Archive for the 'martial arts marketing' Category

Killer Marketing Secret with Example

People often ask me what kind of marketing I do for my dojo. 

“Do you drop flyers on windshields?”

“I hear demonstrations are a great way to get new students, do you do that?”

“What about yellow pages, do use them?”

The answer is a resounding no. None of the above.

Have I used these types of things? Sure, I’ve tried all kinds of things and I’ve paid attention to what works  and what doesn’t. And at the end of the day I focus on those things that DO work, and let others do the things that don’t.

This is KEY to having a successful full time dojo.

KILLER TIP: In fact I track not only what marketing sources get most students, but know which sources produce the longest serving students and focus on those methods.

And you know I’m probably the world’s laziest marketer. In fact my marketing is sometimes downright pathetic, yet my dojo continues to grow from strength to strength.

So what do I do?

Well I have 4 rules when it comes to marketing:

1) I like it to be inexpensive, free if possible.
2) I like other people to do the work for me.
3) I don’t like to put in too much continued effort – I like to set things up once and let them take care of themselves.
4) It’s got to get good results.

So recently when I won the WEKAF Stickfighting World Championship I thought, how can I use this in my marketing to promote my school?

Well here’s what I did:

1) I wrote a short press release (30 minutes work)
2) I sent it to 3 local papers
3) The editor of the biggest of the three papers called me for an interview (20 minutes) and I sent him a photo
3) The story ran in this morning’s paper and also on their web site.

So this fits my 4 criteria above:

1) It was free to do
2) The editor did most of the work
3) The article is now out there in today’s paper, and also on The Press Enterprise web site, which can be linked to forever
4) Past experience tells me that this article will get in front of 10′s of thousands of people, create word of mouth and great exposure for our dojo.

Perfect!
If you’d like to read the article here it is…

http://www.pe.com/localnews/lakeelsinore/stories/PE_News_Local_S_speople15.31630a5.html

Now is this the only way I market?

No of course not.

You’ve got to have multiple streams that bring you traffic and make your phone ring consistently. But this is one example of an excellent way to get exposure for you and your school. I hope you can use it as an example for yours – unless you’re one of my competitors… =)

The Keys to a Successful Martial Arts Business

Running a full time karate school can be a challenge.

I used to think that my instructor sat around all day and casually rolled up to teach for a few hours each night, while spending the rest of the day lazing in the sun. When I started my own full time school a few years ago I soon realized there is a lot more to running a full time school than I imagined.

Don’t get me wrong, I wouldn’t trade it for a 9 to 5 job (Errr, I mean a 4:30am to 7:30pm with the commute! ), with 8 different bosses asking me if I got the memo about the TPS reports.

As a full time instructor although you might only be teaching 15-25 hours per week, there are other tasks you need to take care of on a daily basis. These things most people don’t realize until they start their own business.

Over the next few posts I’ll share some of these with you. The first being…

Marketing Your Karate School

Yes, you have to do it and you have to do it constantly in order to continue to get new students through your door and onto the floor. Many businesses fail because they have little idea of how to do this critical part.

This doesn’t mean randomly spending $500 on flyers and having some kid place them on car windshields, or walking around your neighborhood knocking on doors trying to get people to come to class.

It means carefully testing different low cost (and in some instances free) , time conserving marketing methods, and tracking the results. Then you can spend your effort on those things that work well for you and avoid the things that waste your time and money.

When testing new marketing methods my personal rule is I need to be able to test it for $50 or less. Then if it works, I can spend more on it. But giving $2,000 to some direct mail marketing company without a personally proven result might be the torpedo that sinks your ship.

In a nutshell, test small, pay attention to your results, and roll out the big guns when you KNOW it works….

Stay tuned for next week’s installment…