How To Instantly Improve Your Guitar Teaching Business & Get New Guitar Students By Eliminating These 9 Mistakes

by Tom Hess


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Are you struggling to be a highly successful guitar teacher? Do you want to have more new dedicated guitar students who remain committed for the long term, but your guitar teaching methods are not working as effectively as you would like them to? Are you unhappy because most guitar students don’t reach their musical goals and/or an advanced level of guitar playing? Are you unable to support yourself and your family with your guitar teaching business? Is your guitar teaching business not earning the money you would like to?

Most guitar teachers struggle with at least some of the areas mentioned above.


How To Keep Your Guitar
Students Taking Lessons
With You For Years
ENTER YOUR NAME AND
EMAIL TO GET ACCESS
FREE eGUIDE

An error occured. Please contact admin@tomhess.net to fix it.

By submitting your info, you agree to send it to Tom Hess Music Corporation who will process and use it according to their privacy policy.


Many years ago, I was no different. 

I used to have a difficult time balancing the challenges of trying to help more guitar students, become a more effective guitar teacher, grow my guitar teaching business income, and have time left at the end of the day.  When I began teaching guitar, I had only a few guitar students and struggled to support myself on guitar teaching business income only. 

My biggest challenges were getting consistent results with different types of guitar students - having reliable systems in place for attracting more guitar students and keeping my existing guitar students from quitting.  I also couldn’t see an effective way to increase my income other than increasing the number of hours I taught or raising my lesson rates to very high levels.

Unfortunately, I could not find much help from anyone on how to change my situation.

Although there were some very good musicians teaching guitar in my area, very few had anything that I considered to be a thriving guitar teaching business: one that ensures effective, powerful and consistent results for guitar students as well as financial success for the guitar teacher. 
 


It became clear to me that following the conventional approaches to teaching guitar was not going to bring me the results I was after (for myself and for my guitar students).  It took a long time of studying successful business people (outside of music), and a lot of trial and error, before I finally began to understand why my earlier attempts to become successful teaching guitar were so ineffective.  Eventually I realized what I needed to change in my approach before I would be ready to start a highly successful guitar teaching business. 

In this article, I will share with you 9 of the biggest mistakes I used to make as a guitar teacher and that I notice many guitar teachers make.  By correcting these mistakes, I was able to completely transform my guitar teaching business and skills in very powerful ways.

Note: This article is focused specifically on how to improve the business side of your guitar teaching, the ‘teaching side’ of your  business will be discussed in a future guitar teaching business article.

Before reading further, it will be useful for you to assess your current level of readiness to become a highly successful guitar instructor.  Take this 5 minute guitar teaching test before reading further. It will help you discover if you are making one or more of the top 9 mistakes guitar teachers usually make.


Guitar Teaching Business Mistake #1. Having Limited Guitar Teaching Models To Help Your Guitar Students

The vast majority of guitar teachers only engage in one form of teaching: one-on-one guitar lessons.  While this approach certainly has its place, it is not the only guitar teaching method that could be or should be used to maximize the benefit to both your guitar students and yourself.  Contrary to conventional wisdom, guitar students do not “always” learn most effectively in a one-on-one guitar lesson format.  Unfortunately, very few guitar teachers ever venture outside of this traditional method.  Many teachers simply aren’t aware of the benefits that other guitar teaching formats have, or they follow what other guitar teachers do.  There are many cases where a group class could be a more appropriate model, or at least be a useful addition to private guitar lessons.  The wide range of group teaching formats (when designed and taught in the right way) allows your guitar students to interact and learn from one another.  This is obviously not possible in private lessons.  Also, group guitar classes are usually more focused on one specific topic, allowing guitar students to master it in less time. Finally, including group formats into your guitar  teaching can make your guitar teaching business much more lucrative, less time-demanding and add more value to your guitar students (plus it becomes more affordable for them!)


Guitar Teaching Business Mistake #2. Not Achieving Meaningful Results With Guitar Students

When it comes down to it, the only thing that really matters is the results that your guitar students get from you.  If you are able to consistently turn out good or great guitar players, then your positive reputation will begin to spread and referrals will come to you.  So if your guitar teaching business is not growing at the rate you would like it to, one of the questions you should ask is: “How effective am I in getting powerful results with my guitar students?” If your guitar students are not happy with the results they receive, then you need to take a closer look at your guitar teaching methods and ask yourself: How can I teach more effectively?  How can I add more value to my guitar students? Do the guitar lesson formats I use produce effective results? Do I inspire my students or do I simply give them “information” about guitar playing? How can I lead my guitar students through a literal life transforming experience as their guitar teacher, trainer, coach and mentor?  One great way to improve as a teacher is to find the most successful guitar teacher you can, and take lessons with him or her on how to TEACH.  Remember that the more you are able to fulfill and transform people’s musical lives in genuinely empowering ways, the faster your guitar teaching business will grow. 

