Zanda, formerly Power Diary, is an established Australian practice management platform. Kinecta is a different kind of tool, built around AI exercise and meal programmes you review and approve, client engagement between sessions, and a gym-to-PT funnel. Here is what is different, told straight.
Zanda does practice management well: appointment scheduling, client records, notes and billing, used across health and therapy practices. Kinecta is built around a different centre of gravity. These four points are where the two tools point in different directions.
Kinecta is organised around the programme a client follows. AI drafts exercise programmes and meal plans, and you review, edit and approve each one before the client sees it.
Clients get a mobile app with daily check-ins, streaks with a weekly grace day, and Jesse, the in-app AI coach, so adherence happens in the days between visits as well as at the appointment.
Clients log pain and rehab markers, Kinecta charts the trend, and progress reports build from that logged data, so you can show the change across a block of care.
Kinecta is two products in one. The second turns gym members into paying PT clients through a public intake form, scored lead allocation and direct Stripe payouts to trainers, with a 2.5% platform fee per session sale.
Practice management software schedules the visit and records what happened. Kinecta is built for the work that happens between visits, where most programmes are won or lost.
The fair comparison only works if we are straight about the limits. Kinecta is not a billing-first system, and for some practices that matters more than anything else.
It can be, depending on what you need. Zanda is an established Australian practice management platform, used across health and therapy practices for appointment scheduling, client records, notes and billing. Kinecta is a different kind of tool, built around AI exercise and meal programmes you review and approve, client engagement between sessions, rehab and pain tracking, and a gym member-to-PT-client funnel. If your priority is programme delivery and client adherence rather than billing, Kinecta is worth a look.
Yes. Zanda is the platform formerly known as Power Diary, so people searching for a Power Diary alternative and a Zanda alternative are usually looking at the same product. Whichever name you know it by, Kinecta sits beside it as a different kind of tool: programme-led care, a client engagement app, and a gym-to-PT funnel, rather than a scheduling and billing system.
Kinecta is organised around the programme a client follows, rather than the appointment alone. AI drafts exercise programmes and meal plans that you review, edit and approve before the client sees them. Clients get a mobile app with daily check-ins, streaks with a weekly grace day, and Jesse, the in-app AI coach. Rehab and pain are tracked over time and charted. There is also a second product, a gym funnel that turns members into paying PT clients with direct Stripe payouts to trainers.
No. Kinecta is not a billing-first system. It does not do Medicare, DVA or private health fund billing, claiming or rebates, and it does not include telehealth or insurance processing. Kinecta takes session payments through Stripe, but if your main priority is invoicing and health fund claiming, a billing-focused practice management tool will suit you better.
Kinecta suits exercise physiologists, physiotherapists, dietitians and coaches whose value is in the programme and the client's adherence to it, and gyms that want to convert members into paying PT clients. Practices whose top priority is invoicing, Medicare or private health fund claiming will be better served by a billing-focused system, and may even run that alongside Kinecta for the programme side.
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