The one-to-one practitioner tech stack in 2026
Vikrant Singh is co-founder and Chief Operating Officer of Slide Practice. He writes about running a one-to-one practice.
The five jobs every solo practice runs on, in one profession-neutral guide, with honest free-first picks and what to delay buying.
The tech stack for a solo one-to-one practice in 2026 has to do five jobs: let people book time with you, capture what happened in a session and send it back, give clients one place to find their materials, take payment for your own work, and keep a simple record of who you saw and what changed. You can start every one of those jobs with a free or near-free tool and only pay when a real bottleneck shows up. Buy for the practice in front of you, not the one you imagine having in two years.
Start from the jobs, not the tools
Software marketing sells you features. A practice runs on jobs. Whether you coach, tutor, consult, train, or work as a health coach, the same five jobs sit under all of it, and they hold whether you see three clients a week or thirty. This guide is profession-neutral on purpose. The tools differ a little by field, the jobs do not. If you want the wider picture of running a solo one-to-one practice, the practitioner hub collects the rest of it.
The trap is buying by category. You do not need a booking platform, a note app, a portal product, a payment processor, and a CRM as five separate paid subscriptions on day one. You need each job done well enough that it is not costing you clients or evenings. Most jobs start free and stay free for a long time.
The one rule
Add a paid tool only when you can write down the bottleneck it removes in a single sentence. No named bottleneck, no purchase.
Job 1: Booking
The job is simple. A person should be able to see when you are free and claim a slot without a chain of "does Tuesday work?" emails. That back-and-forth is where you lose people who were already ready to book.
Free-first pick: a single scheduling link tied to the calendar you already use. Most calendar tools now offer appointment slots, and the common scheduling apps have a free tier that covers one meeting type and one calendar. That is enough for a solo practice. You pay later only if you need several session types, group booking, or payment taken at the moment of booking, and even then, wait until the manual version genuinely hurts.
What to skip here
You do not need round-robin routing, team availability, or a fully branded booking website yet. Those solve problems a solo practitioner does not have.
Job 2: Session capture and recap
This is the job most practitioners under-build, and it is the one clients feel most. After a session, the client should get a short, clear record of what you covered, what they are doing before next time, and what you noticed. That is a session recap, and it is one of the highest-return habits in a one-to-one practice. If you have never written one deliberately, start with what a session recap is and copy the structure.
Free-first pick: one recap template and a notes doc per client. You write the recap in five to ten minutes while the session is fresh, paste it into an email or a shared doc, and keep a copy for yourself. No tool required beyond what you already type into. If you want a target to aim at, look at a sample recap before you write your own.
Capture is the input to the recap. Jot two or three lines during the session, or record a thirty-second voice memo to yourself the moment it ends. The point is to not rebuild the session from memory three days later, because that version is always thinner and always wrong in small ways.
Job 3: Client portal and delivery
The job is a single place a client can go to find their materials without asking you. Worksheets, recaps, the plan, the reading you promised. When that lives scattered across email threads, files, and text messages, you become the search function, and that is a tax on every week.
Free-first pick: one shared folder per client in whatever cloud drive you already have. Name it plainly, drop everything for that client inside, and share the link once. It is not pretty, but it does the job until your roster gets large enough that folders become a chore to keep tidy. Only then does a purpose-built portal earn its cost.
Job 4: Payments
This job is about taking money for your own work, and it is worth being precise. You need a way to send an invoice or a payment link and get paid without chasing. A payment link tool or your accounting app's built-in invoicing covers it for a long time.
Free-first pick: one payment link or one invoice template. Send it, get paid, done. If you offer reduced rates for some clients, decide the structure before you build any tooling around it. There is a full walk-through in sliding-scale pricing for any practice.
Keep two payment questions separate. One is how your clients pay you. The other is how you pay for the software you run your practice on. Those are different bills paid with different tools, and blurring them is how solo practitioners end up overpaying on both sides.
Job 5: Records and outcomes
The last job is the quiet one: a simple record of who you saw, when, and what changed. Not a database. A place you can open and answer "how is this client progressing?" in under a minute. Most practitioners skip this and regret it at renewal time, when a client asks what the two of you have actually done together.
Free-first pick: one spreadsheet, one row per client per month, plus the notes doc you already keep. Track the few things that matter in your field: sessions held, the goal, one line on movement toward it. That is an outcomes record, and it costs nothing but the discipline to fill it in after each session.
If you work in nutrition or health coaching, keep this clean. This is a cash-pay, non-clinical practice record for your own tracking. It is not a medical record, it is not clinical documentation, and it does not replace anything a licensed clinician provides.
