Do you love teaching yoga but sense a disdainful undertone toward yoga teachers who promote themselves?
In recent weeks I’ve been asked about this frequently and thought I’d post a reply on my blog.
Yoga Teacher: If I put myself on Facebook in beautiful yoga poses, create a brand, and a website, doesn’t that go against yoga’s values?
Amy: This question is a hot one right now.
If you teach yoga it is likely you have:
- Put hundreds of hours of teacher training under your belt
- Done copious amounts of continuing education
- Traveled long distances to learn
- Invested greatly in your education
- Live and breathe teaching
- Served students to the fullest
Despite this many yoga teachers are poo poo’ed as unprofessional, flakey, scattered and/or held in contempt for promoting themselves.
This can be infuriating when you’ve invested so much time building your skill set and creating something of value to offer. You’ve worked hard on making your offering authentic, proficient and meaningful.
Unlike other professionals, the yoga teacher finds themselves in a conundrum between what is considered “yogic” and what many in the media have been calling “the commercialization of yoga”.
Yoga teachers may get “push back” from the media and others who feel that self-promotion and spiritual practice is like mixing oil and water, and that marketing is at best, tacky and inappropriate.
Yoga teachers, much like any other professional (such as healers, doctors, massage therapists, computer consultants etc), want to get the word out about their services.
Unfortunately the result of this push back toward yoga teachers is that they are petrified to get the word out or to use social media for their cause.
We could debate the philosophical arguments on whether spirituality and self-promotion are in fact so diametrically opposed. Historically there are some traditions that argue for asceticism and renunciation, but there are also those traditions (way less prominent voices in the conversation) which invite us into the physical world where engaging in money and transaction are actually considered part of living a skillful life as a yogi. The teacher has a responsibility to provide meaningful teachings and the student is also responsible for choosing which teacher suits them best.
We’ll leave that topic for the scholars to more fully flush out.
That said, if we look at what yoga does for people, the benefits and virtues are notable:
- Improves health & wellness
- Cuts back on stress (the cause of most disease)
- Connects people to spirit
- Saves lives
- Decreases health care costs
- And on and on…
It’s a shame that this conundrum around marketing and spirituality has made yoga teachers gun-shy about promoting themselves when they are skilled at offering the very things that help people gain access to these benefits.
If yoga teachers don’t inform people about the merits of yoga and what they can offer as a competent teacher, then how do people find the path to those benefits?
Of course, not all yoga teachers have escaped cheesy marketing strategies and their promotions can come across as a bit tawdry. Given the sensitivity and “push back” in the yoga world, how can a yoga teacher get the word out with sophistication and finesse?
3 Steps to Healthy Self-Promotion as a Yoga Teacher
1. Define your gifts & goals as a yoga teacher.
Do you excel teaching one-on-one? Or do you prefer to teach groups of 10 or less students? Do you work best with children? Women? Men? Or can you more effectively work with a larger reach? Make it clear who you work with in your promotional materials and reach out to that kind of student.
2. Craft Your Distinct Message with Sensitivity
Once you are clear on your assets and goals find a way to craft your message that is authentic, totally you, and make it classy. You can’t go wrong if your message shares who you are and what you have to offer with sincerity.
Part of tasteful yoga promotion is recognizing that there is indeed touchiness in the yoga world around promotion; therefore, cheesy marketing that overly glamorizes or emphasizes you is not going to cut it. Instead focus on what the student will receive by working with you.
Show your promotional material to close friends and students who know you well to get feedback before making it public.
3. Confidently Send Out Your Offering!
Be confident and enthusiastic in sharing what you have to provide with others, knowing that you are in service and that what you do makes a difference in the lives of your students.
Be unapologetic about your offering. Spread your gifts on a website, professional Facebook page and by email. Some will like it, some will not. You never know, there may be a student out there that has a tremendous shift in their world, because of you!
Learn more about our professional education programs for yoga teachers here.





Great timing for me to read this. I have been going back and forth on whether I should start my yoga FB page or a website or whatever. I want to promote myself, but honestly get a little annoyed with a few of the celebri-yogis who post pics of themselves on FB every ten or so minutes. I was actually just considering deleting one specific yogi who fills up my feed constantly.
