Clinical Manager - Psychotherapy

Lorenz Clinic

$95K — $150K *
Healthcare
Less than 5 years of experience
Job Overview by Ladders

Qualifications

  • Master's or doctoral degree in a mental health profession from an accredited program
  • Full, unrestricted Minnesota licensure as a Mental Health Professional (LP, LICSW, LMFT, or LPCC)
  • Demonstrated competence in relational and systemic psychotherapy
  • Competence in relational/systemic group psychotherapy and family therapy to anchor an IOP
  • Approved clinical supervisor status with assessable supervision competence
  • Reflective-supervision competence or genuine willingness to develop it
  • Capacity to hold operational authority and reflective leadership as distinct functions

Responsibilities

  • Carry an individual, couples, family, or group clinical caseload
  • Support a team of licensed clinicians
  • Supervise pre-licensed clinicians with structured support
  • Lead the site's reflective team space to enhance clinical discussions
  • Anchor the Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP) clinically
  • Protect the integrity of care and ensure quality delivery
  • Handle operational tasks including appraisals, scheduling, and compliance

Benefits

  • Student loan repayment eligibility
  • Paid burnout time and annual CEU allowance
  • Comprehensive health/dental/vision/life insurance
  • 401(k) with match and paid parental leave
  • Flexible schedule and professional development support
  • Access to extensive training opportunities including CE hours
  • Opportunity for community engagement with paid service time
Full Job Description
Job Type

Full-time

Description

Where you practice shapes who you become as a clinician, and the same is true of where you first learn to steward clinical systems. We're hiring a clinical manager to lead a single Lorenz site that houses both an outpatient psychotherapy practice and an intensive outpatient program (IOP) as one integrated clinical team.

What you'd do
  • Carry an individual, couples, family, or group clinical caseload - roughly half your week, enough to keep your clinical judgment current and your standing with the team real.
  • Support a team of licensed clinicians
  • Supervise pre-licensed clinicians - clinical and administrative supervision for supervisees, held within a structure that supports you rather than leaving you to improvise it.
  • Lead the site's reflective team space - the standing meeting where the team thinks together about the actual clinical work. You hold this as something distinct from your authority over schedules and performance, and we'll help you learn to hold both at once.
  • Anchor the IOP clinically - group quality, the debrief the program depends on, family work, and the referral-and-screening rhythm that keeps it healthy.
  • Protect the integrity of the care - in who delivers it, how groups are run, and whether family work actually happens when census pressure and fatigue pull toward something thinner.
  • Hold the operational floor - appraisals, scheduling, coverage, performance, prior authorizations, and compliance with documentation standards, payer requirements, board rules, and the APA Code of Ethics.


How we practice

We treat the system, not just symptoms. We locate a presenting problem in its relational and developmental context - the family, the history, the patterns that hold it in place - rather than treating behavior as a flaw inside an individual. The therapeutic relationship, and the work with the family, are the instruments of change.

Our IOP runs on that same logic. It isn't higher-frequency symptom management; it offers a corrective interpersonal experience in the group and treats the family system the symptom lives in. Holding that model steady - especially under pressure - is a real part of what this role protects.

Most behavioral health clinics in this region are owned by to private equity, medical systems, or insurance companies. Not us. Lorenz is owned and governed by psychotherapists , which is why we can organize the work around the depth of the care and the development of the people doing it, rather than around throughput. The clinician here is someone we support, not a unit we utilize.

Our Reflective Practice Model

We have built our culture and clinical operating model around a mentalization-based approach to clinical work. Every clinical team here meets in a standing, protected space whose only task is to think together about the real emotional substance of the work - what's happening between people in the room, what a hard case is stirring up, what the team is carrying but hasn't said. It isn't case review or a vent session; it's the discipline of holding difficulty long enough to understand it rather than react to it, and it runs at every level, from a trainee's first group up through how managers themselves are supported. The premise is simple and demanding: clinicians can only offer clients the steady, thinking presence they've experienced themselves. So we hold our people the way we ask them to hold their clients - reliably, without being thrown by what's hard, with honest repair when we get it wrong. For the team, that means a culture where it's safe to bring uncertainty and a mistake is data about the system, not a verdict. For the manager, it means the core skill of the role isn't administrative: it's the capacity to take in a team's anxiety and not-knowing without passing it up the chain or absorbing it silently, and to hand it back in a form the team can use. That asks for real things like staying regulated when a room is activated, sitting with someone's difficulty without rushing to fix it, tolerating not having the answer yet. Clinicians who've worked somewhere that ran on threat rather than thought tend to feel the difference here immediately.

