Sunday, March 03, 2013

How to be a Tuition Teacher Part 1 - How to find students

Thanks for supporting my old post on being a relief teacher! From there I realized that there were people keen to know more about teaching!

So I decided to write a new series, and this time, it is on teaching tuition.

I'm sure many of us out there would have tried being a tutor at some point of our lives. For many people, they do this without the benefit of teaching experience. This means they are not always prepared for what to actually teach and do during tuition classes.

I went through this once too, after my exams. I taught tuition privately for about 2 years before stopping completely to concentrate on teaching. With the benefit of my experience in school with actual students, I can now look back and see where I did wrong, and where I did right.

So, I decided to compile them into a short series. Some of the things I have written may not work for everyone! Everyone has a unique style of doing things. ( As I found out from the comments on my previous post on relief teachers ) I can only offer my two cents worth, and it is up to you whether you want to employ my methods or not.

This is Part 1: How to find students for tuition

1. Network, network
This is a valuable lesson, and I think those working in sales would agree. Tuition assignments will not come to you magically. You must let people know that you are up for hire, and networking is the key. Let as many people know that you intend to do tuition, for which levels and which subjects.

(Facebook and Twitter may have their uses here, but don't forget that many parents may not use these as frequently as you do. Don't forget your target audience is not your friends, it's the parents)

Let all your parents' friends, especially those with young children know. Send out the news to as many parents in your circle, maybe your neighbors even. You never know what may come your way.

2. Tuition agencies
I called many agencies when I first started. The first thing you must realize is that they will take half of your first month's pay as commission. This is non-negotiable as the agencies rely on this for their main income. If you go for the first lesson and you realize that you do not want to teach that student, you may even have to pay the agency in some cases.

Make sure you are 100% clear on the agency's commission policy before you take any assignments. You must be prepared to wait for assignments. I first started calling agencies in early Dec. I only started getting return calls in early Jan.

Some agencies may ask for copies of your educational certificates, and these are usually the bigger agencies. Make sure you have copies of these ready.

3. Leaflets
Printing your own leaflets and sending them out can be low-cost, but time-consuming. I tried this in 2 ways.

First, I pasted leaflets with my HP no on the walls of the lift lobbies around my estate. Second, I also tried photocopying leaflets to drop into mailboxes. I covered around half my estate.

The result? ONE reply. Later on, I also realised that the educated parents around my estate were not likely to trust a strange leaflet pasted up by who-knows-what!

Also, I found my leaflets torn off the very next day! I suspected the HDB cleaners at first, till I realized that other leaflets by other tuition schools had been left alone! Had my leaflets been torn off by rivals? To this day, I do not know... But I can conclude from that experience that this is a very time-consuming and wasteful marketing strategy!

That's all I have to share on this and I hope you find it useful! If there's anything else you would like me to share, you can always comment below!

5 comments:

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Anonymous said...

Thanks for sharing. Excellent post. A great resource for many aspiring tutors.

SG Tutors

Mr Wong said...

Great post, just want to point out that adding yourselves to tutor directories (like WongTutor.com) also helps.

Much better than engaging tuition agencies, and certainly more efficient in promoting your services than flyers.

Unknown said...

Awesome blog thanks for sharing
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Anonymous said...

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