Massage Continuing Education is vital to the profession of massage. Most states have some sort of requirement that you take CE to renew your license. The NCBTMB also requires that you have CE to renew your certification. The AMTA also requires CE for membership renewal. These organizations somehow think that requiring CE will help protect the public and create better massage therapists.
The way CE works for many is that they just look for any class to fulfill their CE credits and they do it at the last minute so that they do not have many options in classes. Many also think of CE as a burden and expense rather than an investment in their careers. Many also focus on technique classes to further their training even when they do not have the clients that they need. Many think that finding the right technique will help them in working with clients and help them magically have the clients that they need. (Of course I am speaking in generalizations here and not all massage therapists do that. I couldn’t really figure out another way to bring it up.)
There are also very few really quality sites out there that help you decipher and pick the best massage continuing education class for you. The so called ‘economy’ is also causing massage therapists to take classes based on what they can afford or taking the cheapest classes to save money.
Massage Continuing Education is really the future of the massage profession. Massage school is just the very beginning. They only teach you how to do massage – not necessarily how to become a professional massage therapist.
One of my first findings in my little survey on massage ce shows that massage therapists don’t have the clients that they need yet they do not take classes in business and marketing or do they engage in supervision. Unless you have a background in business and marketing these classes are imperative. What good is all the money you spend on a new technique if you don’t have any clients to use it on?
So some of the things I would like to see change in the area of CE are:
- A CE resource website that rates and reviews classes and teachers
- A CE resource website that allows people who have taken the classes or experienced the work to write about it.
- CE providers learning to write more from the massage students perspective. The bottom line for massage therapist is usually will it help me get more clients or make more money. How will your classes help massage therapists do that? What support do you have for therapists in integrating what they learn in your classes into their massage business?
- Eventually a certifying agent to monitor CE Providers other than the NCBTMB.
What else would you like to see happen? What do you need to know from CE providers about their classes or techniques? Why do you take CE classes? What would you like to see in CE?

