Master Stoker,
I know exactly what you are talking about, because I have experienced the same thing for many years. I am the senior instructor in my area, not only by rank, but I have been teaching here for a lot longer than anyone else. Every so often, a new instructor pops up, and is the talk of the town. They quickly fill their classes and have a bunch of smiling faces jumping around the classroom floor. This can be disheartening to a serious instructor, because we know the difference between the quality of what we offer, yet the public still falls for their hype - - hook, line, and sinker.
I don't sense that you are dissatisfied with your school, or the way you teach. I don't believe that you fail to see the difference between you and them, or that you are considering becoming like them. What I sense is that you have moments like I do. "Why is the public so gullible and quick to sign up at a fluff school, and pay so much money to an fly-by-night operation when a genuine, dedicated, experienced instructor has been right here in town all along. It is sickening to see this happen.
The one thing that I keep in mind, which lifts my spirits, is that these schools come and go, and each will soon fail and close their doors while I am still here. Their temporary success is a flash in the pan, and will soon burn up and disappear. One year, at Halloween, I decorated my Dojang with store-bought plastic cut-outs of tombstones. On each tombstone, I put the name of a different fly-by-night school that had come and gone - - died out over the past three decades that I have been here.
Whenever one of my students brings up the fact that there is another new instructor at a local "Y," health-club, college, or a big flashy school, I just point out that one fact to them. There have been many before, and there will be many more. We teach quality Martial Art, and are legitimate, dedicated, professional instructors that take what we do seriously. I never comment specifically about one of those schools or instructors, but in general terms, I say that if someone wants to take their training as a joke, then let them join those schools. When the school closes, they will be looking for a more stable environment, and will probably be sorry they wasted their money at those other places.
My question is why are these school coming over the top of older established schools.
There are ways to take the wind of the the sails for those flashy schools with hundreds of students, and there are ways of getting hundreds of students without compromising your values. Rather than going into detail here, I'll PM you about a few things I have learned over the years.
CM D.J. Eisenhart