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    Home»RELATIONSHIP»How Therapists Become an Organizational Consultant
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    How Therapists Become an Organizational Consultant

    adminBy adminDecember 3, 20255 Mins Read
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    How Therapists Can Transition Into Work as an Organizational Consultant and Executive Coach

    Lisa Marie Bobby, PhD, LMFT, BCC

    Dr. Lisa Marie Bobby is a licensed psychologist, licensed marriage and family therapist, board-certified coach, AAMFT clinical supervisor, host of the Love, Happiness, and Success Podcast and founder of Growing Self.

    If you’re a therapist who’s quietly thinking, “I cannot do 30 more years of back-to-back sessions… but I don’t know what else is possible,” you are so not alone. Many therapists are beginning to explore what a more meaningful and sustainable career could look like, and becoming an organizational consultant is one path that opens far more doors than most clinicians realize.

    More and more clinicians are feeling the tug toward work that still uses their clinical wisdom but in different rooms: boardrooms instead of therapy offices, leadership retreats instead of treatment plans, strategic conversations instead of progress notes.

    That’s exactly what we’re talking about in this episode of Love, Happiness, and Success for Therapists: how to pivot from clinical work into life as an organizational consultant and executive coach in a way that feels grounded, ethical, and sustainable.

    I’m joined by Dr. Shannon Sheehan Jennings (Dr. J), a trusted leadership advisor with a PsyD in Business Psychology who specializes in the “sticky human stuff” behind growth and change. She serves as a confidential sounding board for mid-market CEOs as they wrestle with tough calls about people, trust, and transition – helping them name what’s true, have hard conversations with compassion, repair ruptures, and make decisions that actually stick.

    This is an honest look at how she made that transition… and how you can too!

    Why Work Systems “Suck” (and Why Therapists Belong There)

    For many people, work really sucks. And not because they need a DSM diagnosis. Toxic cultures, burnout, unspoken expectations, confusing power dynamics, and unresolved interpersonal ruptures follow people home every day.

    (You’ll see these themes in Why Therapy Clients Are Hiring Coaches.)

    Dr. Shannon believes therapists and psychologists have a body of knowledge that could make work suck less. Clinicians already understand:

    • Power dynamics
    • Emotional regulation and burnout
    • Communication patterns and conflict cycles
    • Group dynamics and systems thinking
    • The impact of stress, trauma, and overwhelm on behavior

    In therapy, we use these tools with individuals or families. As an organizational consultant, you apply the same lens to:

    • Leadership teams that avoid talking about power
    • Organizations scaling faster than their culture can keep up
    • Family businesses navigating loyalty, conflict, and succession
    • Workplaces where everyone feels something is “off,” but no one has language for it

    Your clinical training isn’t a detour from organizational consulting. It’s the engine.

    Dr. Shannon’s Journey From Therapist to Organizational Consultant

    One reason this episode resonates so deeply is that Dr. Shannon’s career path wasn’t linear, which gives therapists permission to build as they go.

    She began in high-conflict divorce and custody work, co-founding a nonprofit that interfaced with courts and community systems. That experience pushed her into systems-level problem solving, collaborating with judges, government agencies, and local stakeholders.

    That systems perspective opened the door to a role at the Edward Lowe Foundation, where she joined leadership retreats for entrepreneurs and CEOs. She was brought in to deepen discussions around:

    • Psychology and human behavior
    • Wellness and burnout
    • Emotional intelligence and self-awareness

    She quickly realized something important: business owners were hungry for psychologically informed insight – but had never been given a framework for it.

    From there, she completed a PsyD in Business Psychology, blending:

    • Strategy and financial literacy
    • Organizational development and I/O psychology
    • Real-world leadership challenges

    Today, she works as an organizational consultant and trusted advisor to mid-market CEOs, doing exactly what many therapists dream about: helping leaders navigate the human side of growth and change.

    (Dr. Shannon’s path echoes the research described in this systems-psychodynamic study and in this classic consulting psychology transition paper.)

    What Does an Organizational Consultant Actually Do?

    If you’ve ever thought, “Organizational consulting sounds interesting, but what does that actually mean?” you’re not alone.

    Small Business vs. Corporate: Two Different Worlds

    Executive coaching in a major corporation looks very different from coaching inside a privately held, mid-market company.

    • Corporate executives are influenced by boards, shareholders, and external pressures.
    • Small and mid-size business owners are navigating, “If I screw this up, 150 people don’t get paid.”

    Both environments have high emotional stakes, just in different ways.

    The Work Itself

    As an organizational consultant, Dr. Shannon’s work includes:

    • Helping leadership teams talk honestly about roles, power, and expectations
    • Naming interpersonal dynamics no one has language for
    • Supporting leaders through trust ruptures and repair
    • Facilitating strategic conversations that honor both people and performance
    • Coaching leaders through difficult feedback and conflict
    • Designing learning experiences around communication and emotional intelligence

    Listen closely and you can hear the therapist in all of it, but with a different frame. Instead of symptom reduction, the focus shifts to organizational health, culture, and sustainable growth.

    The Skills You Already Have (And Don’t Give Yourself Credit For)

    Therapists dramatically underestimate how qualified they already are for organizational consulting.

    Your clinical skills translate directly into this work:

    • Power dynamics
      You already think about authority, vulnerability, and influence. Leaders need that awareness too.
    • Communication and conflict
      You know how to hear what’s not being said and interrupt patterns that cause harm. Organizations need those skills at scale.
    • Group and systems thinking
      If you’ve treated families or couples, you already understand systems. Teams are systems too.
    • Emotional safety
      You know how to build trust and create space where people can tell the truth. Leaders rarely get that anywhere else.

    These skills are the reasons why so many therapists quietly feel the pull toward becoming an organizational consultant, even when they’re not sure what the role looks like yet.



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