You finished your Diploma in Nutrition Therapy from NTI. You have the NTM credential. You sat through hundreds of hours of coursework in Denver or online, learned functional assessment techniques, studied whole-food nutrition at a level most people cannot comprehend, and passed your exams.
And now you are staring at your diploma thinking: "What exactly do I do with this?"
You are not alone. We have worked with hundreds of NTI graduates, and the pattern is remarkably consistent. Strong clinical foundation. Real passion for holistic nutrition. And a massive gap between what you learned in the program and what it actually takes to build a career.
This guide is your roadmap. Every step, from BCHN® certification to your first paying clients to advanced credentials that will set you apart. No fluff. No vague advice. Just the path forward.
What Your NTI Education Gave You
Let's start with the truth: NTI gave you a genuinely excellent clinical education. The Nutrition Therapy Institute is one of the strongest NANP-approved programs in the country, and your training reflects that.
Your NTM credential represents mastery in areas that most nutrition professionals never touch:
- Functional assessment skills — NTI's approach to functional clinical assessment is one of its most distinctive strengths. You learned to evaluate the body as an interconnected system, not a collection of isolated symptoms.
- Whole-food nutrition foundation — not just macronutrients and micronutrients, but a deep understanding of food quality, nutrient density, and the therapeutic power of real food.
- Biochemistry applied to practice — NTI does not just teach you what to recommend. It teaches you why, grounded in biochemical pathways and physiological mechanisms.
- DEAC accreditation — your diploma comes from a nationally accredited institution, which carries weight in a field where many programs lack formal accreditation.
This is a real education. It prepared you to understand the science of nutrition at a level that can genuinely transform your clients' lives. Do not let imposter syndrome convince you otherwise.
The Gap Your NTI Program Didn't Fill
Here is the part no one tells you during orientation: clinical competence and career success are two different skill sets. NTI trained you to be an excellent nutrition therapist. It did not train you to be a business owner.
The gaps we see consistently in NTI graduates:
- Business fundamentals — pricing your services, structuring packages, managing finances, understanding taxes and business entities. NTI does not teach this, and most NTM holders have never run a business before.
- Client acquisition — you know how to help people once they are sitting in front of you. But how do you get them to sit in front of you in the first place? Marketing, content creation, networking, referral systems — these are skills, and they require deliberate development.
- Scope of practice confidence — NTI graduates frequently struggle with the boundary between education and diagnosis, between holistic nutrition and medical nutrition therapy. This uncertainty leads to paralysis. You second-guess every recommendation, every conversation, every piece of content you create.
- Imposter syndrome — you spent years in school, you have a credential, and you still feel like you are not ready. This is nearly universal among NTI graduates, and it is the single biggest barrier between your education and your career.
NTI gave you the clinical skills. Now you need the business skills, the confidence, and a structured path to turn your NTM into a thriving career.
Your BCHN® Path: Step by Step
The BCHN® — Board Certified in Holistic Nutrition — is the gold standard credential in this field. As an NTI graduate with your NTM, you are already eligible to sit for the exam. Here is your step-by-step path:
Step 1: Confirm Your Eligibility
Your NTI Diploma in Nutrition Therapy is a NANP-approved program. This means you meet the educational requirement for the BCHN® exam. Verify your transcript is complete and your NTM credential is in good standing.
Step 2: Document Your Practice Hours
The NANP requires documented clinical practice hours as part of the BCHN® application. If you have not started accumulating hours yet, begin immediately — even pro bono or reduced-rate sessions count. Every client interaction is building toward your certification.
Step 3: Prepare Strategically for the Exam
The BCHN® exam is comprehensive. It covers clinical nutrition, anatomy and physiology, practice management, and professional ethics. Your NTI education covered much of this, but the exam format and specific emphasis areas may differ from how you were taught.
A structured BCHN® Exam Prep program can cut your study time significantly. You already know the material — you need targeted review, practice questions, and exam strategy. Our exam prep is designed specifically for graduates of NANP-approved programs like NTI, and our pass rates reflect that specificity.
