- Dec 3, 2009
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It was bad enough when last week my friend asks point blank, "Why won't you work at [name of spa she works at]?" and I explained that I was getting along with just two shifts of IC work per week, and wanting to focus the rest of my time on building my private practice...
But now a client of mine who also gets massage at the place he gets his hair cut, a downtown dayspa targeted to male execs, has called me to tell me that his therapist there quit and the other MTs aren't to his liking and he talked me up to the owner and could he give her my contact info?
Two years ago when I had just graduated, I was begging for work, and wasn't even considered by this place. Now, apparently, the owner may be contacting ME soon. It's such a weird place to be in, that I told him I would at least have a conversation with her.
So here's the thing: building private clientele is still taking forever. But it will take even longer if I don't keep putting time and energy into it. And I'm wanting to put even MORE into it, not less.
On the other end, more cash flow in the short term is also nice. I'd get a lot more exposure to a particular target market that happens to be one of my target markets. I'd get experience in a higher-end spa... not that I intend to ever need the resume again, but you know... although they charge less for an hour than the massage mill I work one night a week for. Burke Williams it's not.
Anyone have any similar experiences?
Also, I've never been in this kind of position of me having "no deal" on the table before with a potential employer. Any advice on how to go about this kind of interview? How to interview them too, how to negotiate?
But now a client of mine who also gets massage at the place he gets his hair cut, a downtown dayspa targeted to male execs, has called me to tell me that his therapist there quit and the other MTs aren't to his liking and he talked me up to the owner and could he give her my contact info?
Two years ago when I had just graduated, I was begging for work, and wasn't even considered by this place. Now, apparently, the owner may be contacting ME soon. It's such a weird place to be in, that I told him I would at least have a conversation with her.
So here's the thing: building private clientele is still taking forever. But it will take even longer if I don't keep putting time and energy into it. And I'm wanting to put even MORE into it, not less.
On the other end, more cash flow in the short term is also nice. I'd get a lot more exposure to a particular target market that happens to be one of my target markets. I'd get experience in a higher-end spa... not that I intend to ever need the resume again, but you know... although they charge less for an hour than the massage mill I work one night a week for. Burke Williams it's not.
Anyone have any similar experiences?
Also, I've never been in this kind of position of me having "no deal" on the table before with a potential employer. Any advice on how to go about this kind of interview? How to interview them too, how to negotiate?