I think the key for annoyance-free self promotion is to only share stuff that may heal, help, or provide insight to others. Not just pictures of all the acrobatic-esque poses I can do in exotic locations. Yoga has transformed me, and now I want to share how it can transform others. Yoga can change the world if we keep it sacred, and keep our marketing classy. Thanks, Amy!
Thank you so much for your comment, Rachel – it’s great to get this stuff aired out, converse about it and approach our profession mindfully.
Thanks for this thoughtful and encouraging post, Amy. Since the question asks, ‘does self-promotion go against the values of yoga?’ I’ll off a simple answer that comes from the perspective of a yoga traditionalist who doesn’t hesitate to promote himself: if you can honestly tell yourself that you are making a good faith effort to refrain from harming any living being, being truthful in all of your dealings with others, directing your sexual energy in a controlled and constructive way, don’t take things that don’t belongs to you, avoid conspicuous consumption of things that you do not require for a peaceful life, and teach these same values to your yoga students, then what you’re really promoting are the values of yoga in the form of you, the example of what it means to try to practice yoga as a moral philosophy, which is the prerequisite for the experience of what one may legitimately call ‘yoga’ as opposed to any number of other things one can do to bring about the benefits and virtues that you have duly noted in your post.
Of course, some more broad-minded yoga teachers may think I have wandered into the territory of judgmentalism in my orthodox view of what justifies self-promotion as a yoga teacher and they are welcome to argue with Patanjali all they want. My point is that self-promotion is not, by definition, in conflict with the traditional values of yoga. On the contrary, using marketing tools to promote the teachings of yoga fall squarely into the category of yukta-vairagya: appropriate renunciation.
I trust you and your readers will forgive my conspicuous typos: good things to avoid when engaged in self-promotion – doh!
Not a problem!!
Thank you, Hari, for your thoughtful comment!
The meaning of the words and functions “Marketing” and “Promotion” seem to have been burdened with nuance in recent years. In their truest form, however, they are simply communication and education…and that is, in fact, a Yoga Teacher’s role. Sharing the benefits of these ancient teachings, letting people know that a higher, more beautiful way of living is possible and available is part of Teaching Yoga. Isn’t it wonderful that there are now communications media that enable Yoga Teachers to spread these precious truths to more and more people?!
To the other Rachel – thank you, nicely said! And yoga can teach us to be sensitive in how we engage new technology and communications, which is a worthy conversation and inquiry for sure.
Self-Promotion as Yoga Teachers: Is it Tasteless or Simply a Method to Share Your Gifts? http://t.co/mE4bV7O7 via @Amy_ippoliti LOVE THIS!
Self-Promotion as Yoga Teachers: Is it Tasteless or Simply a Method to Share Your Gifts?
http://t.co/TIW88kpJ via @Amy_ippoliti
RT @AshleyTurner1: RT @AshleyTurner1: Self-Promotion as Yoga Teachers: Is it Tasteless or Simply a Method to Share Your Gifts? http://t.co/mE4bV7O7 via @Am …
Listen to your gut folks, not the arguments of marketers. If something about what a teacher puts out there feels ‘not right’ in any way, your inner wisdom is trying to tell you something. I am not saying that self promotion is wrong at all, but I think my ‘off” feelings comes from the fact yoga teachers who buy into the American Marketing machine are in fact changing yoga – it is the Borg! … When it is subsumed in Marketing, it is no longer about the substantive-ness of what yoga has to offer, but it becomes about how teachers can rationalize lists of reasons about why students should buy their story. You no longer have to be a yogi, just a good marketer. And that is the core of the issue. Don’t buy the idea that this issue is about combating that you should not promote yourself, that is just marketing.
Thanks for this comment K., and reminding us that indeed, yoga teachers still need to be highly educated, well-trained, proficient, and adept at what they do first and foremost. It’s funny, there was another question along those lines that I did not answer in this blog for the sake of brevity…it was something like: “Has yoga teaching quality become judged as a measure of how much media attention and FB followers a teacher has?” I’ll have to write another blog to answer that one. Thanks again for contributing to the conversation.