Step 4: Apply and Schedule Your Exam
Once your application is approved, schedule your exam within 60-90 days. Longer than that and you start losing momentum. Shorter than that and you may feel rushed. Find the sweet spot.
Step 5: Pass and Credential
After passing, you can use the BCHN® designation. Update your website, your social profiles, your email signature. This is not vanity — it is a trust signal to potential clients and a differentiator in a crowded field.
Building Your Practice: The First 90 Days
You have your NTM. You are working toward (or have achieved) your BCHN®. Now it is time to build. Here is what the first 90 days should look like for an NTI graduate specifically.
Days 1-30: Foundation
- Choose your niche. NTI's whole-food and functional assessment training positions you well for gut health, autoimmune conditions, hormonal balance, or metabolic health. Pick one area and go deep. Trying to serve everyone serves no one.
- Set up your legal structure. LLC or sole proprietorship. Get your EIN. Open a business bank account. This takes one afternoon and makes everything that follows easier.
- Create a simple online presence. You do not need a $5,000 website. You need a one-page site that clearly states who you help, how you help them, and how to book a call. Add a professional photo and your credentials. Done.
- Define your offer. Start with one package: a 3-month nutrition therapy program. Price it based on your market and experience level. You can always adjust later. Having one clear offer eliminates decision paralysis for both you and your potential clients.
Days 31-60: Traction
- Offer 5-10 discovery sessions. Free or deeply discounted. Your goal is not revenue — it is practice, testimonials, and confidence. NTI taught you the clinical skills. Now you need reps.
- Start creating content. One piece per week. Use your NTI training — explain functional assessment concepts in plain language, share whole-food nutrition tips, break down the biochemistry your clients need to understand. Your education is your content engine.
- Join professional communities. The NTI alumni network, NANP member forums, local wellness practitioner groups. Referrals from other practitioners will become one of your best client sources.
- Connect with complementary practitioners. Acupuncturists, chiropractors, functional medicine doctors, personal trainers. You are not competing with these people — you are building a referral ecosystem.
Days 61-90: Momentum
- Convert discovery sessions into paying clients. If your discovery sessions are going well, you should be converting 30-50% into your 3-month program. If you are below that, the issue is usually confidence in the close, not clinical skill.
- Collect and publish testimonials. Every client who has a positive experience should be asked (with their permission) for a testimonial. These are more valuable than any credential for attracting new clients.
- Evaluate and adjust. What is working? What is not? Where are your leads coming from? Double down on what works. Cut what does not. This is business, not theory — data matters.
If this 90-day process feels overwhelming, that is exactly what our LAUNCH Your Career program is designed for. It walks NTI graduates through every step with mentorship, templates, and accountability.
Advanced Training: What Comes After BCHN®
Your BCHN® is your foundation credential. But the practitioners who build the most successful, fulfilling careers do not stop there. Here is what to consider as an NTI graduate:
Herbalism Certification
NTI's whole-food nutrition philosophy is a natural bridge to herbal medicine. Plants as food, plants as medicine — it is a continuum, not a departure. Adding herbalism to your practice allows you to offer a more complete toolkit to your clients and differentiates you from practitioners who only work with diet and supplements.
Our Herbalism Certification program is taught by Betsy Miller, a certified herbalist and professor, and it is designed specifically for nutrition professionals who want to integrate botanical medicine into their existing practice.
Functional Medicine Testing
Your NTI functional assessment training gave you qualitative clinical skills. Functional medicine testing adds quantitative data — lab panels like GI-MAP, DUTCH testing, organic acids, and comprehensive metabolic panels. This is the direction the field is moving, and practitioners who can interpret functional labs command higher fees and attract more complex cases.
The Functional Medicine Alliance (FMA) offers advanced training in functional testing interpretation, taught by leading clinicians who work with these tools daily.
Clinical Residency
Our BCHN® Residency program provides supervised clinical experience under David Feuz, an experienced practitioner and educator. For NTI graduates who want mentored practice before going fully independent, this is the bridge between education and confident clinical work.
