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GOLF
TEACHING PRO®
Boosting Your Teaching Business
You’ve done it. You’ve passed the
USGTF certification course, you get hired at a driving range or golf
course as the head teaching professional, and you can’t wait to get
started.
You hang out your shingle and wait
for the students to come… except that they don’t come in the numbers
you envisioned. What’s going on here?
There are certain locations where all
you have to do is hang out the proverbial shingle and students will
come. If you are teaching at such a place, you are fortunate.
However, most teachers will have to pursue students to maximize
their lesson revenue.
The most obvious place to start is
with the hometown newspaper. Most of them have a golf column in the
sports section. Contact the golf writer and let him or her know that
you are now a teaching professional at your facility, and see if the
writer will do a story about you. Almost all will, as they often
have to search for content for their columns. If you offer the
writer a free lesson, you may just get a very detailed and glowing
review.
Summer junior camps and clinics often
produce great revenue. Depending on where you’re at, in terms of
region or facility, you can earn a much greater amount doing camps
than regular individual lessons. For example, if you offer a
three-day junior camp from 9 AM – 12 noon, charge $150 and get 10
kids, you just earned $1,500 for nine hours of your time. Even if
you pay an assistant $100 per day to help you, that’s still a pretty
good hourly rate you just earned.
To promote your junior camps, drop
off some brochures at area schools. The administrators will be glad
to pass them on to their students.
Adult clinics can also deliver added
revenue. Twenty dollars for a one-hour clinic is not unreasonable in
many areas, and just 10 people produce $200 for that one hour of
your time. Unlike junior camps, a clinic ratio of 10 students per
teacher is not out of line. Clinics are not fullblown lessons.
If there is a charity scramble event
in your area, show up with your video equipment and offer a free
five-minute swing analysis. The analysis should involve detection of
the main error with a comment along the lines of, “You need to fix
that.” At that point hand them your card and tell them you are
available for lessons.
Area companies sometimes put out a
monthly or quarterly employee bulletin. Advertise in these. Giving a
talk to a civic group can pay dividends, too.
Finally, there is nothing wrong with
introducing yourself to people on the lesson tee. Some teachers like
to offer a quick free tip, but if your tip works, then there is no
point in taking a paid lesson from you. Just let them know who you
are and hand them a business card, while perhaps asking them some
questions about themselves. Don’t sell yourself too hard when using
this technique.
There are many ways to drum up
teaching business, too many to list in the scope of this article.
The above suggestions have all been utilized successfully in the
real world. Take action beyond just waiting for students to come,
and you should find yourself with more business.
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