Hi
Just wondering what your thoughts are out there on this scenario..
if you are massaging clients in a clinic and they are advertising by the hour or half hour or whatever (i..e 60 mins massage £50) - would you expect to have the client do the consultation, undress, dress, sip water etc all within those 30/60 minutes. Not to mention changing the towels, freshening up the room and god forbid even have a sip of water yourself and grab 5 minutes rest before going into the next hour long massage.
A place I have recently stopped working in expected me to do a 3.5 hour stint of deep tissue massages without any time in between to do a proper consultation and allow enough time for the client to do what is necessary. They claim that they are charging the client for an hour of the therapists time and so therefore everything must be done within that specified time even if it means that the client therefore only gets a 45 - 50 minute massage. Not to mention that they didn't think it appropriate or necessary for me to want a 10 - 15 break in between, despite the fact that I wouldn't actually be getting that break as I would changing the towels and freshening up the room etc.
On top of this the main lady of the place mentioned that upon a client having an epileptic fit, she deemed him healthy enough at the end of the fit and didn't call an ambulance because she 'didn't need an ambulance turning up outside her clinic', despite another therapist insisting that she do so. That therapist didn't last the first day.
And to put the icing on the cake I was told that I was to do the consultation very quickly in order to fit the client's treatment into the time slot allotted.
Now I have been doing massage for over 12 years, albeit not always in a clinic and mostly from home or in a mobile capacity and so I have always had the luxury of time to make my clients feel pampered but I cannot help but feel that this practice is really exploiting the client by not making clear exactly what they are paying for in terms of actual hand's on treatment time and instead are almost putting the clients on a virtual treadmill. Not to mention the health and safety implications by not calling an ambulance after a client has failed to even mention that they are an epileptic in the first place and then proceeded to have a fit and end up on the floor. Regardless of what it 'looked like' I would rather know that I was covered by my insurance or indeed, actually know that the client was alright!
Hmmmm.. please let me know your thoughts.
Thanks
Just wondering what your thoughts are out there on this scenario..
if you are massaging clients in a clinic and they are advertising by the hour or half hour or whatever (i..e 60 mins massage £50) - would you expect to have the client do the consultation, undress, dress, sip water etc all within those 30/60 minutes. Not to mention changing the towels, freshening up the room and god forbid even have a sip of water yourself and grab 5 minutes rest before going into the next hour long massage.
A place I have recently stopped working in expected me to do a 3.5 hour stint of deep tissue massages without any time in between to do a proper consultation and allow enough time for the client to do what is necessary. They claim that they are charging the client for an hour of the therapists time and so therefore everything must be done within that specified time even if it means that the client therefore only gets a 45 - 50 minute massage. Not to mention that they didn't think it appropriate or necessary for me to want a 10 - 15 break in between, despite the fact that I wouldn't actually be getting that break as I would changing the towels and freshening up the room etc.
On top of this the main lady of the place mentioned that upon a client having an epileptic fit, she deemed him healthy enough at the end of the fit and didn't call an ambulance because she 'didn't need an ambulance turning up outside her clinic', despite another therapist insisting that she do so. That therapist didn't last the first day.
And to put the icing on the cake I was told that I was to do the consultation very quickly in order to fit the client's treatment into the time slot allotted.
Now I have been doing massage for over 12 years, albeit not always in a clinic and mostly from home or in a mobile capacity and so I have always had the luxury of time to make my clients feel pampered but I cannot help but feel that this practice is really exploiting the client by not making clear exactly what they are paying for in terms of actual hand's on treatment time and instead are almost putting the clients on a virtual treadmill. Not to mention the health and safety implications by not calling an ambulance after a client has failed to even mention that they are an epileptic in the first place and then proceeded to have a fit and end up on the floor. Regardless of what it 'looked like' I would rather know that I was covered by my insurance or indeed, actually know that the client was alright!
Hmmmm.. please let me know your thoughts.
Thanks