Shiatsu, paid hobby
or profession?
Shiatsu survey 2012/13
Motivation for
undertaking survey;
Having graduated from the British School of Shiatsu-Do in
2012 I had what I think may be a very common question pop into my head. ‘How am
I doing’, meaning how was my practice doing. I soon realised that I could not
really answer this question as I had nothing to base it against. Of course I
knew how I was doing against what I wished for, but I had no idea if my wishes
were realistic. Like I imagine lots of other graduates do, I talked to my
fellow ex-students to get a sense of how they were doing, but this was
unsatisfactory.
I asked the Shiatsu Society, they were really helpful, but
bid not really have the information I needed. So I decided to ask the questions
myself.
Method;
Using the
public facing part of the Shiatsu Society website, I contacted nearly every
Shiatsu person who has their e-mail contact on their profile a total of 249
individuals. Asking them to fill in a short online survey. 95 individuals
successfully completed the survey, 38.1% of those contacted.
I decided to
ask a few simple questions; I wanted to limit the scope of my questions, to not
make it an onerous task and I did not
want to pay for a ‘gold’ Survey Monkey account.
The
questions were;
- When did you graduate?
- On graduation what were your plans/dreams regarding practising? (To treat family and friends only with no charge. To treat part time as an additional income. To (eventually) treat full time as my main income. Wasn't sure)
- How would you describe your Shiatsu treatment situation at the moment? (I don't treat using Shiatsu at all. I treat family and friends for no charge. I treat part time as an additional income. I treat full time as my only income. A mixture of the above (please say more below))
- If you describe Shiatsu treatments as an additional income, please say what % of your income it represents in an average month.
- If you indicated that Shiatsu treatments are part of your income please indicate briefly your other sources of income.
- If you describe Shiatsu treatments as your full time income please indicate what % of your household income the Shiatsu treatments represents (does someone's financial support make it possible for you to practice).
- Please say how much you charge for a Shiatsu treatment (if you have a sliding scale please indicate the scale)
- On average how many paid Shiatsu treatments do you do per month?
I hoped that
when taken together the survey questions would offer a quite broad range of
answers about the ‘state of play’ in Shiatsu
Results;
On graduation what were your plans/dreams
regarding practising?
43.1%
answered; To (eventually) treat full time
as my main income
45.2%
answered; To treat part time as an
additional income
2.1%
answered;
To treat family and friends only with no charge
2.1%
answered; Not sure
How would you describe your Shiatsu treatment
situation at the moment?
13%
answered; I treat full time as my only
income
76% answered: I treat part time as an additional income
3.1%
answered; I treat family and friends for
no charge
2.1%
answered; A mixture of the above
1.1%
answered; I don't treat using Shiatsu at
all
If you describe Shiatsu treatments as an
additional income, please say what % of your income it represents in an average
month.
The average
for this question over the 95 respondents was 28% of income
If you indicated that Shiatsu treatments
are part of your income please indicate briefly your other sources of income.
63 people
filled in this question of which 33.3% indicated that they earn the rest of
their income from activities which could be described as related to Shiatsu.
From teaching Shiatsu, Qi gong, Yoga etc to acupuncture. The rest varied
greatly.
If you describe Shiatsu treatments as your
full time income please indicate what % of your household income the Shiatsu
treatments represents (does someone's financial support make it possible for
you to practice)
Of the 11
people who filled in this question the average was 55% of household income.
Please say how much you charge for a
Shiatsu treatment (if you have a sliding scale please indicate the scale)
The average lower
amount was £35, the higher was £41.
On average how many paid Shiatsu treatments
do you do per month?
The average
number was 19 per month, however if one takes away the few outliers who have
high numbers this drops to 16.
Outliers;
Of the 95 respondents
there were 16 individuals (16.9%) who stood out and therefore could be
considered outliers to the main body of the group. These individuals see a far
higher number of clients per month than the main group and therefore had a much
higher income. Below I have shown the gross average income from Shiatsu, both
with and without the outliers included.
Average gross pay lower level of sliding
scale with the 16 high earning outliers included
£603 per
month
Average gross pay higher level of sliding
scale with the 16 high earning outliers included
£759 per
month
Average gross pay higher level of sliding
scale with the 16 high earning outliers excluded
£347 per
month
Average gross pay higher level of sliding
scale of the 16 outliers
£1,806 per
month
Conclusions
This survey
was of practitioners who have remained registered with the Shiatsu Society, and
as such may be seen to be picking up the most active shiatsu graduates. It is
not a survey of all graduates of Shiatsu schools, of which there are many, many
more.
I wanted to
ask questions to allow myself and others to measure how we are doing, to have a
guide to what’s happening within the Shiatsu world. I wanted to know the
average number of treatments, average charge per treatment for the average
Shiatsu person.
It’s a
sometimes difficult emotional process, coming close to graduation and after to
manage expectations. My hope is that this will help.
It seems
clear that Shiatsu can offer an OK part time income (£347) to most practitioners
and to a few a reasonable full time income (£1,806). It’s interesting to note
that of the 16 higher earners 50% identified themselves as being Shiatsu
teachers. This may have implications for teachers within schools managing
students’ expectations. It’s clear that their Shiatsu experience is not the norm.
So paid
hobby or profession? I don’t think it’s for me to say, but I think it’s an
interesting question.
A great read and yes i totaly agree with previous comment you have confirmed what many believe, so the question is do we all battle it out to make it into the few top earners or give up and accept it as a part time hobby that has the wonderful benefit of healing? Hows your findings influenced what you intend to do?.
ReplyDeleteHi
DeleteHow have the finding influenced me in what I intend to do? Interesting question.
I have been very influenced by the Working Class Acupuncture clinic and their ethos of treatment for the 'working poor'. Whilst I can't do the multi bed clinic model, I can offer affordable treatments to working folks. My limited availability has been fully booked since before I qualified.
I feel that there is something wrong with the Shiatsu movement in the UK. It seems like its adrift in many ways. So whilst I don't hide my Shiatsu-ness I don't promote it very much either. My clients don't really care what I call what I do that much.
Not sure if I have answered your question, but maybe it's a start