business, career, yoga

Beginning: Moving Away from Welfare Yoga

Last week New York magazine ran an article entitled “Welfare Yoga” about the current state of yoga teachers and their lack of income sources. Below is the letter to the editor I wrote in response. The points raised in this piece further confirm that I made the right decision by turning away from the traditional studio teaching route; my gut steered me toward a brighter future by seeking to integrate with the traditional healthcare system.

“Dear Editor,

Thank you for your excellent piece “Welfare Yoga” on October 2, 2011. As a yoga instructor, I’ve been disappointed to see how the value of yoga classes in New York has been deeply diminished by offers through Groupon, Living Social, and other similar sites, as well as the less-than-savvy marketing efforts of many studios.

In many ways, yoga teachers have created the trend of cheap-to-free yoga to their own detriment. Now their own efforts have put them in the bind of people expecting free yoga and the studios not being able to keep their doors open. Rather than fixing this broken business model, an increasing number of studios are compounding the problem by generating their income through teacher training programs that produce even more teachers who compete for an ever-decreasing number of paying teacher gigs. It’s a vicious cycle that yogis are feeding at a dizzying rate.

Unfortunately, “karma” has been equated with “free” in the yoga world, and some teachers and practitioners have come to believe that all yoga should be free to everyone, regardless of the means of their students. We live in a world where eventually there is a cost for everything. In the case of yoga classes in New York City, the ones truly bearing the cost are the instructors who have to work several jobs in addition to (their often free) teaching so they can meet their own basic personal expenses.

Sadly, the only people we have to blame for this situation are ourselves.

Sincerely,
Christa Avampato”

6 thoughts on “Beginning: Moving Away from Welfare Yoga”

  1. Well put, Christa. I’ve been wondering if we are devaluing classes since I heard someone say that discounts killed the book industry. Trying to think of other ways to get new students, and those less financially secure, over the hump and into class.

    Like

    1. Thanks, Erica. So true that we have seen this happen in the book industry as well. Same exact pattern! For Compass, I went the nonprofit route for this very reason – our attempt to cook-up a new breed of business model.

      Like

  2. I’m confused! Are you suggesting that the free-of-charge yoga we offer those with no money for $15-$20 studio class, but great need for yoga, is responsible for the difficulty we’re having making a living as teachers?

    Warmly,
    Stacey

    Like

    1. Hi Stacey,
      I am all for meeting students where they are in terms of financial need! The tough part is determining that need. As the article in New York magazine states, there are many students of very substantial means who attend free or deeply discounted yoga that is provided by yoga studios. Cheap or free yoga is now so plentiful in NYC, to all students regardless of their financial means, that students no longer have to pay $15 – $20 a class. Groupon, Living Social, and other offer sites have done a very good job of helping yoga studios get people in the door but then the studio down the street runs an offer and students just migrate there for a comparable class at a deep discount.

      The traditional studio model, combined with the offer sites, have changed consumer sentiments about yoga in NYC. There’s no more need to pay good money for classes and in the process it’s become harder and harder to earn a living as a teacher.

      Like

  3. Well put. It can be difficult in not just New York for studios to keep the doors open. And I agree that the teachers have caused it, but I also know that when you truly love something you want to share it with everyone and in the forget that if you are trying to make a living doing what you love, you need to charge and people will still pay for it because it is something they love. Unfortunately, with the economy if someone is offering a better deal most people aren’t going to stay and pay more if they can jump ship to a place where you don’t have to.

    Like

    1. Hi Carolyn,
      It is a tough conundrum for sure! I don’t know that the current model is sustainable. We have to find a better way to make yoga affordable and to support teachers making a living.

      Like

Leave a reply to Erica Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.