I explain more about the topic of getting powerful and consistent results with guitar students in my free 7 day e-mail mini course about teaching guitar.


Guitar Teaching Business Mistake #3. Working Too Much “In” Your Guitar Teaching Business And Not Enough “On” It 

It is very common for guitar teachers (and business owners) to get so caught up in doing the daily work of “teaching” that little action is taken to actively expand and grow their guitar teaching business further.  As a result, they don't really own a guitar teaching business; he/she only owns a “job”.  Of course your guitar teaching business may expand on its own to some extent, but it will grow MUCH faster if you invest some time each week into doing things that will speed up this process.  Focusing on promotion, analyzing and improving your guitar teaching effectiveness and business models, creating referral programs, joint ventures and partnerships all create opportunities for you to maximize the value you add to your guitar students and expand your guitar teaching business!  Schedule some time each week to plan the direction you want your business to take in the next 3, 6, and 12 months… By being proactive in this way, you will see many positive results for you and your guitar students. 
 

Guitar Teaching Business Mistake #4. Not Knowing How To Distinguish Yourself From The Competition

The best way to distinguish yourself from your competitors is to not have any.  Read the last sentence several times and think about what it means!  How can this apply to your situation as a guitar teacher?  There are probably dozens (or hundreds) of guitar teachers in your local area, so it may seem impossible to “not have competitors”….or is it?  One effective way to make all competition “irrelevant” is to offer something that no other guitar teacher in your area does. Having several teaching models in addition to the standard one-on-one guitar lessons is one such possibility, but there are MANY others.

The options range from changing the way you conduct lessons to thinking of innovative ways for overcoming objections of prospective guitar students that will make them want to choose you over the competition every time.

Here is another common competition problem and something you can do about it:

Very often you may only be able to attract guitar students who live close to your teaching studio. When a prospective student lives further away, that distance creates a barrier of inconvenience and the student is more inclined to find a guitar instructor who is closer.  Most guitar teachers would simply give up and allow the person to study with someone else.  But have you ever thought about what that inconvenience really means?  Most of the time, the “distance” isn’t the problem. The problem (the objection) is the “time” that the student feels is wasted each week as they travel to and from your guitar lessons.  They may love your lessons but hate wasting an hour to travel to you.  Have you ever thought about what that means for you and how understanding this difference can be of great benefit to both you and your prospective guitar students? The question on your mind should be, “How can every minute they invest into traveling to me be reinvested into something useful for them?”  Asking this question will likely inspire you to create some powerful resources to offer to your prospective guitar students that they can study while commuting to and from your lessons!  This is one of many examples of how you can differentiate yourself from the competition. The more you set yourself apart, the easier it will be to grow your guitar teaching business.


Guitar Teaching Business Mistake #5. Not Understanding How To Achieve Geometric Growth Rather Than Linear Growth  

Most guitar teachers only know how to grow their guitar teaching business linearly.  They take one action in one area, and achieve some result. Then they repeat that same action and receive more results.  Of course there is nothing wrong about this, but such an approach limits the amount of total growth you can achieve and the number of people you can help.  Here is an example. 

Most guitar teachers have only 1 or 2 ways of acquiring new guitar students.  Perhaps the most common method is advertising locally (posting flyers or placing ads in newspapers).  So to recruit more new guitar students, most teachers either increase the number of ads they release, or change the ads to make them more effective.  Let’s assume that last year you were able to recruit 20 new guitar students.  To increase this number, you publish more ads than before.  As a result, this year you recruit 25 new guitar students.  Certainly this is good progress (a growth of 5 guitar students or 25% per year), but you have only achieved linear growth.  What if, in addition to advertisements you also focused on keeping your existing guitar students longer, establishing joint ventures with music stores, and focused on converting a higher percentage of prospects into guitar students?  Most music teachers are completely unaware of how these elements can contribute to their guitar teaching business, and miss huge opportunities for MASSIVE growth! 

If each of these elements provided you with 25% more guitar students, your growth would now become geometric!  The growth in each of these elements would compound on top of the others.  Instead of expanding by only 25%, you can now grow by 144%!  If your current state of business is at level 1, and you expand it by 25% (multiply by a factor 1.25) from 4 different business elements, your total growth is about 144%!  (1 x 1.25 x 1.25 x 1.25 x 1.25 = 2.44 or 144% increase!!!).  This means that your guitar students can go from 20 to 48 instead of 20 to 25 in one year!


