Coping with surprises
Learn how not to be thrown by those minor irritations in performance.
DIY Studio Awards
Why you should create them, what they're for, and how to present them.
Promoting your teaching studio
Combining forces with other teachers
It's a powerful example of the whole being greater than the sum of its parts.
You'll end up with an ad that will completely overshadow most of your competitors.
One great way to be able to cope with the
cost of a large ad is to create a group of teachers. The group then
shares both the ad, and all associated expenses. In this way, six teachers can
co-operate to ensure that a commanding $3,000 ad only costs each participant
$500.
So how does it work? The secret is
ensuring that the members of the group complement, rather than compete
with each other. So your ad could be for "Boydtown Music Tuition", but
the six listed teachers might consist of flute, piano, oboe, clarinet, trumpet
and voice, each with a separate listed number. Prospective students are much
more likely to notice this ad than the smaller ad you would have done by
yourself, and then they call the relevant teacher.
Because of the complementary nature of the
services on offer, sharing the ad like this doesn’t mean that you have
to share students. If you’re the only oboe teacher in the group, then 100% of
the parents who call "Boydtown Music Tuition" looking for oboe lessons
will talk to you. And you’ll have an advantage over the other oboe teachers,
because they will be limited to whatever advertising they could afford by
themselves. The advertisement for your group will overshadow your competitors’advertisements
in a way that advertising by yourself never could have.
Each of the studios can retain their own
autonomy—apart from co-operation on the ad itself, there is no need for any
further official association between group members. Alternatively, the group
might elect to take things further still, and create a business that reflects
the association, perhaps even co-operating in a similar fashion on a centralized
premises of some sort. But the point is, it doesn’t have to be that
grand. Even if all the group did was meet once a year to discuss next year’s
ad, the mechanics of the idea work just fine.
Combining with same-instrument
colleagues
This technique is also possible for
teachers who all teach the same instrument, but you will need to introduce some
additional way of differentiating between the studios. For example, you could
ensure that all members of the group were from different parts of the city. Or
that different members of the group specialize in different styles, or different
levels of proficiency, or different ages. Again, you don’t end up losing
prospective students to other group members, because all the students who are
interested in your niche will call you, and only you.
Float the idea at your next MTA meeting—be
clear on the structure, limitations and benefits of the proposal, and let people
know that if they are interested, they should contact you. Make sure you’re
already armed with some figures and examples of what’s possible. It’s much
easier to excite fellow teachers about combining forces if they can actually see
it in action.
Found
this helpful? It's just a start - the
PracticeSpot
Guide to Promoting your Teaching Studio is the largest collection
of studio promotion techniques ever assembled. Over 240 pages of ideas,
inspiration and analysis from Philip Johnston, founder of PracticeSpot, and
author of The Practice
Revolution.
Free shipping to all destinations - this is the ultimate guide for teachers
who are serious about growing their studios.