Glen Gross A Martial Arts Career Time Line
Transcription
Glen Gross A Martial Arts Career Time Line
Official Magazine of the Martial Arts Teachers’ Association John Graden As I See It How Many of Your Classes is One Sink Worth? The most common mistake that I see school owners make day-in and day-out is a learned condition that creates a tremendous amount of frustration and confusion. This is the Core Dynamic of Value What You Do. Though this encompasses far more than just how much you charge for tuition, I want to focus on money for this example. This subject is also covered extensively in my new book, The Truth About the Martial Arts Business. As black belts, we place an extremely high value on the martial arts as a life-changing lifestyle that we wouldn’t give up for $50,000. Yet the majority of us are convinced we live in an area where virtually no one can afford lessons unless we charge very little. In 1974, the tuition at my school was $25 per month. Adjusted at 5% historical inflation, you would have about $113 per month tuition in today’s dollar. The average American household has an annual income of $46,000. The typical “connected” household spends $65 a month for cable, $80+ for two cell phones, $50 for broadband, $15 - $20 for magazines and newspapers. That’s over $200 a month for entertainment and “connectivity.” Add in movies, DVDS, CDs, rentals and the numbers get even higher. My plumber has an $85 minimum plus $50 per hour. If he comes out to fix my sink, it will cost me more than most martial arts schools charge for a month of lessons. My CPA is $125 per hour. Are four hours with him ($500) worth more than 8 hours a month learning in your school? My attorneys range from $250 - $390 per hour. Is one hour with a $390 an hour attorney equal to three months of martial arts classes? Let me assure you, it is not. This Core Dynamic is a major obstacle for most owners, but what’s interesting is that with the exception of some small pockets of poverty, it’s clear that virtually anyone can and will pay over $100 per month for martial arts lessons, wouldn’t you? MAT magazine is the official publication of The Martial Arts Teachers’ Association MartialArtsTeachers.com and is published by Seconds Out. Seconds Out, Inc. 727-566-5426. All rights reserved. Phone Calls + Great Intake = More Students The Intake Intensive Intake Intensive is a total solution that transforms how martial arts schools front line staff handle prospect calls. So instead of your school spending MORE money on advertising to generate inquiries, the Intake Intensive helps you make the most of what you’re already getting. The Intake Intensive shows owners and their teams how to handle intake calls, how to be MORE effective on the phone, in person or online with prospective students. Go to MartialArtsTeachers.com/intake-intensive to sign up for a free mystery shopping call. We’ll call and record an information call and review it with you. MartialArtsTeachers.com/intake-intensive High Gross For Empower Boxing™ Brandon Owner Glen Gross, Success is a Family Affair Glen Gross was a traditional tae kwon do instructor with a serious challenge Shortly after earning his 6th degree he made a big promise to his 7 year old son Jeffrey. He promised him that he would teach him martial arts. He had two problems with that. First, he was racked with injuries from training. Second, he didn’t think TKD would hold the interest of his son. Here is his story. MartialArtsTeachers.com 4 In 2012 I had been teaching traditional Taekwon-Do (TKD) for 21 years. My training for 6th degree had just come to a stop as accumulated injuries, from years of patterns and sparring, had taken their toll. My son Jeffrey was turning 7 and I had promised to teach him the martial arts. John Graden had just introduced his new curriculum “MATA-MA”, promoting it as “a blend of the best, most basic, easy to learn and effective techniques from many forms of martial arts.” I took an instant interest in the program as I looked at the legacy that I would be passing on to my boy. For months, I would hobble down the stairs in pain, preparing for a new day. The repetitive motions of my traditional 24 patterns and sparring had produced torn hamstrings, and worn out hips and knees. I decided this would not be my son’s inheritance. My wife Katie and I were planning a trip to Disney with Jeffery and my daughter Genna. I wondered how I would even be able to walk with my children. During the day I sit at a computer as Brandon University’s Distance Learning Specialist with a Master’s in Education. In the evenings, I am a parttime martial arts instructor, only teaching three nights a week for two hours. I also have instructors who teach a children’s program (Ninja Tots) for ages 4 to 6 twice a week, but that is the extent of my program. I was enjoying my teaching less and less, due to the pain, and I knew I had to make a change. Ultimately the decision to add MATAMA to my program came from a very persuasive argument from John Graden. He helped me realize that I hadn’t started martial arts for the patterns. I joined for the benefits I believed I would receive. John professed that the new