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Episode 451| The Summer Slide
Podcast Description
Summer doesn’t “cause” cancellations—lost routines do.
When school ends, schedules get weird fast: families travel, sports calendars explode, bedtimes drift, and parents get overwhelmed. Then attendance slips… and most of the time, students don’t quit in a dramatic way. They just miss a week, miss another week, and quietly drift out.
In Episode 451, Duane Brumitt and Shihan Allie Alberigo break down the Summer Slide and share a simple, repeatable retention playbook you can run every year—without discounting your program, without begging people to stay, and without burning yourself out.
Key Takeaways
- Summer isn’t the problem. Chaos is. The “summer slide” is really the pile-up of travel, sports, late nights, and less structure.
- “Breaks equal quits.” Even a short break can turn into a permanent dropout because the habit gets broken.
- Most cancellations don’t come from anger—they come from drifting. A missed week becomes two, and the student falls out of rhythm.
- Not every student needs the same plan. You’ll typically see three categories:
- Travelers (gone for trips, sometimes for weeks)
- Sports kids (schedule conflicts and weekend tournaments)
- Drifters (no major conflict—just fading motivation)
- Set clear summer standards. Consider adjusting attendance targets so families can win during summer instead of feeling like they’re failing.
- Make “maintenance mode” acceptable. Sometimes one class a week is the difference between staying connected and disappearing.
- Incentives can keep momentum. A simple “Summer of Fun” ticket system rewards attendance and participation.
- Communication beats chasing. Use early warning signs to catch students before they fall off.
Action Steps for School Owners
- Define your 3 summer buckets (and label them).
- Decide what you’ll do for travelers, sports kids, and drifters.
- The key is having a plan before you need it.
- Set summer attendance expectations that are realistic.
- If your normal target is 8 classes/month, consider a summer target like 6.
- Make it clear: the goal is to keep the routine alive, not to be perfect.
- Review your testing cycle and adjust if needed.
- If your testing cycle lands in peak summer chaos, consider shifting it.
- Duane shares how adjusting cycles can reduce end-of-May “we’re taking the summer off” cancellations.
- Create a summer-friendly makeup policy (and actually explain it).
- Many families don’t realize they have options.
- Consider summer flexibility like:
- More makeup opportunities
- Cross-attending other class days
- “Unlimited makeups within 30 days” (if it fits your model)
- Run one simple summer challenge or contest.
- Example: “Summer of Fun” tickets—one ticket per class.
- Add bonus tickets for things like:
- Bringing a buddy
- Participating in theme days
- Weekly prize + monthly prize + end-of-summer grand prize keeps it exciting.
- Use early warning signs to trigger action.Watch for:
- Missing a week (or even two classes)
- Parents stop walking students in / stop engaging
- Uniforms and gear “disappear” (kids show up unprepared)
- Students look lost on basics
- “We’re just really busy with summer stuff” becomes the default answer
- Reframe the sports conflict.
- Don’t position martial arts as “versus” sports.
- Position it as the foundation that makes them better at sports (balance, coordination, resilience, mental toughness).
- Protect owner sanity with a simple system.
- Don’t build a summer plan that requires you to be frantic.
- Set standards, communicate clearly, and run a few repeatable activities.
- Then track what worked so next year is easier.
Additional Resources Mentioned
- Spark membership software (including tools like MIA tracking and client flagging/star features)
- Perfect attendance systems (Allie references a full system she’s built)
- Event Journal (a simple way to document what worked, what didn’t, and what to change next year)
- Stephen Oliver’s approach to fast follow-up when students miss classes (calling after a missed class, not weeks later)
If summer has been a retention killer for you in the past, use this episode as your reminder: keep it simple, keep it proactive, and don’t let routines break.