The stack at a glance
| Job | What it must do | Free-first pick | Pay only when |
|---|---|---|---|
| Booking | Let people claim a time without email tag | One scheduling link on your calendar | You need paid or multi-type booking |
| Capture and recap | Send a clear record after each session | One recap template plus a notes doc | Writing recaps eats over ten minutes each |
| Portal and delivery | One place clients find their materials | One shared folder per client | Clients keep asking where files are |
| Payments | Get paid for your work without chasing | One payment link or invoice | Chasing payment costs real hours |
| Records and outcomes | Answer "how is this client doing?" fast | One spreadsheet, one row per client | You cannot see progress at a glance |
Your stack checklist
Copy this into a document and fill it in today. Review it every three months. The only rule that matters is the one at the bottom: a paid tool earns its place only next to a written bottleneck.
MY PRACTICE STACK (review every 3 months) 1. BOOKING - how people get time with me Tool now: ____________________ Free-first option: one scheduling link tied to my calendar Working? Y / N Bottleneck: ____________________ Upgrade only if: I lose bookings to back-and-forth email 2. SESSION CAPTURE + RECAP - what happened, sent to the client Tool now: ____________________ Free-first option: one recap template + a notes doc per client Working? Y / N Bottleneck: ____________________ Upgrade only if: recaps take me more than 10 min per session 3. CLIENT PORTAL + DELIVERY - one place clients find their stuff Tool now: ____________________ Free-first option: one shared folder per client Working? Y / N Bottleneck: ____________________ Upgrade only if: clients keep asking "where is that file?" 4. PAYMENTS - taking money for MY work Tool now: ____________________ Free-first option: one payment link or invoice Working? Y / N Bottleneck: ____________________ Upgrade only if: chasing payment costs me real hours 5. RECORDS + OUTCOMES - who I saw, what changed Tool now: ____________________ Free-first option: one spreadsheet, one row per client per month Working? Y / N Bottleneck: ____________________ Upgrade only if: I cannot answer "how is this client doing?" fast RULE: add a paid tool only next to a written bottleneck. Total monthly spend now: $______ Cap I will not cross yet: $______
What to delay, on purpose
Some tools feel essential and are not, at least not yet. A few worth naming out loud:
- A CRM. A spreadsheet is a CRM until you have too many clients to see on one screen. Many solo practices never cross that line.
- A course platform. If you deliver one to one, you are not running a course. Build the group product when there is real demand for it, not before.
- A custom website with bookings, payments, and a member area. This is a project that eats a month. A simple page plus your five job tools does the same work this year.
- An all-in-one practice suite. These promise all five jobs in one login, and some are genuinely good. But do not buy the suite before you know which jobs actually hurt, or you pay for four features to fix one problem. When you do reach that point, we wrote an honest comparison of the main all-in-one platforms, including when ours is the wrong choice.
When to upgrade a job
The signal to upgrade is never "a better tool exists." It is always a bottleneck you can name in a sentence. You are re-typing the same recap structure every session. You spent an hour last week hunting for a client's files. You lost a booking to email lag. Write the bottleneck down, then buy the smallest thing that removes it. One job at a time keeps your stack cheap and your evenings your own.
If the recap-and-records side is the job that starts hurting first, which is common, that is the corner Slide works on: it holds your booking, the recap you send after each session, and a plain running record of each client in one place, and you keep 100% of what you earn on any plan. None of this needs a product to begin. A recap template and a spreadsheet do the job today. When the manual version starts costing you real time, you can see how we think about it on the practitioner page.
Common questions
What tools does a solo practitioner actually need in 2026?
Five jobs, not five products: booking, session capture and recap, a client portal or delivery spot, payments for your own work, and a simple records and outcomes log. Each one starts free.
Do I need an all-in-one practice platform?
Not at the start. Buy a suite only after you know which jobs actually cost you time, or you end up paying for four features to fix one problem.
Which part of the stack should I build first?
Usually the session recap habit. It needs no software, just a template, and clients feel it immediately. A shared folder for delivery and a spreadsheet for records come next, both free.
How much should a solo practice spend on software?
Start near zero. Add a paid tool only next to a bottleneck you can name in one sentence, and set a monthly cap you will not cross yet.
Is a spreadsheet enough for client records?
For most solo practices, yes. One row per client per month lets you answer how a client is progressing in seconds, until your roster outgrows a single screen.
Do the records count as a medical record for health coaching?
No. For nutrition or health coaching this is a cash-pay, non-clinical practice record for your own tracking. It is not a medical record and does not replace a licensed clinician.