EPISODE · May 28, 2026 · 14 MIN
Recitals Are Band-Aids: Why Music Schools Are Solving the Wrong Problem | EP 282
from Music Lessons and Marketing · host Dave Simon
Most music schools run two or three recitals a year and call it a retention strategy. I used to think that was enough, too. In this episode, I want to challenge that assumption, because I think it's costing schools more students than they realize, and the fix has nothing to do with running better recitals. In today's episode, I break down why recitals work when they do work, what's actually happening in a parent's mind when they re-enroll after a shaky performance, and why building your retention around two big events a year is less of a strategy and more of a rescue operation. Here's what I cover: Why parents don't quit because their kids hate music, they quit because confidence quietly erodes What a recital actually does inside a parent's brain (it's not what most of us think) Why "the problem is practice" is the wrong diagnosis almost every time What soccer gets right about retention that music schools keep getting wrong The visibility gap that's silently draining families between your recitals In this episode, you'll learn: Why recitals are "confidence restoration events" and what that actually means for how you run your school How to map parent confidence across your school year and see exactly where families are slipping away Why blaming practice charts and accountability systems is solving the wrong problem What the real lever for retention is, and why almost no one in this industry is building around it How to start thinking about weekly visibility instead of relying on two big moments a year What changes when you stop asking "how do we run a better recital?" and start asking a much bigger question davesimonsmusic.com
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Recitals Are Band-Aids: Why Music Schools Are Solving the Wrong Problem | EP 282
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