Eh, I wouldn’t say you’re necessarily not a coach, in the same way that an emu or ostrich isn’t not a bird, it’s just that I don’t think your approach is a central example of the genre. Short-term coaches do exist, after all, just like flightless birds.
If you’re asking from a marketing perspective, I wouldn’t use consultant or practitioner, I’d either say “specialist” or “coach”, i.e. secure attachment specialist or secure attachment coach. If you hardly ever work with anyone for very long or only work with people to solve a specific problem, I’d lean towards specialist. (Then again, I’m not sure I’d say “secure attachment” unless the people you work with already know that term and are looking for that. But I’m not the best person to ask marketing questions, anyway.)
Eh, I wouldn’t say you’re necessarily not a coach, in the same way that an emu or ostrich isn’t not a bird, it’s just that I don’t think your approach is a central example of the genre. Short-term coaches do exist, after all, just like flightless birds.
If you’re asking from a marketing perspective, I wouldn’t use consultant or practitioner, I’d either say “specialist” or “coach”, i.e. secure attachment specialist or secure attachment coach. If you hardly ever work with anyone for very long or only work with people to solve a specific problem, I’d lean towards specialist. (Then again, I’m not sure I’d say “secure attachment” unless the people you work with already know that term and are looking for that. But I’m not the best person to ask marketing questions, anyway.)
Specialist is nice and neutral, thanks!