Life As A New Martial Art School Owner

new martial art school owner

"What the heck is that on the floor? Seriously, I thought I cleaned and mopped before I left last night!"

Being a new business owner is scary, mysterious, and exciting all at once. On the one hand, starting your new business represents an exciting new adventure, as well as the potential for financial freedom and getting to do what you love for a living.

On the other hand, not knowing what to expect can work on your nerves and make your first few months that much more difficult. Starting a martial art school is stressful enough; the last thing you need is additional stress based on uncertainty.

In addition, you may have unrealistic expectations that can later work against you when life as a school owner doesn’t turn out to be the smooth trip you thought it would be.

So, I thought I’d quickly share the following with you…

A Typical Day In The Life of a New Martial Art School Owner -

Chances are good you’ll be working at your “day job” while you’re getting your school off the ground. So, your day will start at around 6:00 A.M., or maybe a little earlier if you want to check in on your billing accounts, do some paperwork for the school, or get a workout in before work…

Your work breaks and lunchtime at your day job will likely be spent returning phone inquiries and following up on leads. Plan to use the back hallways, lonely conference rooms, and empty offices in your place of work to return phone calls using your cell phone. If your school phone is your cell phone, so much the better.

Oh, and you’ll be using your employer’s internet access for returning email inquiries and customer service emails as well… unless you have a smart phone, which solves that little ethical conundrum. But, you still may find yourself doing this when you should be working (shame, shame!)

After your work day at the day job is done, it’s time to fight traffic in order to make it in to teach that first class. Hopefully, your job is close to your school – if not, you’ll likely face a daily struggle to open the front doors on schedule.

Since your earliest classes are usually your youngest age groups, you can assign opening and teaching early classes to an assistant, once you have a student with enough rank to teach for you. However, you’re pinching every penny you can right now, and it doesn’t make sense to pay someone else before you are even able to pay yourself… so it’s likely going to be months or years before that happens.

Roughly 5 minutes before (or after) your first class is supposed to start, you rush in the door with your uniform and gear bag in tow. Apologizing profusely to the streams of parents and children who are following you in the school, you run to your office, pull the shades and quickly change into your uniform. The thought enters your mind that you could use a telephone booth for this routine, but you sure don’t feel like Superman right now…

That feeling changes, however, the minute you walk out on the floor and catch a smile from one of the kids in your first class. The minute you walk out, you get bum-rushed by about a dozen little future black belts, all clamoring to tell you about their new pet, toy, sibling, teacher, “ow-ee”, fake tattoo, etc. After letting them get it out of their system, you get them lined up and start class – only 3 minutes late. (Phew!)

Classes rush by in a whirlwind of activity… you’re in your element, and the rush you get from teaching and doing what you love makes your day job seem like it’s almost worth putting up with for a few more months until you can do this full-time. In between classes you’re going back and forth from the floor to the front lobby to the office, trying to take care of customer service issues and field walk-in inquiries while you keep classes running.

If you’ve been smart, you’ve already trained a leadership team and have them helping with warm-ups and the like. And if you’re really smart, you’ve scheduled a short break between classes. If not, you silently wish you could clone yourself, leave five of you at the school, and take two of your extra doubles on a vacation to Tahiti, so you can sleep three times as much while you’re there…

After the last class is over, you don’t get the last adult student out until 30 minutes later. They like to chat, you like to explain things and share insights into your martial art, and it’s hard to tell them you really need to do some work before you leave.

It’s always a good idea to start cleaning the school while you’re talking, since you are going to have to do it tonight anyway, and there’s always the odd chance a student will take the hint and chip in to help. Usually, though, they just follow you around the school and keep asking questions, even when you’re elbow-deep scrubbing toilets…

Right around 9:30 or 10:00 P.M., you’re in your office. It’s time to get the day’s deposit together, to check inventory for the week’s pro shop order, to process new membership agreements and set up billing schedules, to enter and review attendance, to print a list of MIA calls you’ll need to make in the morning at your first break, to pay some bills (can’t forget the light bill again – that “ninja training night” story only works once), to finish off this month’s newsletter, to figure out how many belts you need and what color for graduation (yikes… it’s this Friday!), to plan your marketing for next month…

It’ll never get all done tonight, but there’s always Saturday morning before classes for the things that aren’t urgent. 11:00 P.M. and you’re finally walking out the door, locking the front door on your way out.

11:20 and you’re finally home. Feed the dog/cat/parakeet/hamster/turtle/yourself, kiss the dog/cat/parakeet/hamster/turtle/wife/kids (don’t wake them!), make sure you have a clean uniform for the school and clean socks and underwear for work tomorrow… and don’t forget that report you’re giving at the big meeting!

Midnight rolls around, and you’re tucked away in bed, ready to drift off to… CRAP!

You bolt upright in bed, realizing you forgot to close and lock the back door to the martial art school.

Oh, the joys of starting and running a martial art school.

Now, where are those car keys?

