Tuesday, June 12, 2012

10 Reasons Why Your Tutoring Practice Needs a Blog



Blogs are great ways to share information and even market your tutoring services as a tutor. In this high-paced internet world, you should get on the super-information highway and start a blog if you want serious business to flow in. 

Below are 10 reasons to help you understand why blogs are important for your tutoring practice:

  1. Blogs are great sources of information
Fundamentally, blogs carry so much information that can help out in whatever purpose you make your blog for. For tutoring blogs, you can provide information on tutoring, your business, or even share your personal experiences.

  1. Blogs indicate your authority in the field
Blogs remain as your literary evidence that you know your field so well. If you focus on tutoring, then you prove to your prospective clients that you mean business and you do it well.

  1. Blogs are excellent marketing devices
Blogs are great when it comes to marketing your services, because of the catchy tone and the easily grasped information present. The psychology behind blogs is that they slowly pique your client’s interests and capture them at the heart of the content.

  1. Blogs allow you to keep in touch with different tutors
Sharing blogs among tutors allows you to keep in touch with them and learn from them as well. Blogs are venues of expression where tutors can identify different strategies and communicate with other tutors in the industry.

  1. Blogs represent who you are as a tutor
Blogs represent who you are in the sense that clients will understand your tone, how you tackle a subject, and how you present them. By your language alone, you tell so much about being a tutor, especially in idea organization and presentation.

  1. Blogs indicate your knowledge in your business
Blogs cultivate your experience through the posts involving business innovations and practices. This gives your clients the solid foundation that you know the framework of your business, which is an important aspect in how secure you are in your business right now.

  1. Blogs help people understand how you work
The frequency of updating your blog and the content that it contains allows people to understand how you work. Are you meticulous and you update at the same time every day or do you find time to construct a very witty and information blog post but not on a daily basis? These attitudes shape who you are and how you work, so a blog is like an extension of your personal and professional characters.

  1. Blogs contain your business character
Blogs are venues for your business, as well, especially in dealing with tutoring services. Your business character is clearly reflected in your blog, especially if you talk about tutoring. How you deliver your services and your perception on service-related topics will determine how you see yourself in the tutoring business, something a client wants to know.

  1. Blogs are more readily read because of their nature
People love reading blogs because they’re so easy to grasp. They don’t contain much jargon and they are written in a friendly manner. That is why you need a blog. You need a place where people can enjoy reading about your business without being too overwhelmed.

  1. Blogs mean increased business (not always though)
This puts the cash in the pocket and sets you home with that “cha-ching” you deserve. Blogs are great ways of increasing revenue, and this is all powered by the information you present. Enhance your business by creating a blog that matters and you will enjoy the sweet scent of success.

Blogs are the backbone of businesses, right now, especially as they are known to increase revenue by almost 70%. Take these reasons to heart and convey your personality as a tutor through your blogs. Draw them in with your professionalism and you will have yourself an even more successful tutoring business. Most importantly, you have made a connection with your clients, which always add value to both you as a person and your tutoring practice.


How do you use your blog in your tutoring practice?

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