facebook Using to promote your can help to connect you with new clients.

The best thing to do is to build a fan page for your massage business.  That way it keeps things separate from your personal page.  People don’t have to become friends with you – they just become a fan of your page.  When people become fans then their friends and family who are connected to them on will also see that they are a fan of your page and it might inspire then to find out more.

Even with a page you really need a website to back you up and refer people too from the page that outlines all of your services, fees, location and is also filled with articles on why people should get regular weekly massage (yes weekly!) and how massage can help them.

To create a fan page first go to the small link at the bottom left hand side that says ads and pages.  It is there that you can create your page.  (I think!)  It took me a few hours to figure it all out and even now I am not quite sure about it all!)

Once you get your page created you can then create a badge to add to your website so people on your website can follow your page.  Also ask a few friends to follow you to get it going!

The one drawback to are that the wall and other postings don’t show up on your main wall which is what most people see first when they login to .

On your pages section you should also create articles and add photos.

I have also created a page for Builder and will be working on updating that and adding more content.

I actually can’t figure out the craze really but it is what it is.  People like .  It is fun and I have been able to connect with easily but keeping them all separate is a challenge.  You can create a separate friends list for clients and create different privacy settings.  You don’t really want clients seeing all your friends from high school or what you had for dinner or your new remodeling project.

I actually get much better results working on my website because I not only get traffic to my website and clients from my website but it also makes me additional income while I am busy writing on my other sites and doing massage.  I actually have been busier than I ever have in my right now for some reason.  The only thing I have been doing is writing an article now and then for my clinic site.

How are you using ?  Has it helped your ?

The best way to learn how it works is to just start using it!

Text by Julie Onofrio – December 20, 2009 from The body worker blog

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American Massage Therapy AssociationIf you are a member of the Association, you may be aware that every year the AMTA publishes an with statistics about the . Typically it addresses the demographics of who receives massage, how much they pay, what the average looks like, and other details that create a snapshot of our profession. A typical fact sheet has the following headings:

This year’s Fact Sheet is available here: http://www.amtamassage.org/news/MTIndustryFactSheet2010.html, and it is free to everyone: members and non-members alike.

But you may not be aware that the AMTA also produces a much more thorough report specifically for member schools. Titled 2010 Massage Profession Research Report, this year’s effort is a monumental piece of work with 59 fact-filled pages of information about our vocation, along with ideas about how that data can be applied. It provides a wealth of information based on extensive surveys of practicing therapists and massage therapy clients. Interested readers can access the report here: http://www.amtamassage.org/a/shoppingmall/ProductDetail.aspx?SiteMapId=5&ProductId=2874.

It is free to AMTA members, and available for a charge to the rest of the public. Even if you aren’t with an AMTA member school, if you have any interest in the marketing of massage therapy, this report will be worth your time and money.

Here is a tidbit from p. 9, taken from a survey of clients who had received massage within the past year:

Primary reasons for receiving last massage:

Pampering/ just to feel good/ special indulgence              17%

Relaxation/ stress reduction                                                       32%

Medical reasons (including injury, spasm, pain relief)      32%

The remaining 18% had no specific reasons to get a massage; their responses were “it was free”, “It was a gift,” and the like. But the trend is obvious: of all the people who got a massage recently, about one-third did it to deal with a pressing physical or medical need—more, if we add the people seeking stress reduction.  Compared to the 17% who claim “pampering” to be their primary reason for their last massage, we can derive some important information about the need for therapists to be well-educated in how to work with clients who live with imperfect health.

In an apparent contradiction, on p. 13 the answer to the question, “Where did you get your last massage?” was most often—and by quite a wide margin—in a spa setting. This points to the fact that the difference between massage as a service industry and massage as a health care intervention is a distinction that many clients don’t understand. Massage therapists in spas, cruise ships, franchises and salons are daily dealing with clients who are looking for a health care consultant more than a pampering provider.

As our profession considers what lies before us in the possibilities of tiered licensing and varying regulations to reflect levels of training, I hope we can keep in mind that separating practitioners by skill level  on paper is one thing: it is entirely another when the public is looking for health care, and goes to the spa to find it.

This quandary will create some challenges for our profession in the near future. I am interested to hear your perspectives on how to address it.

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Our Basic Human Pleasures: Food, Sex and Giving

We are distributing relaxation music, but it is not one of the basic needs of human pleasure.  The conclusion of the following article is not to stress and to relax. I encourage you to read this article:

Want to be happier in 2010? Then try this simple experiment, inspired by recent scholarship in psychology and neurology. Which person would you rather be:

Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times

Nicholas D. Kristof

Richard is an ambitious 36-year-old white commodities trader in Florida. He’s healthy and drop-dead handsome, lives alone in a house with a pool, and has worked his way through a series of gorgeous women. Richard’s job is stressful, but he spent Christmas in Tahiti. Unencumbered, he also has time to indulge such passions as reading (right now he’s finishing a book called “Half the Sky”), marathon running and writing poetry. In the last few days, he has been composing an elegy about the Haiti earthquake.

Lorna is a 64-year-old black woman in Boston. She’s overweight and unattractive, even after a recent nose job. Lorna is on regular dialysis, but that doesn’t impede her active social life or babysitting her grandchildren. A retired school assistant, she is close to her 67-year-old husband and is much respected in her church for directing the music committee and the semiannual blood drive. Lorna believes in tithing (giving 10 percent of her income to charity or the church) and in the last few days has organized a church drive to raise $10,000 for earthquake relief in Haiti.

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