Join the forum discussion on this post

17 Responses to “What It’s Really Like To Start A Martial Art School”

  • [...] http://martialartschoolalliance.com/what-its-like-to-start-a-martial-art-school/ — Mike Massie has owned and operated martial arts schools for most of his adult life. A lifelong martial artist, he is the author of "Small Dojo Big Profits", runs the Martial Art School Alliance International (MASAI) business coaching website, and is the creator of The Self Defense Black Belt Program (TM) and Fighting Fit Boot Camp (TM). For martial arts business coaching, visit http://martialartschoolalliance.com. [...]

  • Javy:

    Great article Mike!

    This is EXACTLY how my days were for the first 12 months. It was ridiculous. It seemed worse when I was actually trying to first open the school too because I was the General Contractor, and I had sub contractors doing work at the school, while I was working… wow, how that seems like it was sooooo long ago.

    But, like I’ve said before, if you don’t put in the time and effort in your school, you won’t have an appreciation for it. Blood, sweat, and tears is what gave me full ownership and realization of what I was doing. Well worth every penny. All those late nights I pulled off.

    The funny thing is… parents all saw how hard I was working and what I was doing, so if a class started late because I was enrolling a new student, or I was showing up just before my first class, they understood. No matter how much you tried to explain yourself and apologize, they seemed fine (at least mine did).

  • I shared this on facebook. Hope do you got anymore people members of your alliance?

  • How True How True. But wouldn’t have changed the experience for the world. Well maybe a couple of things ;-)

  • Darrin Walton:

    Mike that is so funny and so like many of my days. Thanks for the giggle this morning!

    -Darrin Walton
    A Warriors Way Martial Arts
    http://www.ww4you.com

  • Agreed.

    Some of my best memories are from my early days of starting schools.

  • Yeah Javier, the people seeing you go through it understand.

    But later, when you’re established… not so much. :)

    But, once you’re up and running there’s really no excuse for dropping the ball on customer service.

    And, you’re right… it’s definitely worth it.

  • Glad you got a laugh out of it, Darrin.

    Believe me, it came straight from the annals of my own experiences. :)

  • Hey, I’m doing this right now! There must be a hidden camera in my dojang. Just wrapping up my second month since my grand opening…
    :)

  • Keith, haven’t you seen that Big Brother Cisco commercial with that girl from Juno?

    http://videolounge.cisco.com/video/town-hall/

    Yikes, if that doesn’t scare a person…

    Anyway, glad you got a kick out of this post.

  • Tony:

    That was me too 6 month ago. For 6 yrs I would get up at 3:45am be at work by 5:00-3:30 at the studio by 4:30-9:00. try to get to bed by 10:00. Just to do it again the next day.
    Mike, thanks for the reminder that I need to work harder to made sure that I don’t go through that again.

  • Tony, you won’t let it happen. Let me tell you why -

    I know there are school owners out there who didn’t go through the same sort of experiences I describe here, but not many. There just aren’t that many folks with the cash to start a school and not have to work a day job to support themselves while they get their business off the ground…

    I can tell you from personal experience partnering with some folks who had a lot of start-up capital – it can be a problem to have a lot of start-up money, because you never learn to operate on a budget, and you don’t feel pressured to be profitable from day one (my partnership didn’t last, for that very reason – I couldn’t get my partner to stop spending money).

    Trust me, the work ethic and “creative financial management” skills you learn by boot-strapping your martial art school during the start-up phase are essential to your long-term success. If you went through that, I doubt you’ll ever find yourself in a position where you have to go back.

    Besides, the work ethic you gain during that experience causes you to get bored if you’re not working… so as for Tony and the rest of you guys, I doubt any of you have a lazy bone in you right now. :)

  • Holy Cow ! !
    I’m not the only one! You hit almost everything on the head Mike. It is insane! When I tell people, “You really have to love this stuff to teach it” they really don’t understand. I’m so freaking tired now by Thursday it’s not funny anymore. But like Javier said, it will all be worth it when it’s up and rolling. I feel like I’m about 8 months out from it getting a little easier on me. Thanks for the post
    Robby

  • Juan F. Fogal:

    This could only have been written by someone who has lived that life. I can totally relate and I’m happy to be in such company!

  • Juan, you have no idea…
    :)

  • Robby, believe me it’s worth it.

    You may not realize it, but right now you are experiencing what will become some of the best memories of your adult years.

    Hang in there!

  • Wow! There must have been a camera crew following me for the last two years. I recently expanded, the best move I could have made, and I feel like I am starting over. By all means, I’m not complaining, I can see the light at the end of the tunnel. and it’s not a freight train heading my way. Thanks for this post, now I can see what MY instructor went through even though he told me. Nothing like LIVING it makes you realize why we do this.
    Rick


Subscribe below to get your FREE report on how to start and run a school the
"Small Dojo Big Profits" way!

Member Login

You are not currently logged in.






» Register
» Lost your Password?
Recent Forum Posts
About MASAI

The Martial Art School Alliance International is the #1 resource for martial arts consulting and martial arts business coaching online.

Join today and find out what hundreds of other martial art school owners have discovered...

That our membership is head and shoulders above the rest when it comes to providing martial arts business information that you can actually use!