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Dear Folks..."Newbies, Mid-Timers, and all,
There is NO fixed price for massage, anywhere in the country. This is not a contractualized profession, and frankly this discussion on a site supported by a professional organization smacks of anti-trust, and should cease immediately. The price of any massage is fixed by the practitioner, and sometimes negotiated with the client. I support the younger practitioners effort to charge less, if that is the value of their product at this time. Folks who have been around awhile can indeed ask for a little more and feel confident to receive it especially if it holds a value to THEIR client! Time in profession can of course be a consideration, but lets not insult the new guy because they out manuveured a more senior practitioner in a negotiation. That is unprofessional and mean-spirited. The corporate client may in fact find that they are less happy with a different provider and could come back, but maybe not. That is the consumers purogative....its called capitalism, welcome to American business. In closing, please keep in mind that if time on the job was the only factor in setting your massage rates, you would all loose to my 27 years in business. See you on the road.
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Monica - Wow! Were you referring to my answer to Emma about my experience with chair massage when you commented about anti-trust laws? She asked about a price range - so I gave her my charges and the other arrangements made. I was not setting Emma's charges for her as she will decide those for herself. And as to this site - I was not advertising to do chair massage for x amount of dollars. I believe in the "free-market", I was not "conspiring to fix prices", I am not trying to "monopolize" any business and I was not setting up an "unlawful merger". The pleasure in this site is that those of us who have been around for a while can hopefully be of assistance to those who are new to the business. And those who are new can bring their thoughts and experiences to the table - an old dog can learn a new trick. If you didn't learn it in school - maybe - you can have the benefit of at least hearing what other therapists have to share.
I'd like to also interject that just because a therapist DOES charge a under-market price for their services does not immediately indicate that the massage is no good.
Yes thats completely true, but what is publics perception ???
Agreed! Our work is not to be bargained for. We put a lot of time, effort, energy, money, etc, etc, etc into it. Its so much more than the half hour or hour or whatever amount of time we are actually with a client. The amount of self-care required alone makes it valuable, not to mention the time and money put into cleaning, linens, supplies, and everything else. There is a whole other behind-the-scenes of this job that people don't think about or take into account when it comes to pricing. You are absolutely right in saying its fine if you lose a client to cheaper prices. If they do not value your work, let them be with a practitioner who does not value their own work. But these are the same therapists that are treating your body as if its like every other body, just pumping out session after session. I've always found its better to do everything with purpose and intention, which usually means taking your time with the opportunity you have been given to work with a particular body and spirit. Its beautiful, and it shouldnt be cheapened. Besides, who wants to be the cheapest therapist? That's like being the cheapest prostitute. Not literally, but I hope you know what I mean. I'm all about package discounts and incentives and things like that, because every body does deserve massage, and it should be affordable. We need to work with our clients to find a plan of care that is beneficial to their healing process but not detrimental to their financial well-being. But to straight up slash your prices to get a client is plain dirty.
I don't believe that massage is the SAME basic service...no matter where it's practiced. The different modalities and different techniques/attitudes/education of therapists should not lend itself to be put under such a broad category. Maybe that's why I would never compare what I do to a fast food place. All burgers are not the same basic burger. Fast food burgers are cheap and really aren't that good.
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