ways to structure your systems.
The practices that grow consistently are usually the ones that:
When those pieces are connected, marketing becomes much simpler.