Gateway: News, Updates & Blog

News, Updates & Blog

News, Updates & Blog

News/Blog Articles

Find News from a specific month - select one of the following

Massage Courses in Essex

5 August 2008

Gateway Workshops TM offers massage courses in Essex, we are delighted to offer training courses at our popular venue in Upminster Essex.

We have found a beautiful location to offer our massage courses in Essex which seems very popular with our students, so we have expanded what we offer there and we look to continue offering our most popular massage courses at this venue.

Our tutor Claire is also a therapist at this centre and has built a large client base, she also enjoys running the massage courses and is a popular tutor with our students for this venue.

How to find the venue

From the M25 turn off at Junction 29. This journey is approximately 15 minutes from the M25 turn off.

Take Junction 29 off the M25.

Take the first slip road off (almost immediately, just passed Cranham Caravans) into FRONT LANE.

Continue to the end of FRONT LANE and turn LEFT at the MINI ROUND ABOUT.

Continue for approx 1 minute and take the turning on the RIGHT (just passed The Thatchers Pub), into PIKE LANE.

Continue to the end of PIKE LANE and turn LEFT.

Take the next RIGHT (almost immediately just passed Manor Farm) into PEA LANE.

The centre is situated at the other end of PEA LANE on the right hand side, lots of parking at Centre

The training courses we offer in Essex are:

  • Chair Massage Seated Acupressure Diploma Course
  • Hot Stone Massage Full Body and Face Diploma Course
  • Indian Head Massage Diploma Course
  • Natural Lift Facial Massage Diploma Course
  • Thai Foot Massage Diploma Course and much more

You can view details of all our Essex venues in the venues section of the website


Free Health and Nutrition Workshops

6 June 2008
HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR HEALTH AND EARN EXTRA INCOME

With Fatima Ford and Sally Tomkins

Fatima Ford and Sally Tomkins have both helped numerous people to improve their health and well being by using a scientifically based health analysis system that is easy to learn, and can be used by anyone. Their free workshops in Crawley will introduce you to this system, and teach you how to use it. You will also learn how you can turn this knowledge into a full or part-time income.

No hi-tech or expensive equipment is required, and the training is free!

The system they use is based on the principle that your body systems (i.e. digestive, intestinal, circulatory, etc) are like a chain. This chain is only as strong as its weakest link. By determining which are the body’s weakest systems, and then strengthening and supporting them with high-quality nutritional supplements, you help the body to naturally regain its health and vigour.

Determining the right nutritional supplements for you and your family can seem like a hit-and-miss affair, which can prove very costly and ineffective. These workshops will show you how to take the guesswork out of this process, so that you can easily, safely and accurately pinpoint anyone’s nutritional needs.

You will also learn why it is so important to know how your supplements are sourced, tested and manufactured – not all supplements are the same – and how you can earn full or part-time income from using this system.

For further details please call Sally - 01293 541144


Massage Courses in Dublin

28 April 2008

We are delighted to announce Gateway Workshops we are offering a wide range of massage courses in Dublin Ireland. All courses are recognised by FHT, Embody, CMA and the Beauty Guild.

Suzanne Cromie started by offering courses in Belfast, Ireland and has now added Dublin to her list. Suzanne is qualified in VTCT: Body Massage, Reflexology. Certs: Indian Head Massage, Natural Lift Facial Massage, Hot Stone Massage, Traditional Thai Foot Massage, Hopi Ear Candling, Seated Chair / Acupressure Massage,  Manual Lymphatic Drainage Massage, Advanced Massage and pregnancy massage.  Suzanne is also a qualified YTTC Yoga teacher.

We started with courses in belfast and due to demand we have now added a venue in Dublin which is proving to be very popular, please check out our course page to see what we have on offer for these massage courses in Dublin and the venue available. We also have a venue page dedicated to each area telling you about the location and travel information.

Suzanne is a very popular tutor and we are very happy to have her on board so we are now able in 2008/2009 to offer courses in ireland. We started in London and expanded around the UK and wanted to make sure we could eventually offer our accredited courses in Ireland and Suzanne was the perfect choice.

To view all our venues near Dublin, please visit our venue page


Music for Enhanced Relaxation

5 December 2007

Holistic Health Directory 4 New Special Offers New royalty-free Offer Knowledge base, 4 New Special Offers - 15% off selected relaxation and meditation CDs and downloads.

New royalty-free music offer Order any two royalty-free tracks and get a free 60 minute download - silentwaves.xl.

Our royalty-free tracks can be used as background music for hypnotherapy or as backing tracks for guided meditation/visualisations and are specially designed to enhance your own CDs and other audio-visual products.

Knowledge Base

What is relaxation music? Ever since the first musician sang the first song and played the first drum music has been used as a powerful healing tool. More recently medical research from across the world has shown the remarkable therapeutic qualities relaxation music can have in treating many different conditions ranging from muscular tension and stress relief to pain management, sleeping problems and depression, as well as memory loss and speech therapy.

 

www.silenciomusic.co.uk
Music for Enhanced Relaxation CDs, mp3s & Royalty-Free


Compiling A Good Survey

5 December 2007

It may seem fairly straightforward, but compiling a survey which will bring you useful information and which will elicit and healthy response rate requires a little thought.