NTI Graduates Who Built Thriving Practices
The path from NTI to a successful career is not theoretical. Practitioners who graduated with the same NTM credential you hold have built practices that sustain them financially and fulfill them professionally.
One NTI graduate came to us six months after finishing the program. She had her NTM, zero clients, and crippling imposter syndrome. She did not believe she knew enough to charge for her services. Within four months of structured business training and BCHN® exam prep, she passed her boards and had a waitlist of twelve clients. Her niche? Gut health for busy professionals — a direct application of her NTI functional assessment training.
Another NTI graduate had been sitting on his credential for two years. Two years of "getting ready" that was really just fear in disguise. He enrolled in our LAUNCH program, built his practice in 90 days, and now sees twenty clients a month with a focus on metabolic health. His NTI education is the engine — the business skills were the ignition.
A third graduate combined her NTM with herbalism certification and built a unique practice integrating nutrition therapy with botanical medicine. She now runs group programs and one-on-one consultations, earning more than she did in her previous corporate career — doing work that actually matters to her.
The common thread? It was never about the quality of their NTI education. It was always about bridging the gap between clinical knowledge and business execution.
Frequently Asked Questions for NTI Graduates
Can I sit for the BCHN® exam with just my NTM credential from NTI?
Yes. The Nutrition Therapy Institute is a NANP-approved program, which means your NTM credential qualifies you to sit for the BCHN® exam administered by the NANP. You will also need to document your clinical practice hours as part of the application.
How long after graduating from NTI should I wait to take the BCHN® exam?
There is no required waiting period after graduation. However, most NTI graduates benefit from 3-6 months of structured exam preparation and clinical practice hours accumulation. Many graduates find that starting a BCHN® exam prep program immediately after graduation gives them the best momentum.
Is the NTM credential enough to start a practice, or do I need BCHN® first?
You can legally start a holistic nutrition practice with your NTM credential in most states — holistic nutrition is not a licensed profession in most jurisdictions. However, the BCHN® designation significantly increases your credibility, allows you to use a nationally recognized board certification, and may be required by some insurance panels or employer positions. Most NTI graduates start seeing clients while preparing for their BCHN®.
What scope of practice limitations should NTI graduates be aware of?
As a holistic nutrition professional, you cannot diagnose medical conditions, prescribe medications, or provide medical nutrition therapy (which is reserved for licensed dietitians in most states). You can educate clients on whole-food nutrition, recommend dietary supplements within your training, and provide lifestyle guidance. Scope of practice varies by state, so check your specific state regulations. NTI's functional assessment training is a strength — just frame your work as educational, not diagnostic.
NTI gave me strong clinical skills but I have no idea how to get clients. Where do I start?
This is the most common challenge NTI graduates face. Start with three actions: define your niche (do not try to help everyone), create a simple online presence (even a one-page website is enough), and offer 5-10 free or discounted discovery sessions to build confidence and get testimonials. Our LAUNCH Your Career program is specifically designed to bridge this gap for graduates of programs like NTI.
What advanced certifications should I pursue after BCHN® as an NTI graduate?
After earning your BCHN®, the most valuable next steps for NTI graduates include: functional medicine testing credentials (to add lab interpretation to your clinical toolkit), herbalism certification (to complement your whole-food nutrition foundation with botanical medicine), and specialized training in areas like GI health, hormones, or autoimmunity. Your NTI training in functional assessment gives you an excellent foundation for advanced functional medicine work through programs like the Functional Medicine Alliance.
Your NTM Is the Beginning, Not the End
You did not go through NTI's rigorous program to let your diploma collect dust. You went through it because you believe food is medicine, because you want to help people reclaim their health, and because you are willing to do the work.
The clinical skills are there. The knowledge is there. What comes next is building the structure — the business, the credentials, the confidence — to turn all of that training into a career that sustains you and serves the people who need you.
The path is clear. The only question is whether you will take the first step.
Your NTI education gave you the science. Now it is time to build the career. The practitioners who thrive are not the ones who waited until they felt ready — they are the ones who started anyway.