|
|
|
|
|
by testingworks1
2345 days ago
|
|
As a musician myself, who has also been taught by music instructors over the years, I find this idea strange. Musicians are artists. They are also not beholden to market trends. Music instructors tend to be picky about who they accept when they choose their students. Music is also a person to person thing. Those who are truly serious about learning will choose a person to person connection. This is an interesting case of trying to quantify a subjective subject. Music is an art. It's hard to quantify. Musicians (mostly instructors in this case, then a bit later the students) will most likely shy away from this form of making a commodity of something that is inherently personal and expressive. This model is mostly likely going to fail not because of the numbers, but because of the subject at hand. This is an interesting case study. And it makes sense, the numbers prove that it's not viable. The fact that it's not viable isn't the numbers, however. It's something to consider. |
|