curriculum would provide all of the same benefits without all of the complicated, hard to teach Glen Maximizes the Power of a Branded Program Like Empower Boxing™. MartialArtsTeachers.com 6 techniques. This was the only thing I needed to hear. In September of the same year I decided to offer two programs for ages 7 and above. In the first hour, I offered the new MATA-MA class, and in the second, the traditional TKD style. When I explained the difference to the new inquiring students, 19 out of 20 chose the MATA-MA class. By December I had finished teaching the one month introductory Jiu Jitsu module to the MATA-MA class. It is a simple module and I openly tell anyone I haven’t earned a single stripe in traditional BJJ. One night I decided to try an experiment in the TKD class. As some students were taking both classes, I decided to add grappling to the stand up sparring. Within 30 seconds I saw a White Belt in MATA-MA take down a Red Belt in TKD. The Red Belt had no clue what to do. This happened again and again. Students with relatively little grappling closed the distance and took to the ground senior belts. After that, I began to phase out the traditional style and focus on the new curriculum. On May 30, 2013 I would teach my last class of traditional TKD. It was a bitter sweet class based on a decision I made with mixed emotion. My son would have his first martial arts class that June in the MATA-MA class. It was fast paced and kept his attention. Subsequently he has attained his Black Belt in what has become re-branded as Empower Kickboxing. He has suffered no injuries in his training. On June 3rd I began teaching a new cardio class, Empower Boxing™. I presold “spots” on Facebook and within two weeks had a full class of 20 students (I only had 20 heavy bags). MATA built me a website and I promoted it with Facebook Ads at $15 and $35 a set. My success has attracted the attention of four different imitators have come and gone since I’ve establish my program. I credit that in a large part to the power of branding. Empower Boxing/Kickboxing is a great brand. This fall I focused on ads on Facebook that would appeal to mothers interested in self-defense for their daughters. My Empower Kickboxing program has only enough floor space for a handful more and my Ninja Tot program is full at 20 students. Mr. Graden tells me my website produces the most number of requests for information out of any Martial Arts website he hosts. I MartialArtsTeachers.com 7 Facebook ads like this draw hundreds of responses each month for Glen. MartialArtsTeachers.com 8 How often does your in-box look like this? MartialArtsTeachers.com 9 Everyday, Glen posts a “Hardest Worker” shot on Facebook. MartialArtsTeachers.com 10 they are bound together by a bond of mutual goals like getting in shape or keeping weight off. I do my best to Three Things That Work Well find a nickname for everyone. Some of for Glen Gross my longer term members are: Number One, Nike Face, Two-Towels, Killer, Bare First-Facebook Ads Knuckle, Ripper, Thumper, Slash, Animal, First and absolutely most important Undertaker, Tornado, Heisenberg, May is my Facebook advertising. I use 6 Day, Monster Left, Butcher, Mauler, professional graphics provided by Boom, and Googleit to name a few. Facebook and run a set of ads for only a Members have preferred heavy bags week at a time. During that time I see that they use and we are starting to put which graphics are preforming the best their names on them in vinyl lettering. and shut down the others. I know when my ads are working as I begin to get The Empower Boxing™ members requests for information within the hour. support each other when their pictures are posted with encouragement and Facebook Posting bug each other on the page if they miss The second thing I do is post to classes. They also share their “winning Facebook a picture every night at the posts” with friends and family and this end of the class with me or one of spreads the news! my instructors posing with one of the participants. I recognize one person for Glen’s Order of Priorities something that has happened during Never sacrifice family for the Martial Arts. the class. The “Hardest Worker” is a My order of priorities: common award, but sometimes students confess that they had rather stayed at home and so they will get the “Just 1. God Made it to Class” award. Others include 2. Family “Best New Nickname” or “Most Points 3. Friends for Superman Yell.” believe it is because of three things I do differently. Family Focus 4. Everything else The third thing I do is focus on the feeling of being a family. Many students may not want to work out alone, but MartialArtsTeachers.com 11 It All Started with a Promise from Glen Gross to His Son Jeffery MartialArtsTeachers.com 12 Glen Gross A Martial Arts Career Time Line 1990–Began training I.T.F. Taekwon-Do 1991–Opened Kirin Taekwon-Do Club under Terence Wisniewski (I Dan) 1992–Became Head Instructor of Kirin 1993–Test to I Dan under Mr. Clint Norman 1993–Opened branch club in Sioux Valley 1994–Test to II Dan under Mr. Clint Norman 1996–Test to III Dan under Master Andre Blake 1999–Test to IV Dan under Master Andre