The Secret To Achieving Great Success As A Guitar Teacher
Have you ever noticed how some guitar teachers seem to “have it easy” when it comes to getting great results for their students? If you are like most guitar teachers, you have sometimes struggled to attract guitar students and take them to a new level in their guitar playing skills...
The Secret To Achieving Great Success As A Guitar Teacher
Tom Hess, virtuoso guitarist and musician, member of Rhapsody Of Fire
and guitar teacher trainer helps guitar teachers understand the
psychology behind achieving success in their guitar teaching businesses.
Have you ever noticed how some guitar teachers seem to “have it easy”
when it comes to getting great results for their students? If you are
like most guitar teachers, you have sometimes struggled to attract
guitar students and take them to a new level in their guitar playing
skills. This only becomes more frustrating after watching other guitar
teachers succeed where you are unable to. However, the truth is that you
can also achieve great things as a guitar teacher as well once you
understand exactly what makes these teachers so successful.
After teaching over one thousand students as a professional guitar
teacher and helping many other teachers learn how to become more
productive in getting results for their students, I have spent a great
deal of time figuring out the whole story behind what makes some
teachers successful and others mediocre in order to best help my clients
attain great results in their guitar teaching businesses. After much
research, I have observed that most guitar teachers posses some kind of
balance between two sides in their mindset. These sides consist of one
side that focuses on strengths and another that focuses on weaknesses.
The guitar teachers who have highly successful guitar teaching
businesses have mastered the ability to channel the side of them that
focuses on using their strengths to their advantage while guitar
teachers who do not experience much success tend to think mostly from
the side of them that focuses on weakness (more on this shortly).
Previously, I have created many guitar teaching articles that deal with
specific ideas on what you should ‘do’ as a guitar teacher to make
your guitar teaching business more successful. For the purposes of this
article, I am going to explain to you a concept that will be
instrumental in your growth and success as a guitar teacher. When I
personally train guitar teachers to become more effective in their
teaching strategies, they become very familiar with this idea.
The Psychology Of A Guitar Teacher
As guitar teachers (and people in general), we all have different parts
of our psychological makeup that direct our behavior in every action
we take. Similarly, the way you develop expertise as a musician or
guitar teacher depends on the skills that you focus on most. That said,
for each ‘strong’ quality you possess in your musical or teaching
abilities, there exists an opposing (and connected) ‘weak’ quality that
often keeps you from reaching your full potential. If these weak
qualities remain undetected, they will quickly overwhelm your strong
qualities until you take the time to identify and correct them. This
commonly occurs to all guitar teachers (experienced and inexperienced
(usually without them even knowing about it).
If you have not
yet become a successful guitar teacher, it will be very important for
you to learn how to gain the most benefit from your strengths while
avoiding the negative side effects of the weaknesses that come bundled
together with them. If you are unable to do this, all of your efforts
to learn how to become a great guitar teacher will be destined to FAIL!
Every guitar teacher will a successful guitar teaching business knows
about this, and fortunately; you can learn this for yourself regardless
of whether or not it is something that comes naturally to you.
To demonstrate my point, I am going to show you some of the most
common traits I observe in the guitar teachers I train each day. In the
chart below, I will show you how each personality strength also
contains a weakness. The truth is, there are many more weaknesses per
strength than what I have included, but I have narrowed it down to just
one in order to keep this article from becoming too long.
It
is essential to identify that each one of the strengths in the left
column of this chart are certainly good characteristics to have and
will be helpful in making you a better guitar teacher. However, you
must also recognize the different ways that these strengths can also
turn into weaknesses until you take the initiative to learn how to stop
them from doing so.
Opposing Weakness
You have a passion to teach guitar and help your students achieve results.
Being passionate about teaching guitar is certainly a MUST if you want to become a successful guitar teacher. However, many guitar teachers who are highly passionate tend to ignore the business aspect of teaching guitar for a living. As a result, they end up teaching (and helping) less students overall since they do not earn enough money to expand their guitar teaching business. The truth is, the more money you make, the more you can invest it into building the value of your guitar lessons in order to give more to your students.
You already have a good amount of experience teaching guitar/music lessons.
After teaching guitar for a while, it becomes hard for these types of guitar teachers to break away from the methods they are used to. This approach becomes very limiting over time as continually using the same methods does not bring great results for new students. In order to achieve great results for your guitar students (and take a step forward in your teaching skills), you will need to innovate and break away from some of the methods you are accustomed to.
Your guitar playing skills are highly developed.
A lot of great guitar players have difficulty identifying with the challenges of low level guitarists (who are by the way - the majority of guitar students). As a result, these types of guitar teachers are lacking in an area that affects most of their potential students. You must be able to relate to the challenges of your students who are just starting (or are not at a high level in their playing yet). Many guitar teachers with great guitar playing skills fall short in this area.
