The Audacity to Thrive: Lessons from an Incentive Pay Fiasco

Most people are content with surviving. When you decide to thrive, it's going to upset some people.


Maile recently made a change to the incentive structure at Tula Yoga Studio. After three and a half years in business, she felt it was appropriate to update the incentive structure to start paying out incentive pay after a base of 10 students instead of 6. 

She made this change to acknowledge the studio's strengths in it's own right, while also keeping in tact an incentive structure that would provide a handsome pay for full classes. (The lowest an instructor can make is $30 and the incentive pay maxes out at $80 when there are 27 or more people in class.) Her current revenue is solid, and generally supports an average class pay for instructors of the low $40s. Once it starts hitting the high $40s though, the payroll starts taking up a larger percentage of the revenue than a healthy business should allow. The studio will probably support an average pay of $50 within the next 12 months or so, but the average revenue per class probably needs to rise by about 20% to support that.

What she thought would be a simple non-controversial change was indeed just that for about 2/3 of her instructors, while the reaction by the other 1/3 has forever affected my perception of the yoga industry.


Background

At Maile's studio there are essentially three types of classes:

  • Morning Classes which are important and popular, especially with members, but not generally "full". They tend to average about 5 to 10 students and would therefore generally pay the $30 flat rate. 
  • Evening Classes which are popular and fuller, with student counts ranging anywhere from 12 to 25 or higher. These would tend to average a pay of about $50 to $55 per class, and often spike up to the $70s and still at times hit the max.
  • Specialty Classes: These are classes such as Family class, Mommy and Baby class, and Pre-natal classes. Like the morning classes these are important for the studio, but tend to be smaller and therefore usually pay the base rate.

The specific details probably aren't super relevant, but it's fair to say there was some unprofessional behavior and people who completely forgot that as independent contractors they are actually small businesses.

What was most shocking to me though, is that it was crystal clear most people didn't actually know how much they were making for the individual classes they taught. They didn't know which ones they should consider dropping if they were unhappy with the new structure, and which ones they should hang onto tightly because they would still be making $50 to $60 per class.

One guy posted on Facebook (yes, for real) that "he just couldn't live with the contract" he was offered. Here's the thing though: Had this contract been in affect for the past 3 months, he would have been making over $50 on average for his 5pm class. 

This is what happens when you disrespect the business side of your chosen profession.

Instead of analyzing the performance of past classes to see that Maile was in fact over-paying for a lot of her classes ($72 for an hour long class with 20 people in it) and keeping their top performing classes, they burned bridges, hurt feelings and caused strife within the community.


Observations

I finally had enough when I heard instructors were complaining that Maile's expansion might temporarily affect their incentive pay. As it turns out, when someone has a lease that goes through 2026, they make business decisions with a longer time horizon than the next 6 months. The suggestion by some instructors that she should react otherwise left me baffled.

I began writing a series of Facebook updates with "Protips" prepended to them. I suppose the use of 'protips' is a bit snarky, but these are indeed firm beliefs I hold about economics, business principles, and advice that I have spoken hundreds of times before. 


You can be beautiful and wonderful and special and replaceable all at the same time. Good business people embrace this reality while amateurs are frightened to death by it.

It's clear that I simply think differently than a lot of people. Some people were offended by this statement. But here's the thing: Yes, of course, obviously every individual is their own unique human. Also, again, Maile has a lease that goes until 2026.

Is the suggestion that a business should act in such a way that should tragedy strike someone, that the whole business should fail? If an instructor becomes super famous and wants something the studio owner can't afford, should the owner go out of business trying to keep them? These are extreme examples of course, but small businesses deal with nuanced versions of this kind of thing all the time.

Think about it with empathy. What should a studio owner do if payroll cost rises more than revenue allows? Correct it, or risk becoming financially unhealthy?

I get particularly frustrated when people seem to be angry at an action that will prevent financial ill health, as if being an owner that can project your costs out into the future is some sort of evil thing to do to your people.

If some instructors need to leave because of that, then that's the nature of any business. But I think if instructors present themselves to studio owners in such a way that suggests their studios can be held hostage, well I think that misunderstands a lot of things about the kind of commitment it takes to run a successful business. And also, if you respect the studio you work for, then don't you want them to thrive?

And one other thing, not to sound overly snarky, but based on the number of sub requests I see coming through our system, I can say with 100% certainty that nobody thinks a yoga instructor is more replaceable than a fellow yoga instructor. I'm not trying to be a jerk or anything here, but seriously. Instructors LOVE our find-a-sub feature. And when you request a sub for a class, you are in fact asking for someone to replace you for that class.

So maybe just a tad less self righteousness about this please?


The market rate for a service is set not just by other people who are paying for that service, but also by people who are willing to provide that service and the price they are willing to accept for said services. It's called supply side economics.

The market rate for yoga is not set by the one Equinox gym that pays $60 to their instructors. There is a very limited supply of those classes and it's one data point. That instructors can at once feel they are underpaid, while also watching other very good, very qualified instructors, work hard to pick up the same classes, yet not be able to process that the pay is in fact fair and within market range, is a level of misunderstanding of basic economic principles that will forever harm their businesses until they are able to grasp them. And to be very clear: Yes, if you underpay for a service, then you will get lesser quality instruction. But $60 for a class with 20 people in it is not that.

