Sunday, November 28, 2010

Discouraged BJJ Students

For the past couple of weeks there as been a huge amount of individuals who are contemplating leaving their academies, unsatisfied with their training, or even quitting the game. Although this seems outrageous, don’t be too quick to judge. As shocking, quitter like, traitor style this may seem this is a common occurrence that happens today in our sport. In this blog I will enlighten you on why bjj students fall in this very depressing stage in their pathway.

Leaving your academy- For a student to leave it academy it has to be for 4 reasons.

1. False advertisement- this is probably the shadiest form of why people leave academies. Lets say a world champ moves into town, students flood in and sign that 1 year contract in hopes of being developed into a world class athlete, only to find out that he is a flake, cant teach, or simply put “you” cant be them. I guess some instructors finally are catching on that the sport is growing and use it as a way to exploit people and get their money while not giving a damn about their progression. (Note: don’t get me wrong there are some great schools out there that don’t do this and have made their students into world champs).

2. Students expectations are too damn high- Although some instructors simply don’t care much about a students progressions. Sometimes it’s the student’s insecurities that get in the way of their evolution. Why aren’t you making me into a world champ like your student so and so, the move set doesn’t match what I do, I’m losing every time I compete and other issues. Students that walk into bjj now days need to realize that being a world champ is a lot harder than it was 10 years ago. Why you ask simple the sport is growing. More schools, new moves are being created & larger divisions at tournaments. To sum it all up it's a tougher road.

3. Student isn't motivated- this is when a student leaves an academy but even worse the individual ends up quitting. This is really more of a mental thing for most students. As good as they may be they may get tired of not getting help from their instructor, tired of seeing others rise in the ranks while your stuck at this same rank for god knows how long, or worse you feel your not growing and feel you reached a stage which I like to call “the Flat line Stage” in your bjj progression...

4. Other- this just consist of off-mat life things like your job, money, personal issues, or your family ( which should not be criticized in any way). Handle your business

Although this problem will continue to happen 3 things need to be improved ...................

1. Instructors need to be more dedicated to helping their students. If students are putting money in your pocket the least you can do is..put 100 % effort into making their money worth it.

2. Academies (owners, managers,-etc-) needs to lessen their promotion schemes unless they can follow 100 % through with it. A customer hates to be lied too. That’s like going to a used car dealership and the dealer tells you the car is OK and come to find out it is a “lemon”. NOT GOOD

3. Finally students need to be more open about the issues they have at the academy because of course how would anyone know there is a problem if it wasn’t brought up. Another option for students would be to build friendships outside the academy or visit other academies. This is give you the opportunity to not only make new friends but also learn something new as oppose to what your normally learn. All about building your blocks sorta speak.
In addition don't rely too much on the instructor. 1 man can not focuses his attention on 1 individual. Seek help from your brothers (training partners) on the mat because those are the ones that you are bleeding & sweating on the mat with.Shees in my experience i get more pissed when people don't wanna train way more than an instructor paying me attention.


THE END

monta

2 comments:

  1. Good thoughtful post Monta. 

    The reality is BJJ is a business and in every business, the business owner does what he/she needs to do to make a profit. Fortunately, with most businesses there is competition. And as your post points out every student or client of a business has the option to take their hard earned money to a business that provides services that meets their needs. As a prior business owner, I always did customer satisfaction checks and made adjustments as I saw fit to ensure my client churn rate was at a minimum. This is the difference between businesses that succeed and ones that just get by or fail and the beauty of free enterprise - one of the guiding principles of capitalism. :)

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  2. awesome post man. Hit the nail on the head. Sadly most gyms out there won't care about the students progression. Most teachers only teach to make themselves look good in some subliminal way. Very few teachers truly have a passion turning people into champions!

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