Blake 2000–2010 Executive Vice President of the Canadian Taekwon-Do Federation International 2005 –Test to V Dan under Master Clint Norman 2005–Added Ninja Tots program for ages 4 to 6 year with instructor Wendy Sholdice 2007–President of the Manitoba Taekwon-Do Federation International 2008–Moved to 7,200 square foot current location 2010–Opened Branch club in Canadian Forces Base Shilo 2011–Joined Martial Arts Teachers Association 2011–Added John Graden’s “Ultimate Life Skills” program to my curriculum 2012–Added MATA-MA curriculum 2013–Discontinued teaching I.T.F. Taekwon-Do 2013–Began teaching Empower Boxing cardio class 2013–Added Gracie Bully Proof to curriculum 2015–Added Cobra Self-Defense to curriculum 2015–Tested son Jeffrey Gross to Black Belt Have trained 83 individual Black Belts: 4 x III Dan, 8 x II Dan, 71 x I Dan Before Empower Kickboxing™ After Empower Kickboxing™ MartialArtsTeachers.com 13 The Difference Between TKD and Empower Boxing According to Glen Gross. MartialArtsTeachers.com 14 “How did you choose your school name and would you still use the same name if you had it to do over again?” Mountain Martial Arts Academy Our school name was built on several life experiences and the help of one great motivator, my Mom. Yes my mother. As a child, I remember waking from a dream. This dream was a life to be lived. I could feel it at my core. I told my mom of the dream and her response was, “You can be anything you want to be.” Soon after the dream I began studying martial arts with my friends on the rooftop of the building I lived in. We practiced there because there weren’t many parks in the Bronx we could practice in without having trouble with the gangs. 35 years later, the dream has come true. I teach martial arts in the mountains. GEORGE CURBELO Stamford NY McLeod’s Kanzen Kenpo I chose the name to be identified with my art of Kanzen Kenpo. The unfortunate part is that there are so many schools using Kenpo in their name that it lumps you in with schools that teach no contact self defence and schools that require a knock out for you to get a black belt. My hardest job is explaining that not all Kenpo schools are the same. However even with that I would still choose the name as it still best describes what we do and gives the students a larger identity or feeling of being part of a larger group. RICK MCLEOD London, Ontario, Canada Jerry Jones Ultimate Martial Arts Pros: 1. This is a very long but unique. 2. My name in my area has credibility. 1. Negatives - People expect to see me teach most of the classes, (over 60 per week) and if there is a problem they wish to speak to me. Would I do it again? I’m not sure. JERRY JONES MATA Board Member Nutley, NJ Valour School of Self Defense Derived from Men of Valour Ministries, Inc., Valour comes from a Hebrew word, meaning: “Courage with Honor and Strength with Virtue.” It is taken from Joshua 1:14 “...but ye shall pass before your brethren armed, all the mighty men of valour, and help them.” I wanted a name that would help me to motivate young men to be men of courage, honor, strength and virtue. If I had to do it over again, yes, I would keep it. VALOUR SCHOOL OF SELF DEFENSE Delray Beach, FL Wing Lam Kung Fu Out of love and respect, our school is named for my teacher. I’m not sure if I would do it again. JOHN ERVIN Cleveland, Ohio Texas Storm Kenpo Karate This is a great question. Actually, I first thought of a slogan, “Move like lightning, strike like thunder, run like the wind!” From there came the name Texas Storm Kenpo Karate. If I had to do it again, I believe that I would still use this name. TEXAS STORM KENPO KARATE Richland Hills, TX MartialArtsTeachers.com 15 Mid-Coast Martial Arts WhirlWin Martial Arts I started to call my school Intrinsic Martial Arts, but advice from MATA assisted in working through the options to arrive at the final selection. I would consider changing it if I was relocating the school to another area as the name is tied to the region. WhirlWin Martial Arts ANDREW LESMERISES Rockport, ME Matt Fiddes’ Martial Arts Schools Super Kick Karate Family Martial Arts Centre First, I called the dojo Super Kick Karate because I like to kick and train like an animal. The more we grew the less it was about me. Now the dojo is know as SUPER Kick Karate Family Martial Arts Centre because it is exactly what we are about. Don’t get me wrong, we still train like animals, but more like pack animals. Mr. Graden, I would also like to thank you for doing what you’re doing. You really are making the arts better, safer, smarter, and more fun. Anything I could do to help you would be a pleasure. VICTOR GRANIC Super Kick Karate Family Martial Arts Centre Toronto, Canada Best Defense Kenpo Karate, The name derives from The Karate Kid movie where Miyagi Sensei stated “The best defense is no be there.” WhirlWin represents the tornado-like speed, power, and fluidity of kenpo. Armed with new skills and knowledge, students ‘Win’ in life . JAY LARKIN The name was chosen in addition to being the name of the founder, Matt Fiddes. It also remains neutral in not specifying a particular form of martial arts and the word “School” has been chosen