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...people value what they pay for. They've had free workshops where no one showed, and then had the same workshop again but charged a small fee, and got good attendance. Those workshops ended with people who valued their opinion and were ready to become clients afterward. Since I don't know anyone who's tried this in the world of massage, it may be different, but somehow I doubt it.
My plans in the near future to try and do them at least once a month at the YMCA that I work in.
Personally, I haven't tried this method of marketing (yet), but I know several people in other industries that have (estate and trust attourneys, IT consultants, insurance professionals, ect.) They have all said the same thing to me: people value what they pay for. They've had free workshops where no one showed, and then had the same workshop again but charged a small fee, and got good attendance. Those workshops ended with people who valued their opinion and were ready to become clients afterward. Since I don't know anyone who's tried this in the world of massage, it may be different, but somehow I doubt it.
This is what I have been contemplating - charging $10 a head. Which is in the price range in my locality for a single yoga or taiji class. I'm hoping to roll out "restorative friday" classes each based on a common complaint and what clients can do for themselves (e.g. tennis ball massage) as well as demonstrating briefly on each person some things that would be done in a session.
Andrea Turner said:...people value what they pay for. They've had free workshops where no one showed, and then had the same workshop again but charged a small fee, and got good attendance. Those workshops ended with people who valued their opinion and were ready to become clients afterward. Since I don't know anyone who's tried this in the world of massage, it may be different, but somehow I doubt it.
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