Originally Posted by
leach_jeffrey
If you enjoy marital arts and want to teach, good for you.
If you want to open a business whether it is a martial arts school or a bakery, you'd better make sure you know how to run a business. Go to college and get a business degree, during those 4 to 5 years, continue to develop your martial arts, then try to make a go of it.
Without the business knowledge, it won't matter how good you get at martial arts.
Just about every town in America has at least one martial arts school. Some are bullshido, but do well and stay in business for a long time. Some have excellent talent but fail anyway.
Summary: Wall of text that isn't really about anything... mostly rambling and killing time before class.. with an even more random hypothetical time line on how it would happen in my head for an average joe.
key point that actually matters in all this. Like coach herzog said.. its hard and you're going to have to want it bad enough. You're going to have to work long and hard for it.
the rest can be ignored
I agree with this but it isn't necessarily required.. More along the lines of Coach Herzog in my opinion. You have to want it and be prepared to work long and hard for it.(don't really want to preach to the choir but this is my "experience") We have a family business back in Texas that my parents started 25-30 years ago and people cheated them and they didn't make any money because they were so deep in the hole for years. They drove a 200 dollar car that literally had a hole in the floor like the flintstones. But my dad would work 16-20 hours a day by himself(only for a couple years) while my mom taught etc..(had to support newborns lol) while helping at the shop when she was off.. me and my sister "helped" when we got older. And slowly things improved.. to where they are today.
Basically our family business is obviously not a bbj school but they're all the same in the end. If you want it bad enough and you're ready to work hard for it then you're get there. Having absolutely zero experience on how to run a school.. I can imagine it would go something like this.(million different scenarios.. I'm bored waiting for class so I thought i'd think one up)
You start teaching some morning classes or what not.. getting the hang of teaching while you work a side job saving money etc.. once you're comfortable teaching you start shopping for a loan being prepared to get pretty shafted for the next few years. Find a place.. fix it up yourself then start convincing your friends to come charging them barely anything and network through them to find a decent customer base.(all this while working another job) Maybe going to a local school or college etc.. to spread the word. Decide what route you're going to take.. pitch it with more of a fitness aspect with a competitive aspect for those who want it or pitch it as a school solely about competing etc..(Based on my limited experience though the nature of the sport kind of dictates a casual/competitive aspect which is why i think you see more of the first mix.. not saying thats bad in any way) (honestly I think the customer base is pretty equal.. and the people joining a school that is solely about competing may come more because it resembles "practice" for other sports in high school/college.. you wouldn't dare miss one of those because you'd be running suicides until you puke etc..) Work on your skills improving them slowly.. competing so you have some "credentials" to market etc.. Then rinse and repeat for several years making ends meet.
I don't think there is a set method to starting any business.. you just have to want it bad enough. If you want this you'll figure out a way to make it work. The way someone else did it won't be the same way you do it.
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