to generate recognition, identification and associate trust for our franchise. If we had to do it over again? In today’s market it’s definitely becoming more challenging to do so, but yes. Jason MATT FIDDES MARTIAL ARTS UK’s Largest Franchise of Martial Arts Schools Master Zamora’s Kung Fu I came up with that name because I knew I would never have a problem with someone forgetting it. It’s my name and what I teach all rolled up in one. PABLO ZAMORA MATA Board Member McAllen, TX RON MCKINNIE Charleston, SC The Okinawan School of Karate I just kept it from my instructor. He turned it over to me so I didn’t think of changing it. If I could, I would. It is too long and also doesn’t make sense. I am not in Okinawa, it really should be The School of Okinawan Karate, but I would still not use that name if had to do it all over again. MIKE WEBB Hoopeston, IL MartialArtsTeachers.com 16 The Importance of Character by Brian Tracy In his foreword for The Truth About the Martial Arts Business Brian Tracy, one of the world’s most respected personal and professional development experts shares his perspective on the book and its author, John Graden. T he martial arts have played an important part of my life. I attribute much of my success to the confidence and indomitable spirit I learned as a martial arts student when I was a young man. Character is important and few activities have the lifeenhancing, character-building qualities of the martial arts. John Graden is a man of proven character. I first met John Graden when he interviewed me in the mid-1990s. He was very familiar with my work and told me that his study of my material was the major source of information and inspiration for his success. It wasn’t until I saw his presentation introducing his American Council on Martial Arts (ACMA) at the 1998 NAPMA World Conference that I realized he was not only a successful and influential martial artist but also clearly a man of vision. The ACMA - now the MATA Instructor Certification Course - was the right program at the right time. While John's NAPMA pioneered the business of running a school, the ACMA was created with one purpose in mind: to make sure the interaction between the instructor and student remains as safe and professional as possible. In a fragmented field such as the martial arts, the creation of the ACMA was a daunting task and he pulled it off. I was proud to be a board member of the program and continue to support the idea. Brian Tracy is the most listened to audio author on personal and business success in the world today. Simply put, all the business in the world can’t make up for poor service. If you are going to be a martial arts professional, be the best. Make excellence your standard. From the remarkable success of his NAPMA, Martial Arts Professional magazine and the ACMA to the Martial Arts Teachers’ Association, John Graden has made excellence his standard. He has met his challenges head on with the integrity and character of a true champion. A world-caliber martial artist, John Graden has combined his high technical standards and superb teaching skills with proven business systems to show you how to succeed in The Truth About the Martial Arts Business. MartialArtsTeachers.com 17 The Truth About the Martial Arts Business Section One – The Core Dynamics W hen I created NAPMA in 1994, there was little good information available to the industry as a whole. Owners were struggling because they simply didn’t know any way of running a school other than the system they inherited from their instructor, which we know is usually a recipe for disaster. Humble beginnings. Teaching the only student to show up at my new community center class. I was just happy to be paid to teach and wear a gi as my work clothes. NAPMA gave you a way to learn how to run a school. I created Martial Arts Professional magazine to help the entire industry, even non-NAPMA members, by exposing them to methods, people, and ideas that had proven successful. Now, MATA does the best job of all, because this massive resource is at your fingertips 24/7. Still, as time went by, I found it fascinating to observe that two owners-in the same styles, general markets, and circumstances, and exposed to the same information-might react very differently. One would prosper with it, and the other wouldn’t even try it. After more than a decade of exposure to this great information, why were some schools still struggling, while others thrived? The answer is The Core Dynamics. We martial artists are a unique group, but as school owners, we face the same challenges. More importantly, we all have the same Core Dynamics. The Core Dynamics of the Professional Martial Artist are a way of defining the underlying forces that control our patterns of thought and behavior. Nearly every one of us have the same obstacles, but the distinction is how the top school owners in the world deal with them. How an instructor or school owner deals with The Core Dynamics determines his or her success. Before we get into the how-to section of the book The Truth About the Martial Arts Business, I’m going to help you understand some of the obstacles that may be holding