1. Before you put pen to paper (or probably more aptly these days, finger to keyboard!), be clear about what you want to achieve from the survey. It sounds obvious, but many people forget to clearly state their objective before they design their survey and the whole process could be a waste because of that. So think carefully. Is the purpose of your survey to find out if your clients might be interested in a new product, why they chose your product over competitor products, what other activities/products might interest them, how they like to be communicated with etc? Write your objective down and keep referring back to it whilst designing your questionnaire.

2. Write an explanatory paragraph at the start of the questionnaire to explain why you are conducting the service and what this will mean to your future ability to address your clients needs. This means that, as well as encouraging people to respond, you are also demonstrating your commitment to providing relevant products and services for your clients and using the survey as a reason to sell yourself (softly!).

3. Incentivise responses as this always helps to boost numbers. People always like to think they get something back for imparting opinions and views and after all, they are helping make your job easier and that’s worth rewarding! Your incentive doesn’t have to be massive but it’s good to offer a relatively major prize as a result of a draw from all respondents. For example a free treatment or a goody bag with some real value, a book, CD or another package of your products. Remember you will need to inform respondents of the winner of the prize draw and no purchases can be necessary in order to take part. You will need to have a method of announcing the winner. An easy way is to post it on a website or to ask for interested parties to write to you if they want to know who the winner is. You’ll get very few (if any) people requesting this.

In addition, you can use your survey as a sales tool. Your reward to all those who enter can be a discount voucher on future treatments or products to be taken over a given period of time (say 3 months) from the date of the survey. This is good practice, because it is likely to generate additional business as well as having the feel good factor that clients and prospective clients enjoy.

4. Try and keep the number of questions to a manageable number. If the questionnaire is too long and appears daunting, some respondents may be put off. Perhaps at the start of your survey, you give people an indication of how long it will take them to respond, which means you set a relevant expectation. Some people advise that 10 questions should be the maximum, but it depends on the style of the questionnaire and how much detail you need from your respondents. In some instances it may simply be a case of asking something like ‘What is your number one concern relating to xxxx and why?’

5. Phrase your questions clearly and give them multiple options where possible, e.g. Often Sometimes Rarely Never and give opportunities to expand on their answers where this would be useful to you, for example, ‘If you responded Never, please explain why below’ and give them a couple of lines in which to respond. Remember questionnaire results are never an exact science, but they do give a fair indication of what your respondents are feeling and how they might respond to future marketing.

6. Give recipients the opportunity to encourage friends and colleagues to answer your survey and ask them to pass it on.

7. Think about how you are going to distribute the survey. Are you going to leave copies in your reception, will you send it by e-mail, have it on your website, work with a publication who may share your interest in the results and who have a relevant target audience, post it to your clients, distribute it with a local free paper or push it through letterboxes in your target area? Or will it be a combination of a number of these? Think of your target audience and the easiest and most cost-efficient method of distributing them.

8. Do not be disappointed if you only receive a small number of questionnaires back. This is quite common and most surveys receive somewhere between 1 and 3% of the questionnaires they receive back. Even a small number can give you an indication of what is likely to be happening in a wider group.

9. Don’t forget to use the survey to collect any additional data you may not have from the respondents. Ask for name, address, telephone number, e-mail address and even ask them to indicate areas of specific interest. This helps make your questionnaire become as valuable a piece of marketing as possible and maximizes the benefit.

10. Offer the opportunity for respondents to be added or removed from your subscriber list as this also allows you to ensure you have fulfilled your duties under the data protection ask, whilst also offering the opportunity to expand your database.

11. Analyse the data you receive back and prepare a short report, which you can also report back to your clients via the website, e-mailing programme, mailing programme or post up on your practice noticeboard etc. Having contributed to the survey, people will be interested to read the results and may even find it useful to them.

12. Having collated and analysed the data, use it to develop your marketing messages, to package future products and treatments and so on, so that respondents can see you are taking their views on board. You are far more likely to sell treatments and products which address a specific need or target, so using your information is a crucial part of the process.

Generally speaking, keeping it simple but carefully thought out is probably the best advice in preparing a survey. The information you glean can be a real boon to your future business, so it’s an activity worth investing in.

I hope this article is thought provoking and helpful and welcome your views and ideas if you want to share them on annie@breathingspacetherapies.co.uk

Until the next time, best of luck and take care of yourselves!

Annie

About Breathing Space Therapies

Having worked in competitive business environments for over 20 years, I established my company, Breathing Space Therapies and its corporate division, Breathing Space for Business. Through a mixture of one-to-one coaching and counselling sessions, seminars and workshops, I am able to help people make positive changes in their personal and working lives so that they can perform better and enjoy every aspect of their lives more fully.


Cookie Warning

This site uses cookies to store information on your computer. See our Cookie Policy page for more details

Monthly e-newsletter

Be the First to Hear about our New Courses & All our News, Interesting Features, Work Opportunities and much more - No cost this is a monthly newsletter

I want to Subscribe

Social Media

Payment methods

Copyright © 1998 to Present Day. Gateway Workshops LTD 85 Great Portland Street, First Floor, London, W1W 7LT |All rights reserved. Legal Notice | 0333 1210742/ Registered in England Number 08301564 | Vat # 943966674. Web Site Intunet Ltd