Ep. 112 - 10 Years of BJJ Academy Ownership with CJ Hollett episode artwork

EPISODE · May 14, 2026 · 15 MIN

Ep. 112 - 10 Years of BJJ Academy Ownership with CJ Hollett

from The Business of Jiu Jitsu · host JP Levesque

Most BJJ academy owners burn out somewhere between year 3 and year 7. Not because the jiu jitsu is hard — because the people part is. The communication, the boundary-setting, losing core members, staying in one piece, knowing who to let through the door.Heads up: this is a shorter episode — we ran into some technical difficulties partway through the recording, but the conversation was too good to shelve.In this episode of The Business of Jiu Jitsu, JP Levesque sits down with his own professor, CJ Hollett, who just crossed the 10-year mark running his BJJ academy. CJ breaks down what actually keeps an academy owner in the game a decade in, how jiu jitsu training methodology has evolved over the past 10 years (and where the "let them work" mentality came from), how to coach white belts and women so they don't quit, and the #1 attribute every great BJJ coach needs.The conversation also gets into the personality side of running an academy — why some people probably shouldn't be coaches at all, why patience and communication matter more than technique when it comes to retention, what CJ would tell himself 10 years ago about losing core members, how to pick your rolls and keep your body in one piece as an owner on the mat every day, and the red flags students should watch for when picking a jiu jitsu academy.If you run a BJJ academy, are thinking about opening one, or want an honest look at what a full decade of academy ownership actually feels like — this one's for you.JP Levesque is the founder of Grow Jitsu. He helps BJJ academy owners clean up their business model, student journey, and simple owner-run marketing so they can grow past the 80–150 student ceiling without selling out the art or burning out.Timestamps:00:00 – Intro: 10 years in the game with CJ Hollett01:00 – What keeps you going a decade later02:30 – How jiu jitsu training has evolved04:30 – The rise of the "let them work" mentality05:55 – Coaching white belts so they don't quit08:20 – The #1 attribute of a great coach10:20 – Why some people shouldn't be coaches at all11:50 – Proudest moments after 10 years of ownership12:40 – How to keep your body in one piece as an owner15:00 – Red flags in an academy17:20 – Green flags of a good academy19:00 – What CJ would tell himself 10 years ago21:30 – Why losing a core member never stops hurting22:30 – Advice for anyone opening an academy today25:00 – Who actually sticks with it long-term28:00 – Belt promotions and how to structure them34:30 – Teaching structure: curriculum vs. organic37:00 – Merch, gis, and not forcing students to buy yours39:00 – How to make a new student feel like part of the teamWant help applying this to your academy? Book a free BJJ Growth Plan Call: https://growjitsu.com/call

Most BJJ academy owners burn out somewhere between year 3 and year 7. Not because the jiu jitsu is hard — because the people part is. The communication, the boundary-setting, losing core members, staying in one piece, knowing who to let through the door.Heads up: this is a shorter episode — we ran into some technical difficulties partway through the recording, but the conversation was too good to shelve.In this episode of The Business of Jiu Jitsu, JP Levesque sits down with his own professor, CJ Hollett, who just crossed the 10-year mark running his BJJ academy. CJ breaks down what actually keeps an academy owner in the game a decade in, how jiu jitsu training methodology has evolved over the past 10 years (and where the "let them work" mentality came from), how to coach white belts and women so they don't quit, and the #1 attribute every great BJJ coach needs.The conversation also gets into the personality side of running an academy — why some people probably shouldn't be coaches at all, why patience and communication matter more than technique when it comes to retention, what CJ would tell himself 10 years ago about losing core members, how to pick your rolls and keep your body in one piece as an owner on the mat every day, and the red flags students should watch for when picking a jiu jitsu academy.If you run a BJJ academy, are thinking about opening one, or want an honest look at what a full decade of academy ownership actually feels like — this one's for you.JP Levesque is the founder of Grow Jitsu. He helps BJJ academy owners clean up their business model, student journey, and simple owner-run marketing so they can grow past the 80–150 student ceiling without selling out the art or burning out.Timestamps:00:00 – Intro: 10 years in the game with CJ Hollett01:00 – What keeps you going a decade later02:30 – How jiu jitsu training has evolved04:30 – The rise of the "let them work" mentality05:55 – Coaching white belts so they don't quit08:20 – The #1 attribute of a great coach10:20 – Why some people shouldn't be coaches at all11:50 – Proudest moments after 10 years of ownership12:40 – How to keep your body in one piece as an owner15:00 – Red flags in an academy17:20 – Green flags of a good academy19:00 – What CJ would tell himself 10 years ago21:30 – Why losing a core member never stops hurting22:30 – Advice for anyone opening an academy today25:00 – Who actually sticks with it long-term28:00 – Belt promotions and how to structure them34:30 – Teaching structure: curriculum vs. organic37:00 – Merch, gis, and not forcing students to buy yours39:00 – How to make a new student feel like part of the teamWant help applying this to your academy? Book a free BJJ Growth Plan Call: https://growjitsu.com/call

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Ep. 112 - 10 Years of BJJ Academy Ownership with CJ Hollett

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Most BJJ academy owners burn out somewhere between year 3 and year 7. Not because the jiu jitsu is hard — because the people part is. The communication, the boundary-setting, losing core members, staying in one piece, knowing who to let through the...

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