Do you have these
problems in your school?
Over the last two years I have seen a lot of things change in the
martial arts world. The popularity of mixed martial arts has helped
push the martial arts into never before seen popularity as we saw
with movies like the “Karate Kid” in the 80’s. The industry around
us changes almost as quickly as the weather and we’re always looking
for the new fad that will last us until the next one is invented. It
has been said that the biggest room in the world is the room for
improvement, but most of the people I see in the industry change the
house every year, rather than the room. The problem with this is
that it gives you no time to settle down on a foundation and
eventually you are going to run out of new houses to buy!
I have moved into the financial services industry and
in a short amount of time I have become one of my firms’ top
personal producers. My heart and soul is still with the martial arts
and I’m still active with the west coast association as well as many
other school owners across the country. My involvement with the
martial arts pertains more to the business and administrative side
of running a school and sharing my success secrets with others. I
recently had a conversation with one of my friends who owns a school
here in California. He expressed frustration with a declining
student body and a decrease in student enrollment. He also seemed
very disappointed in his current program director and his ability to
enroll new students after the introductory lesson. He was also
getting gray hair by the second because in these uncertain
economical times the amount of cash outs coming into his school was
almost none existent. Since I’m a financial professional who advises
people on a daily basis about money, you are better off growing your
residual income, which is your monthly billing accounts rather than
relying on the big money in cash outs. As we have seen with both
real estate and mortgage professionals, one bad year of business can
wipe out five years of growth. This is a story for another time.
During our conversation he was working on ad cards for
Valentine’s Day and the result from distributing these cards in
local schools was less than satisfying for his business. I’d like to
stop right here and focus on an often overlooked fact of new
enrollments which is, controlling the point of contact. When you put
out an ad, commercial, or ad card you don’t control the point of
contact. You are in fact resting your hopes on a, “if you build it
they will come” theory much like the internet entrepreneurs did in
the early 2000’s and you all know how that worked for them. I will
say that all the business you need is all the business you already
have. If you turned your focus towards building a referral based
business then most your business problems will be solved overnight.
Whenever you use one of the methods I mentioned above you are in
fact cold calling and focusing on a cold market. You ask any
business person and they would rather have ten warm market referrals
over one thousand cold market referrals any day of the week. Some
firms will pay thousands of dollars for a warm market list. Why you
ask? Well this is why. The warm market has one big advantage over
the cold one, are you ready? CREDITABLITY! When someone in your
school refers you the name and number of someone they would like to
see join the school that referral joins mostly based on the
creditability they have with your student and not necessarily the
school. Most of these new students will quit on everything else in
life but their friends, and guess what? Their friend is a loyal
student in your school, so you can see where this is going to lead
your school in the future. You need to train your program directors
to constantly ask for referrals from your brand new students. This
should be done in the first lesson after you enroll them into your
school. You also need an ongoing incentive program for your new
student to give you referrals. I would go as far as to offer cash or
something else that highly motivates them to give you warm market
referrals. I would personally ask for the names and numbers of three
of their closest friends who have kids on the very first lesson. If
you want big results you have to play big numbers.
So that solves his problem of a declining student body
and the drop he is experiencing in his enrollments. I also asked him
how many phone calls and how many prospects his program director and
staff were making and getting every single day. He seemed confused
at this point and looked very puzzled. Before he could respond I
explained the importance of both and how crucial it was to turning
his school around. I explained the 10, 6, 3, 1 rule to him that I
use. Out of every ten people his program director prospects, six
will confirm intro appointments, three of them will actually show up
and one will join. So based on this, he will know how many people
his PD and staff will have to prospect every month to get ten new
students into the school. The numbers of enrollments will probably
be higher but I do know that if you want to reach the moon you have
to shoot for the stars. I also told my friend that his program
director needed to be making about thirty phone calls a day to new
prospects. I told him that if his PD and staff all prospected ten
people a day then his PD would never run out of people to call. I
also warned him about the differences between activities and results
and how he was focusing too much on the activity and not on the
result. The activity would be getting names and phone numbers of new
prospects and the result would be signing them up. Unfortunately, he
was accepting activity as his result and I can see the direct result
of that. So my entire conversation up to this point was all about
changing his mentality. Of course, his whole staff is going to
complain and some might be resistant to these new changes but
whatever he is doing right now is not working. I can prove it
because numbers don’t lie!
The final problem we had to talk about was his program directors
enrollment ratio from the introductory lesson. This was a simple fix
for me, he just needed to teach him the 5 C’s of his intro lesson
and teach him how to close. I will go into detail about both of
these in a later article because I don’t want to wear myself out on
my first article in a while. The 5 C’s are pretty simple, they are
Curiosity, Credibility, Concepts, Crusade, and the Close. These are
extremely important when sitting knee to knee at the table with a
parent. It is a proven fact of a solid presentation that will
increase any program directors close ratio. It also abides by the
most important factor of any successful system, it’s duplicable.
There is a reason that McDonalds’ always have the fries on the left
and the soda on the right: DUPLICATION. I know that most schools
that I walk into don’t have a structured duplicable presentation and
that is the reason the school suffers when a PD leaves the school.
Most schools have personality based presentations (1st Intro),
rather than duplicable presentations that anyone can learn in a
short amount of time. Another mistake is that owners don’t require
the entire staff to know the presentation and because of that the
enrollments rely on one person. That is like having an army with
only one general and no lieutenants, sergeants, or other leaders. It
makes no sense.
Next, teaching your staff how to close can be broken
down to three simple steps; they have to ask the right questions,
take it away, and give people options. The most important in the
three is the take away. When you take something away from somebody
they only want it more. The most valuable word that you can use in
closing a deal is the word “Qualify”. Get used to saying this word a
lot because closing is all about understanding peoples mentalities
and when you get down to it you are in the people business. I will
show you how to correctly use this strategy in your business another
time. You see, I just took away from you and naturally you want to
hear about it more. These simple changes in your presentation can
help your staff achieve the results that you desire.
Operating a martial arts school can be very fulfilling
and exciting as long as you have the right tools to fix your
problems. As part of the Championsway team, the other columnist and
I are dedicated to your improvement as an owner and a martial
artist. I realize that some of you are hesitant to use some of the
things that we recommend to you because you may feel like a copy
cat. That’s okay because that is a natural feeling. I’ll tell you
that it is okay to be a copy cat as long as you copy the right cat!
Over the next couple of months I will be talking about different
system and concepts that you can implement into your school that
will help you grow your business to levels that you have never
imagined. If you meet us half way, we will take you to the top.
Darren Gaitan
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