I don't know about your school but at mine its almost impossible to get new students, at my school about at least a good 7 out of 10 quit after the first class. In some way I'm curious about it. Our school has several other schools they teach the same methods and have more students (maybe because they live in a much larger populated area. But that's not the reason why I posted this, -- out of curiosity what are the chances if a new student comes to your class and quites the first day?
Donald
I viewed your profile to see what art you study and then checked your affiliation's site and I see that you are learning Gojo ryu and from the looks of it, it is traditional Gojo ryu. Are you based in Arlington? I'm in Roanoke, up northwest of you.
Just FYI I teach at the Roanoke Rec. center and have been for the past 7 years. I teach American Karate/TKD and Modern Arnis and Kobudo. My American karate/TKD program is my juniors program and I teach both a Junior Modern Arnis program and an adult Modern Arnis program. The Kobudo is taught to my senior students in karate/TKD as part of the program. Classes are 3 times a week for each program and cost is about $80 a month and it is month to month with no contracts. This is not a commercial for my school rather this is to give you context to my answer to see if my program set up is similar to your situation. Anyway in regards to you questions.
If you are paying $30.00 a month for classes 2X a week then you are lucky. From the Texas Gojo ryu Fed. website I viewed, I take you are part of a good program teaching a traditional art, it looked to me that all of the BB instructors listed have been training for a number of years in the art so it's not bad instruction. Therefore the reason why people quit after the first lesson or two can be from a number of reasons, which I'll cover in a sec.
First off 100% of my students don't leave after the first lesson, to earn their 1st belt is about 2 months and I keep generally 95% of them, in the next belt is also a 90% retention rate, in the intermediate ranks is where I see a drop off, but even there I keep 50%, if the make it to the advanced class then I generally keep them. Last year I lost 2 Red belts (1st browns) but kept my advanced class full at 10 students, in July I'll be testing 3-4 Red belts, for 1st black. It takes 4-5 years for 1st dan.
I believe a big difference between our programs is that 90% of my students are kids-teens, not adults. It is not because I'm a super instructor, but teaching kids is different than adults. If your program is largely kids and the are leaving then I believe iot is a different problem but if you are having a hard time getting adults that is a different issue. It is easier to hold onto the kids than it is for adults.
So here are why it can be that the adults aren't staying past the first lesson or two.
1) After the first lesson they believe that what they are going to learn won't be relevant to their needs. I'm not saying that it won't be relative, I'm saying the customer isn't buying it.
2) It could be because they don't like what they see. I mean they might feel intimidated having to wear a gi, they might not like to be training in a class with kids (adults and kids mixed together), they might not like to train with beginners and advanced belts together, they might not like the idea of being taught by a woman or being taught by a man, they might want to learn self defense and all they see is everyone training kata. They might not like being touched by the opposite sex in self defense training. Really the list can be endless.
3) Depending upon how the class is they might come in and be relegated to a junior student to learn from, and they want to learn from the main instructor.
This happened to me and I chose not to go to a particular school (and it was a good school), because I had to rotate shifts and during the months I worked nights and had to take day classes I would be taking class from a blue belt,
at that time I had been training for close to 10 years and would have been paying $100.00+ a month.
4) Right now, adults have more options to learn martial arts from so it is a harder market to crack and it is more competitive to get that potential student. At a Rec. Center first off the instructor in the public's mind is generally a lower level instructor than a commercial dojo. I mean they look at it as "hey if he was really good why isn't he running his own school?" Then you have Krav maga, BJJ, MMA etc. etc. schools popping up all over the place all competing for the adult student. All of these commercial schools generally charge more, have more advertising (more presence in the public eye), have bigger facilities, more classes, more equipment etc. etc. But they also are seen as more serious, more professional, and therefore a better value to the consumer.
This gets back to teaching kids; in regards to kids the parents are going to take them where it is convenient, flexible, safe, and enjoyable. This is why where I lose the students is in the middle school to high school range because of band, drama, team sports. Completely different reasons than adults.
I hope this helps