Video – Music Taching Jobs & Lessons

Fun video about music teaching jobs and building your lessons business:

Answers for Finding Music Teaching Jobs

Welcome to the Music Teaching Jobs blog, your guide to building and improving your music teaching career and your lessons business. Economic times and job searches are tough right now. Many music teachers are finding that adding new music students gives them added income and security. Whether you may teach lessons full time, part time, or you are just considering adding lessons, to help financially, we can help you with advice and real actions you can implement.

The single goal of this blog, and the LessonsBuilder Guide I will introduce to you, is to show you exactly how to add substantially to your income, by adding new students and lessons to your personal lessons business. This blog and guide will clearly lay out for you my proven process that is helping music teachers like you to build their income and their individual lessons business. Here you will find the tools, steps and proven strategies that will help you reach your income needs and goals.

Since I’ve helped music teachers use these exact measures to build a successful business, and get more guitar, piano, voice,  and music students, adding 5 to 35 weekly students to their personal lessons business, I’m confident you can achieve your own personal goals, by following my proven methods.

To help you in the most effective way, so you achieve the results you want, I will mention a few fundamental truths:

THIS IS A REAL BUSINESS

First, your lessons business, full time or part time, is in fact a real business. So, let’s treat your lessons business with the respect you and your business deserve.

Music teachers choose to earn a living by combining a love of music with the ability to teach others to learn and appreciate music, and they are compensated for their time, talent, and expertise. Not to mention compensation for the years of practice it’s taken to reach professional performance levels. Music training, and even earning a music degree, does not include business training. Musicians know the music, but not the business of music. Since music teachers are running a real business, of course you need to know how to run it like a real business. Being a music major, and performer with extensive training, does not teach you the best business practices. In fact, no business classes are typically offered as part of colleges’ music curriculum. Teaching music is the tip of the iceberg.