you back. It’s important for you to understand why you do or don’t do something. I want you to be the one who grows instead of stagnates. First, the book examines a common pathway to opening a school and the predictable patterns in most of our backgrounds. Then, we will contrast how the top owners deal with The Core Dynamics versus struggling school owners. Though you may think the kung fu or mix martial arts instructor down the street is as different as could be from you, you will find that you not only have similar backgrounds and pathways to where you are, but you think and look at the martial arts in a very similar fashion. MartialArtsTeachers.com 18 Section Two – What Works (Abridged Excerpt) Chapter 17 (of 22) Curriculum: The Recipe Book for Your School I had lunch recently with a fourth dan in Uechi Ryu. We talked about how the Eastern mindset is so different from the Western, and the confusion that creates for many instructors. Culturally, the East is more about conformity, or as I call it, cloning, than the West, where rugged individualism and innovation are instilled. This prompted him to tell me a story of the greatest fighter in his system. This was a Japanese fellow who, as a young man, went to his uncle to learn karate. The uncle turned him away, but the guy kept returning. Finally, the uncle took him but made him clean the school, wash the toilets, and generally play the role of school janitor for a year or so before teaching him any karate. When he felt the student was ready, he took him to other schools where he would get the heck beat out of him. Sometimes American GIs would come into the school to spar, and the uncle would have them fight his nephew, who got pounded. This lasted years, until finally the nephew began to win some of the fights. Eventually, he won them all. The guy told me this with pride and added you just don’t see that level of dedication anymore. I said, “Of course not. That’s a stupid way to teach.” He was shocked. That is one of those stories instructors tell students to inspire them. And, as usual, the student doesn’t question it. I can’t help but be curious as to why someone would teach that way. My comment to him was here you had someone with this kind of talent and potential, and you risked losing him by making him clean toilets for a year and then have him get beat up. That’s just dumb. That guy could have been a great martial artist years before he finally reached his potential. Luckily, he stuck it out, but who knows how many others with similar potential dropped out due to such an insane program? My first instructors, (left - right) Hank Farrah, Walt Bone, Richard Jenkins. Though they were outstanding black belts and teachers, each had his own rules on everything from how to run a school and what it means to be a black belt. The instructor may have been a great master, but his curriculum was nuts, even if it does make a nice story. If there is any area of your program you will want to scrutinize mercilessly, it should be your curriculum. As a good restaurant has a book of unique recipes, your curriculum is your school’s recipe book. Most of us either inherit the curriculum we came up in or we join an organization and adopt their curriculum. Because of the Eastern roots of martial arts, there is an inherent bias towards conforming to existing methods. This, in time, leads to a one-size-fits-all approach to martial arts. The Masters on Change Here are some quotations regarding styles from three of the most influential martial artists in history: Gichin Funakoshi: “There are no styles in karate.” Bruce Lee: “You limit a style by labeling it.” Joe Lewis: “The style serves the student. The student doesn’t serve the style.” Despite my stylistic roots, my responsibility is to my students, not tae kwon do, kickboxing, Joe Lewis Fighting Systems, or any other source of information. My job is to create the best black belts possible in a MartialArtsTeachers.com 19 school that authentically represents what I believe in. In large part, that responsibility is expressed through my curriculum. When Does a System Freeze? The history of the arts, however, is the tendency to freeze a curriculum and then resist any change or suggestion of change, regardless of the benefit. I love Shotokan and know that the reason I did so well in forms division was my adaptation of the core elements of Shotokan, which uses a deeper balance and more powerful and crisp blocks and punches than my root system of tae kwon do. We have the system of Shotokan because of the work of Gichin Funakoshi. In fact, the genesis of Shotokan is in the massive change Funakoshi made to Okinawan karate. He radically changed the recipe book, yet for the most part the book has not changed since. It’s also entertaining to see modern jeet kune do teachers argue over what is real JKD. If anyone didn’t want his system to freeze, it was Bruce Lee. He was way ahead of his time in his approach to creating a practical martial art that was not confined or restricted by history. Joe Lewis is someone who has continually updated his material. Recently we trained one-on-one for the first time in over a decade. He had me