It also surprises me how little I see instructors thinking of their peers. Some people act as though anyone accepting a pay straight in the middle of the market, instead of the top of the market, is somehow unqualified and I simply don't think that's the case.


If you make $40 to $60 for a one hour yoga class, don't compare your plight to that of an hourly Walmart worker. The average Walmart worker makes $64 for an 8 hour workday. You sound like a fucking fool.

I should probably swear less because it makes me sound angrier than I am, but I have become convinced that nothing more highlights the class divide that yoga lives within like a yoga instructor comparing themselves to a Walmart worker. I've written about this before. Look, I get it. Business is hard. But it's also hard for servers, and bartenders, customer service reps and school social workers. I just don't know how someone who is paid $60 for an hour to 90 minutes of their services can, with a straight face, compare themselves to someone who makes minimum wage. I feel like it's a shocking display of ignorance, and it is offensive to the millions of people who truly are working minimum wage jobs and living at or below the poverty level.


The yoga studios you teach at should be acquisition channels for other components of your yoga business. If you don't have other components of your independent yoga business, nor a website to go along with it, you are doing it wrong.

It is simply impossible for a single studio to support the careers of 20 independent instructors. I get particularly frustrated when people don't see that a studio provides value for everyone - students and teachers alike. If you are an instructor and you aren't actively doing other things with your yoga business, the only person for your revenue problems is yourself. It's not the studio that's giving you a few classes with a pay structure well within the market norms.


The longer your time horizon is for achieving success, the sooner you achieve success.

Every single person at Maile's studio would benefit from her expansion long term. Again, her lease goes through 2026 now. They're working with someone with whom they might have a 10 to 15 year relationship with. And yet, the shortsightedness of some people doesn't allow them to see the reality that long term thinking helps them today.


Ownership does in fact come with privileges afforded to you, and you alone. People who do not understand this are cancerous.

Yoga studios do not exist to serve their teachers. They exist to serve their students, and the teachers are paid to help the studio owner serve those students. There are literally hundreds of ways Maile could have fairly updated her pay structure to achieve her goals. She picked the option that was best for the studio and community she is building, and is extremely proud of the incentive structure she's been able to put together.

She, and she alone, is the owner of the studio and it is absolutely her prerogative to structure her pay and incentivize her instructors. Instructors have a choice to teach at her studio, and if they don't want to be a part of it,  they have the choice of leaving.

For instructors to pretend that being the owner doesn't come with the right to make these kinds of decisions is a shocking display of arrogance and egotism, especially when someone hasn't even taken enough care with their own business to do basic math.


Lessons for studios

After observing things for the past couple weeks, I've started to form some strong opinions about things that studios can do to improve their businesses and prevent this kind of strife.

1. Stop paying incentive pay on single peopleInstead, pay incentive at thresholds. i.e., something like flat of $35, plus $7 for every 5 people over 10 or something like that. We'll be updating our payroll calculator to account for this newfound belief. It's clear to me that per head incentive pay structures can spiral out of control quickly, and when you work to correct this, some people will not be able to see the reasoning why. I can see already Maile will have to again adjust her incentive pay when the studio is able to command a base of 15 to 20 people, and regularly starts bring in 25 people per class. That revenue will probably support an average pay of $50 per class, but not the $60 that it will lead to.

Unfortunately, it will probably again cause problems when she course corrects again.

2. Never apologize for adhering to the economic laws that all other businesses must adhere to. Use it as an opportunity to teach. Over-communicate about this kind of thing. In hindsight Maile learned she should have been far more communicative than she was. 

3. You will never get the goodwill your instructors give you the day you open your doors. Unfortunate but true. I don't know what to do about this other than to know it as a reality.

4. Pay people differently. Different instructors are worth different amounts to a studio, and trying to keep everyone on the same incentive structure suggests an equality that doesn't actually exist within the market.

5. Set the expectation from the beginning that as you grow and learn, instructors should expect their pay to adjust accordingly. Business owners should never, ever, be penalized for learning new information as their businesses grow.

Lessons for Instructors

1. Be able to identify who your allies are, and treat them differently than you would treat your enemies. Maile had people refuse to talk to her before resigning, all because they forgot she's always been an ally. Some instructors picked up classes others dropped and are now their making hundreds more each month.

2. Not everyone is out to get you. I understand some people take advantage of yoga instructors, but not everyone does, and being able to know that some people actually want to help you, and identifying them, is as important as identifying the people that would do you harm. 

3. Do Math. It's shocking to me that people are not tracking the pay they get for each and every class they teach. If you don't respect your own business, why should anyone else? It's just a few columns: Date | Class Name | Base Pay | Incentive | Total. The first step to improving something is to measure it. If you want to make more money, measure how much you are making for each and every class you teach, and keep it updated constantly. Patterns will emerge, I promise.

