Hi Jen
runzwithsizzorz said:
What is corporate massage?
Corporate massage is basically when a therapist brings their chair (or sometimes their table, but almost always the chair) to a company and does on-site massage of its employees.
They book your appointments? How do I get corporate jobs?
That all depends. These gigs run the gamut. Personally, I was once contacted by the manager of the admin office of an apartment complex. She was planning an employee meeting and as a gesture of appreciation, she wanted to book half-hour clothed table massages for her office staff and herself (for a total of 8 half-hour massages). (Personally, when I get a call for that much consecutive business, I cut them a pricing break. Created a lot of goodwill and I still did quite well that day.) For that gig, it was just me, acting independently.
This last week I was contacted by a company that goes around to corporations in our metro area and advertises chair massage to them. The companies sign up through the chair massage company and pay the chair massage company, which in turn contracts with MTs (on an IC basis) and pays them directly for each hour of massage (something like $35/hr). (Personally, I haven't taken them up on this yet, because I would rather put my energy into my own clients who come to my home office, and make twice the money for my time.) But, these companies are GREAT if they're a step up or if business is slow, or if you're getting started building your business, because they do the marketing for you and they contract with you, sometimes sporadically and other times on a regular basis.
So it just depends. You can go it alone and approach companies yourself if you have your own chair, good personal/negotiating/marketing skills, and the willpower to do it, OR you can contract with one of these companies. Another option you could pursue is to start your own little chair massage group with a couple of VERY trusted friends who would also be interested in a similar arrangement. If you choose to act independently or with friends (i.e. outside of a chair massage company), it is a MUST to cover all your bases. Have a good tax preparer so you can take full advaneforum.xxxe of deductions without risking any trouble, set policies--even if you're acting as a sole practitioner--regarding cancellation of a gig, pricing (make sure you get what you're worth!), travel radius, etc. It's also good to come up with a short little chair massage intake form...yes, you'll only be seeing these ppl for 15 mins or so, but you do want SOME form of documentation of the fact that you worked on them and that they consented to be worked on, along with a short list of the main common contraindications, etc. You can never be too careful in our sue-happy society
Hope this helps
Cheers,
~Jyoti