Subject: Are Your Martial Arts Students Your Property?

Friend,

I'm sure you've seen those retro t-shirts that say, "Property of Such-and-Such Athletic Department."

I've even seen some schools adopt that design for their own shirts. "Property of Such-and-Such Martial Arts." Students love that stuff, and I bet those schools sell them by the droves.

But what students don't care for is when you really treat them like they are property of your dojo.

The Things I Hear From Students Out There...

Every once in a while, I'll get an email from someone who is asking for my advice... someone who isn't a school owner, but a student. Someone who is on the other side of the fence, as it were.

Well, over the years I've realized that I'm not just a business coach; I'm also a consumer advocate of sorts for this industry. And, I have to say that some of the stuff these people have told me has really pissed me off, on more than one occasion.

For example, I was contacted recently by a young man who was thinking about buying his instructor's school. The only problem was, the instructor had convinced him that the school was worth about five times as much as it was actually worth.

The instructor didn't explain to this guy that, when you buy a business, you never accept the seller's suggested price. Instead, you hire a business broker or accountant to do a valuation of the business, and then you negotiate from there.

I did the math based on the numbers the student had sent me, and there was no way he'd be able to turn a profit in that school... at least, not with the astronomical loan payments he'd be making if he'd have purchased it at the asking price.

Of course, his instructor was hacked at me for giving my honest opinion. Me? I felt no remorse for keeping his student from making a huge financial blunder.

Do As I Say, Not As I Do...

Another person contacted me recently because she was confused about common etiquette regarding training at different schools. Her children had been training with a karate instructor for a few years, and this instructor apparently has had them competing in "MMA tournaments."

Well, she noticed they were having trouble on the ground. So, she started taking them to classes at a BJJ school, for supplemental training.

Note that she didn't pull them out of their karate school, mind you. She feels a great deal of loyalty to their karate instructor. It's just that she's a mom who wants the best for her kids, and in this situation they apparently needed someone to teach them what to do on the ground.

You can guess how this went. Now, the owner of the karate school is upset with her for taking her kids to another school, and he's accusing her of disloyalty.

Never mind that this instructor also trained some BJJ to supplement their karate training. Which tells you they're a hypocrite, because obviously they didn't learn BJJ from their karate sensei, so they had to go somewhere other than their karate instructor's school to learn jiu-jitsu.

We Aren't Living In Feudal Japan, People

Treating your students this way is patently ridiculous. We aren't living in ancient China or feudal Japan. We don't live under some sort of asinine and obscure warrior code... and if you do, that's a self-imposed condition of living, and it's not something you should force on your students.

Besides, there are a million reasons why you shouldn't get upset when a student goes somewhere else to learn something you don't offer.

For starters, you can't be an expert in everything. So, when a student wants to learn something you don't teach (or that you don't teach very well), it shouldn't bother you if they go train with someone else to learn it.

If you teach traditional karate and they want to learn muay thai, you shouldn't tell them things like, "Well, I can teach you kickboxing," or "we do striking in our school, so you don't need to learn that." That's crap. You know it, I know it, and the student knows it, too.

They're just not going to say it to your face, either out of respect or out of fear. If it's out of respect, chances are good that soon they're going to lose that respect for you, if you keep treating them like property. And you're likely to lose that student.

A Rising Tide Raises All Ships

Another reason you shouldn't mind it when students go other places to learn stuff you don't teach is because it helps your school. Think about it -- when they learn that stuff and bring it back to your school, it makes your school better because they are bringing new knowledge in.

And that's good for your school. That's why smart BJJ school owners don't get bent out of shape when their students cross-train at other gyms. They know that, when their students learn from other schools they are going to elevate their game. 

So when they bring new things back to their home school, everyone else is going to be exposed to it as well. Everyone wins, because it elevates the school as a whole.

Your Insecurities Are Showing

It's only the insecure instructor who tries to keep their student from learning from others. Why? Because they are afraid that what they teach won't be good enough to keep that student around.

And they're afraid of losing that student's money.

So, my advice to you is to accept that you don't have any right whatsoever to tell students how they spend their time and money outside of your classes. If you find out a student is training somewhere else as well, don't be hurt or angry about it.

Instead, be happy for them. They are learning and growing as a martial artist, just like you did coming up. And if they pursue additional training, it means that they are serious about becoming the best martial artist they can be.

And, a good instructor only wants the best for their students. They aren't threatened when their students train with other people. Instead, they're interested solely in the growth of their students.

If you want to keep students for life, learn to act in their best interests, 100% of the time.

Until next time,

Mike Massie
MartialArtsBusinessDaily.com

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