Blythe17 wrote:That's some interesting insight, Graeme. It seems, however, that some of those concerns mostly apply to independent tutors, no? Sure, the decline in demand and abundance of qualified instructors will affect all, independent or not. But I imagine you won't be spending much time if at all on chasing clients/tax admin/etc. as testprep company employee. So I wonder whether the outsider-allure of seemingly high pay isn't so misguided after all, at least for company employees. What do you think, Graeme?
I worked for a major company in Toronto for a bit, and then for another in Montreal. Very, very few tutoring inquiries, compared to class levels. Tutoring is the gold-plated option of LSAT prep. I think a lot of companies offer it mainly to make their classes look less expensive.
The economics of tutoring aren't favorable for companies, tutors or students. Here's a cost breakdown:
* Tutoring price for student: $150-$200 an hour. Pricey.
* Very high overhead in terms of scheduling, marketing, administration, class space etc. for company. A class divides most of these costs among 10-40 students, whereas tutoring places it on a single student.
* Likewise, very high staff cost per hour for the company. You've got to pay the tutor $30-$50+ per hour whether they tutor one student or a class.
* For a tutor, you're doing one hour at a time. It may be difficult to stack these together, as the company will cater to client schedules. (As an independent tutor you have more leeway to set lessons to the time that suits you)
* For the tutor, you're making less with a company than you would independently, $30-$50 an hour in most cases, sometimes more with some of the majors. Though the plus side is that you don't have to do much admin work.
In a major center like NYC or LA, volume + wealth makes most of these issues go away. Almost anywhere else you may see little demand.
I'm prepared to be corrected on parts of that, as I don't have experience working as a company tutor in a US city. US students take standardized tests far more seriously than Canadians do, so it's possible there's more tutoring volume.
If a company has enough volume to give tutors 8 hours of work in a row, then the economics work out much better for both the company and the tutor. If there's low demand, it's likely tutoring is just a front to make the classes seem impressive.
Also for a tutor, tutoring gets exponentially harder the more lessons you do if you don't set your schedule. Three hours week at random times is easy. 20 hours a week at random times can get messy even if you're getting paid $50+ per hour. There's a big difference between working 8 hours in a row and 8 hours spread out randomly over three days.
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I'll note that, as a side gig, tutoring is still pretty great. All I'm saying is that it's not nearly as great as it seems from the outside, once you have a full view of the economics + scheduling considerations.
Volume + long term clients + control of schedule + long blocks of work + high rates = happy freelancer. LSAT tutoring for a company pretty much only offers high(ish) rates, and maybe volume in a major center. Tutoring for yourself can offer higher rates + control of schedule, at the cost of adding marketing and admin work.
Tutoring for yourself with some kind of platform that generate clients can offer high rates + volume + control of schedule, but that's about as good as you'll get. Note that you'll need a rather large platform as I know few people doing that full time from a site. If you have a referral relationship with a school or other local institution that could provide enough volume.