fire some of the excellent Joe Lewis Fighting Systems’ combinations on the bag in my garage. He stopped me and started to show me how to throw a straight right hand. My mouth kind of dropped, my eyes got wide, and I shook my head in disbelief. He said, “What?” I said, “That is the exact opposite of what you taught me when we trained!” He said, “What? I’m not supposed to evolve?” It was the perfect response. Here was a 60-year-old black belt who was in his fourth decade as a worldwide recognized pioneer and superstar, but in his mind, he is in his fourth decade of evolution. Joe is a very traditional martial artist. I Awaiting the decision of the 1985 WAKO World Championship Gold Medal match in London. This was my fourth full-contact fight of the day. am, too. However, we don’t express our traditions by holding on to techniques or rituals. We express them by making sure our students: execute with proper form, can defend themselves and develop the tenacity to never quit. “Tradition is an attitude, not a technique” Can You Really Teach Confidence? Schools today talk a lot about teaching confidence. They have words of the week and life skills training, which is great. I wish my instructors had taught me about goal setting when I was a kid. But I don’t think confidence can be taught. It’s too experiential and situational. I do think schools can present experiences that will help students to gain self-confidence. For instance, Joe Lewis taught me that confidence as a fighter comes when you are hurt and/or exhausted, not when you are fresh. When you learn to stay dangerous despite being at a disadvantage, your confidence builds. Confidence comes from MartialArtsTeachers.com 20 Core Lessons I Wanted My Curriculum to Teach 1. Respect My school was based upon ideals of respect and courtesy. We expressed this in many ways, from how we addressed each other to how we bowed in and out of class. 2. Tenacity The never-quit attitude is critical to gaining self confidence. You’re tired? Rest when you get home. You’re banged up? You’re breaking my heart. Pain is part of the training. 3. Technical Execution to Honor the Arts We honor the rich history of the martial arts by working as hard as we can to execute the techniques as well as possible. Acceptance of a sloppy side kick is like an exhibit of a sloppy painting in a museum. We work to honor the arts by constantly working to improve the quality and efficacy of our techniques. 4. Self Defense experiencing those times that even though you may not win the fight, you can survive it. That translates to all areas of life and has helped me tremendously. But it wasn’t Lewis’ saying that to me that taught it to me. His saying it to me helped me understand the process, but the process is what taught it to me. The process was years of fullcontact sparring with him in a 12-foot ring in the Florida heat with no air conditioning. There were times he hit me so hard the room changed colors. But I never went down, never quit, and never missed a workout (you can see a video of Joe Lewis knocking the wind out of me with a body dig in The Truth About the Martial Arts Business section of MartialArtsTeachers.com). Regardless of your background and what techniques you were taught, what are the martial arts principles that are important to you? How do you want to teach and express them in your curriculum? How can you create a recipe that instills those principles in a dish that keeps the students coming back for more? For me, the principles were respect; tenacity; technical execution to honor the arts; the ability to defend yourself against nine out of ten people your size; physical conditioning; and the attitude of resilient optimism. The martial arts are fighting arts. To me, the principle has always been peace through superior firepower. We never abuse what we’ve learned, but if we need to write the check, we have the funds in the bank. This is why I introduced Bill Kipp, Peyton Quinn, CDT, and Krav Maga to the industry at my NAPMA World Conferences. These guys were the leaders in realistic self defense, and I knew that many instructors, like me, were limited to our own styles’ ideas of self defense. Though I was limited, that didn’t mean it was not important to me. 5. Physical Conditioning Using the Phase One - Three methods of teaching, we were able to make sure that our black belts were in excellent shape (learn more about phase 1 - 3 in Black Belt Management or MartialArtsTeachers.com). 6. Resilient Optimism This is the attitude that if you work hard in a smart direction, good things will happen. It’s the idea that if you do good things, good things come back to you. It’s a resilient optimism that if you work hard and stay positive, things will work out better than if you didn’t. MartialArtsTeachers.com 21 MartialArtsTeachers.com 22 How to Teach an Escape from the Bottom by Jerry Jones F rom the playground to the the parking lot, almost all students have been trapped by someone sitting on them. Understanding only a few basic concepts from bottom will get you out from underneath your opponent every time. Yes, every time. MATA Board Member Jerry Jones shows you a simple, but highly effective escape that you can take into the classroom at all levels. 