Start a Home-Based Tutoring Business By Peter Engelbrecht
Do you know a topic or subject better than most anyone? Many stay at home moms and dads have received good educations and have worked in the business world or taught at school for a period before starting a family. If this is the case then here is a great work at home idea for moms and dads to become a tutor in the local community.
You may be wondering about what course work can be taught out of the home and will there be high enough demand that residents or even local businesses will pay for them. The list is lengthy on the number of possibilities, but the three areas that routinely receive the highest demand are computer courses, high school courses in math and English and piano lessons. If you have any training, college, work experience or may have even taken classes in any of these three areas in years past, then you can use your acquired skills to tutor others.
Before starting out as a home-based tutor, you will need to setup your business structure. Find a place in the home where you can comfortably teach others while not being overly distracted by outside noise. You may have to purchase some comfortable chairs, tables and a writing board.
After you have setup the learning space, you will need to create your class curriculum. Typically, 8-weeks would be enough learning material. This can be translated into eight one-hour classes.
When you are satisfied that you are ready to begin accepting students you can start to market your services by either handing out flyer's at the local grocery store, advertising in the local newspaper classified ads or visiting with area businesses informing them of your new offering. To get new students quickly, undercut your price as an introductory offer. Once your classes are full and you have repeat customers, you can slowly raise your prices to a point that you feel fairly compensates you for your time.
Once you have established yourself as a tutor, you should consider branching out into offering other courses such as computer training, business writing and perhaps even phone etiquette. This is the commercial side of the business. On one hand, you offer courses to school students and those on the other you offer working professionals courses to assist them to grow professionally.
By diversifying your course offerings you mitigate the risk of lost business should something change. For instance, teachers begin to offer additional classroom time after school free of charge. If this happens, you will still have the commercial business to fall back on and vice versa.
About the author
Diagonal Street Business Services offers work at home articles and business ideas to stay at home moms. If you are thinking of starting a business, visit the Best Business Idea and Resource Site. from http://www.FreeArticlesAndContent.com
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