4. If you want to maximize your dollars per time spent, don't drop all your classes, only drop the low paying ones. Understand that business owners think in totals and averages. If they can make the totals and averages work, they'll probably be able to keep you happy and you'll be able to treat them with respect.

5. Understand that business is in fact a form of nourishment, and by disrespecting the business side of yoga, you are disrespecting yoga in the entirety. Business fosters empathy because it requires you to see how other people value you. Don't be scared of this, embrace it, and you'll be one of the most valuable people a studio owner works with.


While Maile's studio will continue to grow and foster community, the past few weeks will probably go down as some of the toughest. What I witnessed the last few weeks has changed me. I look forward to putting all these lessons into my next set of business of yoga talks to help both instructors and studio owners alike thrive as they build their yoga businesses.

Andrew on the Yoga Biz Studio

I was interviewed a few weeks back by Carla Wilson and Keeley Mitchell, producers of the Yoga Biz Studio - a bi-weekly live video show - about the business of yoga, business philosophy, how studios and instructors can market their businesses, and more. 

Thanks for having me Carla and Keeley!

Guest: Andrew Wicklander of Tula Software* Join +Keeley Mitchell and +Carla Wilson and our special guest +Andrew Wicklander of Tula Software - the best software in the world for independent yoga studios. We'll broadcast live on Thursday, May 28 at 10am EST.

Introducing the Tula iPad app and Electronic Waivers

I'm super excited to make another series of announcements today about Tula and a host of new features. 

First, we now have native iPad application! Version 1.0 comes with most of the features of the iPhone app, plus it also includes a new feature - the new ability to have your students sign waivers electronically! And with this, the iPhone now also has electronic waivers as well.

Download the iPad app here!

The waivers functionality will ultimately be available as a part of the $99/month plan, but we're making it available to everyone for a couple weeks so you can play around with it and see how it works.

Like everything we build in Tula, we spent a lot of time thinking about all the different people that would be interacting with this new feature, and we worked hard to create a nice, easy and fast experience for everyone.

The way we approached building this feature though, is understanding that an electronic waiver is really just one part of the overall workflow of adding a new person, and so we optimized this entire process.

Now, using either the iPhone app or the iPad app, you can have a student add themselves to your studio, review and sign your studio waiver, and optionally put a credit card on file once they've completed the waiver. For existing students that are alread in the system, but for whom you don't have a signed waiver, you can simply search for their name, and then get taken through the exact same waiver process.

How it works

Adding your waiver

The first thing you'll do is add your electronic waiver using the browser by going to "studio settings" -> "waiver settings". From there simply type in or copy/paste your existing waiver.

Press 'Create Waiver' and you'll be all set!

Getting Student Signatures

The first thing a student will do is complete the small form to be added to your studio.

Once they add themselves, they can review your contract, and sign on the iPad or iPhone.

Once they're finished signing, they'll be emailed a copy of the signed contract.

And lastly, we'll ask them if they'd like to put a credit card on file at your studio, so that they can make rapid purchases moving forward.

Once the waiver is signed, we'll store a copy of it on their profile page, and you can easily access it whenever you like.

We're thrilled to now support our customers with our new iPad app, and our new electronic waivers feature - enjoy!

Calendars everywhere

The other week we announced our multiple calendars, payment forms and custom widgets feature that allow you to customize and filter your widgets. It's been a big hit and we wanted to make the individual calendars for your instructors a little easier to get to. Now, whenever you look up the profile page for anyone with the role of admin, desk or instructor, you'll see the option to view their calendar.

In addition, your instructors can pull their own calendar widgets when they log into your studio. 

This allows you to put an individual calendar on a specific profile page at your studio website, and it also allows your instructors to put their schedule at your studio on their own websites.

We hope you love the multiple calendars feature as much as we do and let us know if you have any questions in the comments section!

Introducing Custom Widgets & Multiple Calendars

One of the things that separates Tula from anyone else in our industry are the lengths we go to to put our customers front and center. I was stunned from the very beginning that everyone who makes software in our industry would take their customer's students away from their customer's websites and over to theirs.

So disrespectful.

Today I'm thrilled to announce the next evolution of our widgets, which is that they are now color customizable, allowing you to pick your own custom colors and we also allow you to create multiple custom calendars for specific event series', specific instructors, or groups of each.

Maybe over the summer you have a stand up paddle board class over like the fine folks over at Gaea Yoga. Well now you can have a calendar just for those events. Or maybe you want to have a calendar just for your private lesson availability, well you can use custom calendars for that too!

With this latest update you can create as many different calendars and calendar combinations that you want, and this new functionality is available on all of our plans.

Custom calendars, combined with the ability to create custom payment forms and now customize your colors too, means you can have a more seamless experience than ever before when integrating our widgets into your website.

Implementation

Like everything else with Tula, using this feature is very simple to use. You simply select 4 colors to customize - a background color, 2 text colors, and a link color. From there, we do a few things behind the scenes to layer transparencies, create borders and build a visual hierarchy for the pages based on your color selections.

widjets.jpg

 

The result is fully customized widgets with your colors, with a professionally designed look and feel. Check out the screenshots below to see how many different looks you can create!

pink
blue
bears
cubs
packers