How Piano Teachers Can Beat the Clock
How Piano Teachers Can Beat the Clock
A new competition for Piano Lessons has begun but not between teachers or students, it’s a race against the clock.
Have you heard about new laws passed that require school classes to begin later thereby shortening the after-school hours for activities? This reduces the average piano teacher’s work week by 5 hours a week.
Legislated later school start times cut deeply into kids’ extracurricular after-school hours. Now their options for swim team, cross country, soccer, karate, dance and piano lessons get much harder to work around.
If this hasn’t happened in your state yet, it may be coming. California’s adoption begins this year. Michigan has had later times for cold winter snows for a while now.
Fortunately, due to my methods, this doesn’t affect my business but many of my teacher friends are up in arms- along with their student’s parents.
So what’s the Answer?
How can piano teachers still see all their students despite a 5 hour decrease in teaching time without going so late in the evening their young students can’t focus?
Small group piano lessons to the rescue.
Group lessons will enable you to teach more students in one or two days than most who teach five days per week. But the best part is the lessons are way more fun. Don’t believe me? Read my google reviews. Watch the reels of parent testimonials on Instagram.
Have you thought about this, but feel it seems too hard to figure out?
I Promise, it’s not too hard, you just need someone who’s done it to help you get started. I’m right here. I’ve been teaching others how to teach piano for a long time.
Now I’m also teaching how to use small group lessons because small groups are superior to private lessons for the vast majority of students.
Feel confident in your own teaching methods? Great. Let’s adapt them to small group lessons. Need help in developing your own methods? I’m able to help you there too.
Send me an email, hello@CoralieHarless.com to let me know you’re ready to start. I’ll help you see between 24-28 students in less than 4 hours a day.
Obviously, this increases your income but it will also increase your success rate as a teacher with more students who love learning to play. I average between 100-140 students a week myself.
It’s not hard to figure out, not with me as your guide. Though it took me years to work out some rough edges, you can learn from my own steep learning curve.
I’m right here … send me an email and tell me you’re ready for help.