What is Special about L.L. Bean and How Does it Compare to Your Chiropractic or Healthcare Practice?
- Ed Petty

- 6 hours ago
- 3 min read

The Key to Building a Chiropractic and Healthcare Practice that Lasts
L.L. Bean. You've probably heard of them.
I just received a Christmas shopping catalogue from them (hard copy!). They are a clothing company out of Maine. Founded in 1912 by Leon Leonwood Bean. I probably bought something from them years ago, and I am on their Christmas list.
We also receive a catalogue from Patagonia each year. It is another clothing company. It was founded more recently, in 1973 by a rock climber, Yvon Chouinard.
I like both companies and I will tell you why – in a minute.
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Recently, I saw an ad of a young man (chiropractor) coming off a stage saying that he just sold his practice for "seven figures." It was a bit of brag and sounded like he wanted to help other doctors reach that level. He said he was able to grow his business quickly and sell it thanks to his marketing.
I'm all for marketing, and I truly hope he can help with other chiropractic practices.
But it made me think: aren't there significant financial advantages to owning a business in the long term that compound?
When you own a practice for 10-20 years, you're not just collecting a salary -- you're able to take advantage of tax benefits that can add $30-50K annually to your real compensation! These can include vehicle expenses, health insurance, retirement contributions, continuing education, and equipment depreciation. These can all reduce your tax burden.
Over 20-25 years, these ownership benefits can add $500K-$1M in value that disappears the moment you sell.
And beyond tax advantages, long-term ownership allows your business equity to compound alongside your income. A practice worth $500K in year 5 might grow to $2M by year 10 or $5 -10M by year 25 – or more -- IF you have good management, create a strong reputation, and even bring on other providers, or add other locations. And all the while -- taking profit distributions, building retirement accounts, and enjoying the flexibility that ownership provides.
The doctor who sells early gets one payday; the doctor who builds strategically gets decades of tax-optimized income plus a potentially much larger exit.
Back to L.L. Bean and Patagonia
Now, back to those Christmas catalogues! Both show how patient, long-term ownership and excellent management, products, and services can build generational wealth over decades of brand-building and customer loyalty.
L.L. Bean, a billion-dollar empire, is still family-owned. Patagonia, now worth billions, wasn't sold at all. Chouinard transferred ownership to the Patagonia Purpose Trust to ensure profits protect the planet in perpetuity.
Both companies show how owners who focus on purpose-driven growth and lasting customer relationships can build enduring companies that dwarf what any early buyer would have paid.
Purpose and Values of Your Healthcare and Chiropractic Practice
But here is what does not show up in the spreadsheets of these two companies: their values and purposes.
And, their discipline to stick to them!
Selling your business earlier rather than later can be a valid choice. However, if you ensure it remains focused on its purpose and values, you'll enhance its profitability and make it more valuable for whoever takes ownership next.
L.L. Bean built its reputation on an unconditional guarantee and commitment to customer satisfaction. "At L.L.Bean, we design products that make it easier for families of all kinds to spend time outside together."
Patagonia's environmental purpose became so central that Yvon Chouinard ultimately gave away his $3 billion company. "We're in business to save our home planet."
The lesson is that a business rooted in purpose beyond profit attracts loyal customers and dedicated employees and creates a brand that competitors can't copy.
Your purpose -- and the discipline to stay creatively and positively true to your goals -- pays off.
So…
Stay Goal Driven!
Ed
P.S. And have fun doing so – maybe fishing, camping, or just outside and enjoy the fall. (Or spring, if you're Down Under.)




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