You play several instruments in addition to guitar.
When guitar students look for someone to teach them guitar, they are much more prone to seek the help of an ‘expert’ who specializes in guitar rather than someone who teaches many different instruments. By marketing yourself as a teacher of many instruments, you may actually end up doing more harm than good to your reputation as a guitar teacher.
You have a very disciplined approach to learning guitar and take music very seriously.
Guitar teachers who possess this strength generally cannot relate to students who are learning guitar “just for fun”. The truth is that almost all of your guitar students will be interested in guitar as a hobby, and until you can relate to their basic guitar playing goals on their level, you will have a hard time getting them to come back for lessons.
You have a lot of ambition and many ideas for expanding your guitar teaching business.
The guitar teachers in this category are prone to beginning many new projects out of strong enthusiasm; but end up leaving most of them unfinished. To them, it feels like they are working very hard, but in reality they are making very little progress.
You have achieved many things in your professional music career.
As you invest a lot of time into your music career, it usually leaves very little time to improve your teaching skills so you can teach guitar at a high level. In fact, this is a major reason why many pro musicians who are already successful in their music careers are unable to help their students achieve BIG results.
You are very self-dependent.
Self-dependence is a great quality to have; however many guitar teachers who are strong in this area feel a resistance to asking for help when they need it. In order to develop your guitar teaching business, you can steer clear of many common obstacles by learning from someone who has already been down the same road as you.
You spend a lot of time rationalizing different possibilities in any given situation.
While it is a great quality to be able to map out different possibilities for the scenarios that may pop up in your guitar teaching business; this can often lead to “over-analyzation”. While it is important to think things through, it is also important that you take the necessary action to do what needs to get done in order to realize your guitar teaching goals.
You enjoy offering all you can for your guitar students and making every lesson as enjoyable as possible.
Guitar teachers who seek to give their guitar students as much value as they can have a tendency to overcompensate and give “too much”. Additionally, these types of teachers have a hard time with confrontation and struggle to enforce their teaching policies.
You have a great work ethic and persistence when working on important tasks.
It is very easy for someone who sticks to a task with great persistence to become “stubborn”. This can be highly counter-intuitive if the task you are working on is not very effective at accomplishing your guitar teaching goals.
You spend a lot of time coming up with creative new ideas.
These guitar teachers have a habit of overlooking common (yet successful) teaching or business methods in order to try new approaches. To be a great guitar teacher you must innovate; however, not at the expense of giving up conventional approaches that already work.
What do you need to do now?
Now that you
understand the concept behind how your strong qualities also can
contain weak qualities embedded within them; here are several steps
that you can take now in order to get the most benefit from these ideas
to develop your guitar teaching business:
1. Invest the time
to come up with a solid plan for how you will maximize the benefits
you receive from your strengths while avoiding the negative aspects
that may come along with them. Take note of the daily actions you take
as a guitar teacher and compare them the chart above in order to help
you identify and eliminate any limiting thoughts that will keep you from
becoming a great guitar teacher.
2. Understand that knowing
how to maintain a great balance between your strengths and weaknesses
will require much insight, practice and continued training. Most guitar
teachers have developed entrepreneurial mindsets and have a tendency to
act on their “gut” instincts. They generally see planning as something
that must be done, but nevertheless have a resistance to sitting down
and mapping things out. If this resonates strongly with you, or if you
are struggling to identify your own strengths and weaknesses, then you
will benefit greatly by seeking the advice of someone who can show you
how to effectively apply these things into your guitar teaching
business.
3. Make a commitment to refine your current approach in your guitar teaching business by keeping the above ideas in mind.
That said, you should certainly continue learning more about the things
that you need to “do” as a successful guitar teacher. However,
remember that learning new teaching skills is not the only piece of the
puzzle. In order to quickly become a great guitar teacher, you must
first assess your strong and weak qualities as described in this
article. Only then will you be able to take full advantage of all the
things you learn. Once you have the ability to utilize the full
potential of all your strongest qualities, your success as a guitar
teacher will quickly take off.
About The Author:
Tom
Hess is a successful professional guitar teacher, composer and the
guitarist of the band Rhapsody Of Fire. He also trains guitar teachers
how to improve their guitar teaching methods. Visit his website, tomhess.net to read more articles about guitar teaching, get free guitar teacher skill assessments and guitar teaching tips.
Get more insight on how you can improve your strengths and minimize their negative side effects by taking this guitar teacher improvement test
Source: Free Guest Posting Articles from ArticlesFactory.com
About Article Author
