I disagree. And Gene, I’m surprised to hear you say that after all you spoke out against amazon.com
A lot of people are not all that intelligent. Do you know where all the money is at in MA? It isn’t with the good instructors, it’s at all the TKD and Karate franchises. I’m not saying the instructors at a TKD and Karate franchise are all lousy, but they aren’t necessarily the best, just the “popular thing” right now. There’s a couple big TKD franchises where I’m living now. I checked out some of the schools for the hell of it. Structurally, they are the nicest schools I’ve seen. They were clean, well lit, lots of room, and had plenty of mirrors. I observed quite a few classes (different levels) at various franchises. I’ve never seen the dojo’s “Sensei” teach a class. It’s always one of the black belt students. They do a little circut training or light cardio to warm up and then start practicing techiniques. These “black belt” students were clueless. Their horse stance was sloppy, and their attacks were off-balanced, too wild, and not very strong. I can understand sacrificing control for power, but these “black belts” just didn’t have the power. Just in general I saw so much improper form. This was typical at the two franchises that I looked at. Frankly, I think it was TKD watered down for fitness. I took TKD for 6 months before switching styles, and even as a beginner, if I were to be that sloppy, my sensei would throw me into a wall for being so lazy.
I could go on for a while with what I saw, but needless to say it was really really sloppy. However, these two franchises contain the highest grossing MA schools in the area. Why is that?
I think it’s because people are not doing their research. A large part of the customer base are either soccer moms finding something to keep junior busy, or some business execs just looking for the quickest way to a black belt so they have something other than their portfolio to brag about. And that’s what these francises are providing. Not proficiency in a martial art, but busywork for the kids or a status symbol for a yuppie.
Then there’s another aspect of this that I’m surprised has yet to be mentioned. That is what mainstream marketing does to any enterprise. Franchising and marketing will change a lot of MA schools. Instead of focusing on staying true to the art and style, many instructors will focus on developing and maintaining a solid customer base. Whether it’s done by watering down a Muay Thai class into cardio-kickboxing, or lowering the standards for belt advancement (I’d love to spar an 8-year-old with a purple belt, or even a 28-year-old who got his/her purple belt in 6 months :rolleyes: ) it’s going to have an effect on the art.
I know there will be some instructors out there who will stay true to the art, but marketing and franchising is going to do to the small business MA schools the same thing that any superstore does to the independents. It’s going to run them out of town or force them to conform.
But wait, won’t people see through the nonsense wishy-washy franchise school and realize the true skill comes through hard work with a proficient instructor?
Not in America. Mainstream Americans generally don’t want actual knowledge and to have their mistakes corrected, they just want to be told that they’re right. They don’t want to be more than mildly challenged to achieve a goal, they want the quick and easy reward, and the false sense of accomplishment that comes with it.
Look at the kind of people that hire personal trainers. There was a really great thread about this a while back about personal trainer horror stories and the kind of things the clients would say or do. Some of you are personal trainers and know what I’m talking about. What percentage of your customers bail out after a short period of time because it’s just too much work? The turnover rate with diet and exercise plans is astronomical. People really want to have a great body, but they really don’t want to work for it. They want to loose weight. Tell them to use a treadmill for a half an hour a day at a steady jog. They’ll get going good for about 5 minutes or less, walk the rest, and then treat themselves to a pint of ice cream for being so “health conscious”.
And before I get flamed for that anti-american comment, or see people post “well, I’m not like that”, let me reiterate that was addressed towards “mainstream” americans and I said that they “generally” are like this. There are plenty of exceptions, though probably not enough for genuine MA instructors to form a solid customer base.