Who grows here

The clinicians who thrive in this seat are excellent in the room, think systemically, and stay curious about their own effect on the people around them.
  • You work at the level of pattern, not just presentation - case formulation, the client's relational world, rupture and repair, your own reactions as clinical information. You can grow that same depth in the people you supervise.
  • You can lead group and family work in the relational, systemic register. Competence in relational/systemic group therapy and family therapy is required - enough to hold an IOP's clinical core.
  • You can hold authority and reflection at the same time. You can be the person who signs a performance review and the person a clinician brings genuine uncertainty to - without letting either collapse into the other. This is the capacity the role most depends on, and the one most often missing.
  • You have reflective-supervision competence, or a real appetite to build it. You needn't arrive fully formed. You do need to be able to stay with your own reactions without defensiveness, to remain with another person's difficulty long enough for their thinking to surface, and to tolerate not yet knowing. If you have that and want to deepen it, we'll teach the rest.
  • You treat supervision as a craft, not a credential. We assess it against a competency-based model (Falender & Shafranske), with structured self-assessment and an individual learning plan.


This is a development-centered place. We invest a great deal in our people and ask a great deal in return, and we're comfortable saying "not yet" on either side when the fit isn't there - we consider that a kindness rather than a rejection. If you want to become the kind of clinician other clinicians are formed by, this is one of the best seats in the state to do it.

Requirements

Requirements
  • A master's or doctoral degree in a mental health profession from an accredited program
  • Full, unrestricted Minnesota licensure as a Mental Health Professional (LP, LICSW, LMFT, or LPCC)
  • Demonstrated competence in relational and systemic psychotherapy
  • Demonstrated competence in relational/systemic group psychotherapy and family therapy, sufficient to anchor an IOP clinically
  • Approved clinical supervisor status with your licensing board, with supervision competence assessable against a competency-based framework
  • Reflective-supervision competence - or a demonstrated capacity and genuine willingness to develop it
  • The capacity to hold operational authority and reflective leadership as distinct functions
  • Prior leadership, management, or program responsibility (preferred)
  • Formal training in child or family therapy (preferred)
  • BBHT- or AAMFT- approved supervisor status (preferred)

Internal candidates who meet Manager-in-Training criteria may be considered through an MiT nomination - talk with your director.

Compensation

The hiring range is $95,000-$150,000 annually, depending on experience, credentials, breadth of clinical competence, leadership history, and program. For independently licensed master's clinicians (LICSW, LMFT, LPCC): $95,000-$130,000. For doctorally-prepared licensed psychologists (LP): $125,000-$150,000.

Benefits

May be eligible for student loan repayment. Full-time independently licensed clinicians receive a robust package: paid burnout time, an annual CEU allowance, employer-sponsored health/dental/vision/life, short- and long-term disability, a 401(k) with match, tuition reimbursement, privately-funded student loan forgiveness, PTO, paid holidays, paid service/volunteer time, paid CE hours, paid parental leave, an EAP, a flexible schedule, and professional development support.

As an active training clinic, most clinicians here earn roughly 100 hours a year of board-approved CE simply by showing up. We host an annual conference, monthly Grand Rounds, and four hours a month of case consultation with a specialist. For an unabridged job description or more detail on benefits, contact Human Resources.

How to Apply

Submit a cover letter and CV through the job portal, noting your preferred location (Chaska or Rosemount). A cover letter is required; applications without one won't be considered. We read it as much for how you think as for what you've done - tell us what draws you to clinical leadership now, your experience across individual, family, and group work, and where you find yourself in your own development as a supervisor and leader.

Search terms: clinical manager, clinical program manager, behavioral health manager, IOP manager, intensive outpatient program, site manager, licensed psychologist, LP, LICSW, LMFT, LPCC, psychotherapist, marriage and family therapist, family therapist, child therapist, group psychotherapy, clinical supervision, approved supervisor, BBHT supervisor.

Pre-licensed clinicians (LGSW, NCC, LAMFT) should look at our Post-Master's Fellowship instead. Independently licensed clinicians who are strong in the room but not yet ready to lead a site should consider the Clinical Supervisor posting.

Salary Description

$95,000 - $150,000 depending on qualifications

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