1. Get him to reach for the ground With your feet flat on the floor, simultaneously push your elbows down and your hips up. Keep your hips up until your opponent has to reach for the floor to keep from falling over. This gives you a chance to reverse. 2. Protect yourself When his hands are on the floor, lock your hands around his back and keep your head against his chest. This stops him from effectively striking. Step over his leg to block him from widening his base. MartialArtsTeachers.com 23 3. Roll him over After his leg is blocked I quickly grab the same side arm of my opponent and push my hips up and to the side I blocked. This will roll your opponent. Notice, when under the full mount, an arm is always around my opponent’s hips. 4. Gain control After rolling him keep his head directly in front of you, and you’ll stop 90% of his finishes. 5. Reverse it! MATA Board Member Jerry Jones is the author of the MATA Youth Grappling Curriculum and a successful school owner teaching MMA. MartialArtsTeachers.com 24 Five Benefits to Teaching Within The Public School System by Roland Jackson W hat would it mean to your enrollments if you had a program that was not only embedded within the public school system but you actually got paid as an adjunct teacher? For my school, it has been a huge advantage and I bet it would be for your school as well. The program I created to “penetrate” the walls of the school district is the Scholastic Martial Arts Resource Technology Karate In District Schools program or SMART KIDS. Here are five benefits your school will enjoy once you are in your public schools as an approved vendor and adjunct teacher. 1. Creates a Bond with Area Schools Scholastic martial arts creates a bond between your school and education that will inspire the community to support your program. Creating a volunteer program within your public school system will generate a high visibility of your logo and school name throughout the community. 2. Get School Approval to Market to the Kids The SMART KIDS approach is to gain approval from the school district to disseminate specially designed martial arts newsletters. These newsletters can be dispersed to every student within the elementary through high schools within your area. The newsletter introduces a special free event sponsored by your martial facility. This event will bring in countless phone inquiries and preregistrations. The cost of making 1000 copies is less than $100.00. That’s a targeted direct mail going to the parents of each student and carrying the school district stamp of approval. The ability to hit this market from the inside will give your school a huge edge over the competition. 3. Increase in New Enrollments The volunteer and marketing systems create a low risk feeder program that will constantly produce new prospects. The scholastic marketing combination not only attracts students to visit your martial arts facility; it also encourages many administrators and teachers to check out your adult programs. The result is an enhanced marketing approach. 4. Expand Into the School Buildings Teaching in the school system will allow you to operate several locations with practically no over-head. The average public school location will easily attract 30 students from the school’s population. This will produce a steady stream of opportunities for your instructors. This will ensure that your name and logo covers everything over a five mile radius in all directions. 5. Obtain Grants and Funding Once you are approved by the school district, you qualify for grants from the government. Scholastic martial arts covers many aspects that will link your martial arts facility to a wide array of federal and state programs. School districts have a unique position as highly successful grant writers. The combination of their grant writing services and the many attributes of a scholastic martial arts program will generate several new opportunities for school districts to obtain grants on behalf of your curriculum. MartialArtsTeachers.com 25 The Empower Kickboxing™ Licensed School System Connects the Dots to Your Success A re you an excellent martial artist and teacher, but would like the business side of running a martial arts school to be easier and more consistent? If so, then you may be a perfect candidate to join the Empower Kickboxing™ Team. Empower Kickboxing™ is a unique licensed martial arts school system that provides you with a proven, polished front end system, image and the back end support to help you focus on your core strength of teaching martial arts. Empower Kickboxing™ will provide you with: • Logos • Curriculum • Business plans • Marketing plans • Complete operational system • World class marketing materials • Logo equipment and apparel line • Centralized websites and marketing • Central call center to handle phone inquires • International rank recognition and advancement • Year-round staff and owner training and consulting EmpowerKickboxing.com Empower Kickboxing™ brings you international affiliation, proven systems, an outstanding curriculum, rank advancement and more...