massage and bodywork professionals
a community of practitioners
Tags:
Views: 500
Great thread, Deborah.
I've been very pleased to read all the comments. A lot of good thought. I am an independent with 5 years of running my own one person practice. I am making a decent living at it... loving it ... and making a lot of people feel better, which is great.
1. I support the general consensus that for now at least the franchises are not a threat to a well-run, well-marketed independent practice - especially one where you can differentiate your service (full 60 minutes, specialized focus like medical or deep tissue, whatever) and have a gift for making your clients into relationships, and are willing to work the extra hours it takes to manage a business. They really haven't impacted me much, and I have one down the block and 4 in town.
2. I also share the concerns about the public impact of the franchises - public perception of what a massage is all about, the impact on schools and students (your analogy to fast food farms really hits home!), on the standards and "norms" of our industry.
We probably are now in the shoes of the Rolfers of a decade ago - how do we explain what we do is not "Stroke, stroke, outta here. NEXT!" It's subtle but tangible. I need to figure out where I stand and what small things I can to "hold the space" for practitioners like us. It's also important to show the young students coming up that there is an alternative to the ME model - many of them are gifted with their hands and we should support them to grow into more assertive, confident business people.
In that vein, just wondered if any of you remember the Florida Growers Association commercials a few years back. Probably 10 or more years ago.... the farmers banded together and created an independent farmers association to advertise and pull the market away from the big industry companies (which I believe were squeezing them on price, pun intended.) Would ABMP champion the independents like that? Probably not, given that the article we are discussing was very pro. The ME types are advertising heavily with them. But we could consider our own professional gig dedicated to our needs, including ads to promote the independents.. maybe one superbowl commercial with a big impact? The Doritos ad contest could be the format for getting the commercial, and we could all chip in to pay for one spot? One massage each to fund it -- and we'd actually have enough to do it! I know I'd support a campaign for the independent practitioners... dedicated, personal, and client-centered.
Thanks again, all of you, for your thoughts - I've been chewing on this article for several days and suddenly realized I might find a discussion here. It helped a lot!
Erica
Thanks for your insightful input, Erica! Your idea of independent therapists working together to campaign for ourselves is along the lines of what I was thinking too. While many people responded with sophisticated marketing tactics, data, stats, etc., the focus has not been on home ground. I'm wondering too, how are the schools going to be affected by franchise massage? There was a post mentioning that ME is forming its own school to provide its own brand of massage. How will that affect independents who have invested a lot of money in their training and specialties?
I'm attending a networking event this afternoon where some movie industry people will also be speaking. I intend to make contact and inquiry without specifics, but to move in the direction of some kind of educational video to broadcast over the internet. I've written a couple of articles too, and I may post them on my blog here or elsewhere.
I'm glad you're doing well. It really is about relationships with your clients. Massage is very personal and must be tailored to the individual client.
Thanks again for posting.
Kindest regards,
Deborah
Erica Bliss Winston said:Great thread, Deborah.
I've been very pleased to read all the comments. A lot of good thought. I am an independent with 5 years of running my own one person practice. I am making a decent living at it... loving it ... and making a lot of people feel better, which is great.
1. I support the general consensus that for now at least the franchises are not a threat to a well-run, well-marketed independent practice - especially one where you can differentiate your service (full 60 minutes, specialized focus like medical or deep tissue, whatever) and have a gift for making your clients into relationships, and are willing to work the extra hours it takes to manage a business. They really haven't impacted me much, and I have one down the block and 4 in town.
2. I also share the concerns about the public impact of the franchises - public perception of what a massage is all about, the impact on schools and students (your analogy to fast food farms really hits home!), on the standards and "norms" of our industry.
We probably are now in the shoes of the Rolfers of a decade ago - how do we explain what we do is not "Stroke, stroke, outta here. NEXT!" It's subtle but tangible. I need to figure out where I stand and what small things I can to "hold the space" for practitioners like us. It's also important to show the young students coming up that there is an alternative to the ME model - many of them are gifted with their hands and we should support them to grow into more assertive, confident business people.
In that vein, just wondered if any of you remember the Florida Growers Association commercials a few years back. Probably 10 or more years ago.... the farmers banded together and created an independent farmers association to advertise and pull the market away from the big industry companies (which I believe were squeezing them on price, pun intended.) Would ABMP champion the independents like that? Probably not, given that the article we are discussing was very pro. The ME types are advertising heavily with them. But we could consider our own professional gig dedicated to our needs, including ads to promote the independents.. maybe one superbowl commercial with a big impact? The Doritos ad contest could be the format for getting the commercial, and we could all chip in to pay for one spot? One massage each to fund it -- and we'd actually have enough to do it! I know I'd support a campaign for the independent practitioners... dedicated, personal, and client-centered.
Thanks again, all of you, for your thoughts - I've been chewing on this article for several days and suddenly realized I might find a discussion here. It helped a lot!
Erica
? There was a post mentioning that ME is forming its own school to provide its own brand of massage. How will that affect independents who have invested a lot of money in their training and specialties?
In the article it said that Corinthian Colleges that own Everest Massage Schools are in some kind of agreement to get students jobs there and they said they would be teaching people specifically to get jobs there...
That was one of my biggest concerns in all of this. What will they be doing differently?
Julie
Deborah Herriage said:? There was a post mentioning that ME is forming its own school to provide its own brand of massage. How will that affect independents who have invested a lot of money in their training and specialties?
© 2024 Created by ABMP. Powered by