Social media has become one of the main ways the public encounters chiropractic.
From viral cracking videos to educational content to heated debates about evidence and philosophy, chiropractors are increasingly visible online.
Is the way chiropractors show up on social media helping the public understand what we do, or reinforcing stereotypes that hurt the profession?
This is not a marketing workshop and not a debate about who is right.
It’s a moderated conversation about how chiropractors show up online and whether that is helping or hurting the profession.
As with all Chiropractors Anonymous sessions:
Cameras are optional
Speaking is optional
Participants are anonymous to one another
We discuss issues, not individuals or businesses
Listening is participation.
Space is limited to maintain a conversational environment.
Social media has become one of the main ways the public encounters chiropractic.
From viral cracking videos to educational content to heated debates about evidence and philosophy, chiropractors are increasingly visible online.
Is the way chiropractors show up on social media helping the public understand what we do, or reinforcing stereotypes that hurt the profession?
This is not a marketing workshop and not a debate about who is right.
It’s a moderated conversation about how chiropractors show up online and whether that is helping or hurting the profession.
As with all Chiropractors Anonymous sessions:
Cameras are optional
Speaking is optional
Participants are anonymous to one another
We discuss issues, not individuals or businesses
Listening is participation.
Space is limited to maintain a conversational environment.