Guitar Teaching Business Mistake #6. Not Being Able To Think Of Unconventional Ways Of Attracting More Prospective Guitar Students.

Even if all you do is post flyers in your area and take out ads in newspapers, what have you done to maximize the results you get from these efforts?  If you simply try to copy what everyone around you is doing to attract more guitar students, you will get the same results as everyone else.  But if you want to grow your guitar teaching business and help more people than the average guitar teacher, then you will need to use approaches that are better than average.  Taking some marketing classes will help you to greatly increase the response rate to standard ads.  But in addition to the obvious, it is often the most unconventional methods that bring the best results.  Have you thought about partnering up with a music store around your area to refer guitar students/customers to each other?  This idea can result in much more business for both parties, and it costs nothing to set up! I have guitar students right now (who are professional guitar teachers) applying this concept and almost all of their 50+ guitar students came from this single idea!


Guitar Teaching Business Mistake #7. Not Having Effective Systems In Place For Converting Prospective Guitar Students Into Becoming Guitar Students.

Guitar students will be so much more likely to take lessons from you when you can prove to them beyond any doubt that their life will be enhanced by having you as their guitar  teacher.  One of the best ways to do this is to show the results you have achieved by helping other guitar players.  No matter what you promise “in words”, there must be clear proof to back up your claims.  When it comes to conversion, there is little else as effective as solid proof of your success with other guitar students. Some guitar teachers make the mistake of acting like salespeople, trying to “sell” the lessons to guitar students.  What you need to do instead is to make the prospect see on their own that you are the most logical and most viable solution to their problems.  Nobody likes to be “sold” to, so you should let your massive evidence of success with guitar students speak for itself.  You must also find out as much as you can about your the goals of your prospective guitar students.  After you know this, it will be easier to prove to the person that you can give them the help they need.  Most importantly, you MUST back up every claim you make.  If prospective new guitar students ask to study with you, but you are not comfortable teaching in his/her style, skill level, or musical ambitions, then do NOT teach that student. The fastest way to destroy a guitar teaching business is to fail to deliver what you promise!


Guitar Teaching Business Mistake #8. Not Knowing How To Keep Guitar Students For a Long Time (Years!)

Your guitar students continue studying with you as long as you continue to find unique ways to add value and enrich their musical lives.  When you do this, it is possible to keep guitar students for 5, 6, 8, 10 or more years!  One effective way to ensure that guitar students remain with you longer is to have something to offer that will allow them to continuously advance as musicians.  This becomes easy to do if in addition to private lessons you teach several group guitar classes that go in depth on very specific topics.  This will allow your guitar students to learn more from you in a new setting while also learning from your other advancing guitar students.  Think about the guitar students you have now. You know them well (or at least you should). Ask yourself, in what ways might you be able to provide additional benefits and value to each person you work with?  To be clear, I am not implying that you should create an environment of “dependency”. Certainly our goal as guitar teachers is to make our guitar students grow so that they may become totally independent and not “need” us forever, but that does not mean you should not constantly look to add huge amounts of value to them for years to come!  They should WANT to remain your student for a long time because of the benefit you provide them (not because you are holding them back). Although this might seem like simple common sense, the truth is the VAST majority of music teachers in general, and guitar teachers in particular, don’t do a very good job in this area, and that is why so many guitar teachers and guitar students struggle unnecessarily.


Guitar Teaching Business Mistake #9. Not Knowing How To Motivate Existing Guitar Students To Refer New Guitar Students To You. 

Growing your student base through referrals is a very powerful method of expanding your guitar teaching business.  However, in order to encourage referrals, you need to have incentives strong enough to make your existing guitar students to WANT to refer their friends to you.  One of the strongest incentives is to consistently turn your guitar students into great players and help them reach their musical goals.  In most cases, the more satisfied your students are, the more referrals you will get. 

Another possibility is to offer bonus lessons or bonus instructional items that your guitar students can ONLY obtain when they refer their friends to you.  There are many more possibilities, but these are just 2 to get you started thinking.  Don’t simply rely on word of mouth to work for you!  An effective, organized and systematic referral system will bring you exponentially more guitar students!

It should now be more obvious why guitar teachers struggle with guitar teaching more effectively and getting new guitar students in the process. I hope that by reading this article you have seen that this situation does not have to be this way!  Although the list above is not all inclusive, if you take action on each of the 9 points discussed here, you will surely see your level of success and effectiveness as a guitar teacher begin to grow more rapidly. If you haven’t taken the test mentioned earlier in this article, I encourage you to do so now to find out how prepared you are to establish a highly successful guitar teaching business. Test yourself here

Also, I highly recommend checking out the free 7 day e-mail mini course about how to become a truly exceptional guitar teacher & improve your guitar teaching business.



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