
I wanted to share something that came up in a recent conversation, as it reminded me of an experience from years ago that shaped how I run my business today.
I was speaking to a tutor who has been building his business over the past few years and is now considering taking voluntary redundancy to grow it full-time.
He mentioned that many of the families he works with have started asking if he offers support in other subjects. As a result, he’s begun exploring the idea of bringing in additional tutors (including some based overseas) to help meet that demand.
More subjects.
More tutors.
More opportunities.
But it immediately took me back to something I experienced early on.
A lesson I learned the hard way
Years ago, I recommended a tutor to support my son with A-level Economics.
This was someone I had suggested to other families. Someone I trusted.
When he arrived, he came with a pen… and nothing else.
He sat down and asked, “What would you like to cover?”
My son explained that he had missed that particular lesson at school and didn’t understand the topic.
The tutor responded, “You must know something.”
And for almost the entire hour, they went round in circles.
As a parent, I was frustrated.
I had paid for support, and my son was no further forward.
But as someone building a tutoring business, I felt something else entirely.
Horror.
Because I had recommended him.
That experience stayed with me.
It made me realise that when you bring someone into your business - whether directly or by recommendation - they represent you.
Your values.
Your standards.
Your ethos.
And the further removed you are from that person, the harder it becomes to ensure those standards are upheld.
It also highlighted another mistake I made early on.
Trying to support everything.
Every subject.
Every need.
Every request.
At the time, it felt like the right thing to do - to help as many people as possible.
When you specialise, people understand:
what you do
who you help
why you’re good at it
When you don’t, it becomes much harder to build a clear, trusted reputation.
You risk becoming a “Jack of all trades” and that makes it harder for families to feel confident in choosing you.
Parents aren’t looking for what’s easiest for the tutor.
They are looking for what is best for their child.
They want:
someone who understands the curriculum
someone who is prepared
someone who can build confidence
someone who genuinely knows how to support their child
Why this matters now
This is one of the reasons I place so much importance on:
building strong relationships with the tutors I work with
staying connected
maintaining clear expectations and standards
It’s also one of the key reasons I am taking my time in developing the Clara James franchise.
The goal isn’t to grow quickly.
The goal is to grow well.
To build something where:
standards are consistent
values are shared
and every child receives the level of support they deserve
A final thought
If you are growing your tutoring business, it’s worth asking yourself:
What do you want to be known for?
Because your reputation isn’t just built on what you do.
It’s built on everything connected to your name.
And that is something worth protecting.
Have a great week
Morning,
I hope the week is going well.
So many people seem to be doing D of E and work experience
at the moment, good luck if that’s you and if you’re at Marlow Camp next
fingers crossed for good weather!
I’ve just finished a lesson on division. It seems to be
something that messes with the brains of so many people.
I found it got easier when I stopped thinking about it as
division and instead thought about it as multiplication. So, if for example I
had the question 396 divided by 3, I would look at it as 3x what = 3. My answer
would be 1. How many times would I need to multiply 3 to get to 9, (my answer
would be 3). Then 3x something = 6. My answer would be 2. Giving me the overall
answer of 132.
I know that’s a really simple example but hopefully it explains
my point.
Thankfully in schools they don’t often seem to need to do
long division, but I’ve worked with a couple of adults (generally nurses for
some reason) who have needed it.
I think I’ll explain this one in a video, as it will be too
complicated to explain it with words as bits get put all over the place. I hope
this makes sense though:
Enjoy the rest of the week and speak soon,
Dawn