Self-Promotion as Yoga Teachers: Is it Tasteless or Simply a Method to Share Your Gifts? My latest blog: http://t.co/fihNsRia
RT @Amy_Ippoliti: RT @Amy_Ippoliti: Self-Promotion as Yoga Teachers: Is it Tasteless or Simply a Method to Share Your Gifts? My latest blog: http://t.co/f …
I think its necessary. One of my personal goals as a yoga teacher and studio owner is to bring yoga to more people in a city where A LOT of people are still unfamiliar with it. In order to do that, I have to promote my business and share what I/we do to make it less scary. There is a fine line between vanity and educating your community. Often times, seeing a photo or video online is what influenced me to roll out my mat and figure out a new pose. It deepened my personal practice so I hope I can return the favor to others. Its true that old school yogis didn’t promote themselves, but we are new school yogis and we have to adapt (rather than just adopt) to our current culture.
I really struggled with the ‘marketing’ side of things when I started teaching. It didn’t come naturally to me at all. But then someone pointed out that if I really believed in yoga I had a responsibility to share it with others. Why keep it to myself? That cracked the door open as little for me but it was when I saw how hungry for yoga the people I talked to were that I fully realized that truth in this idea. Without being cheesy, without being pushy, we can share how yoga has benefited us in an authentic way. We can tell of our offerings with honesty and integrity. Of course some people will not be interested but others might experience wonderful changes as a result of our ‘marketing’. And that’s true if they come to our own classes or someone else’s. Thanks for raising this issue, Amy. It’s good to talk about it. xxx
I agree with the part of K. Maier’s post that points out the fact that when Marketing reaches a certain level, it can become more about “who can market best” rather than who is truly the best yoga teacher for you. This is where it’s the student’s responsibility to truly seek out their teacher(s) and not just wait for biggest and most persistent yoga teacher to come to them.
Brilliantly said, Shiva!!
I think promoting yourself is essential – not just from a pragmatic standpoint, but also for personal growth. Putting yourself out there can force you to confront the real reasons you’re doing what you do. It might actually be that you just want everyone to love you. And it’s a damn good idea to figure that out and come to terms with it, one way or another! So Amy, I would say that the first step you suggest, defining gifts and goals, is incredibly important. Not just in terms of finding an audience – but also in terms of recogizing the “shape” of the teacher’s offering, how it appears to others, and which personal and professional challenges that teacher may need to work through over time.
I remember hearing Kino MacGregor address her choice of yoga clothing once… lots of people think it’s scandalous and inappropriate. But to her, wearing those shorts feels like an important part of her expression and offering. And that ability to self-observe and act from there is probably incredibly healthy for her – and I think it’s perceptible and makes her genuine. In other words, truly embodying the intention behind your actions can transform those actions and turn something base into something inspiring. Noise into music, or something.
Thank you Amy for this. As a yoga teacher AND marketing professional, I can’t tell you how happy I am that you are engaging the discussion – and doing what you are doing with 90 Monkeys. The yogi does not need to compromise the yogic principles when engaging in marketing activities. When I help my clients (yoga teachers) put together their marketing platform, it is with the values that Hari has already laid out. As yogi’s, we hold ourselves accountable in ways that are sometimes contrary to the dominant North American paradigms. But there is no shame in speaking our truth. Marketing, for the yogi, is simply discovering what it is that makes you unique and distinct from other yogis (our invididual ‘essential oil’) and then positioning your service in a way that is authentic to that truth. It is about being realistic about what our professional and financial goals are, and taking the necessary steps required to achieve it. That’s it. No smoke and mirrors. Just the hard reality that we all need to make a living, and that marketing ourselves authentically can really help.
it occurs to me that i may have something valuable to offer even if i’m not unique. even if i’m just another bozo on the yoga bus. there are still people who would get something out of doing yoga with me. i haven’t marketed for awhile, but hopefully after my next certification i’ll put myself out there even if i don’t have a finely-tuned unique niche. yoga is great even if i’m not super-unique. just a though.
I couldn’t agree with you more and thank you for your part in educating others about the importance of sharing our gifts as teachers. I would only add that I believe deeply that what I have to offer as a teacher will help people in the ways that you have mentioned,and it’s this belief that makes me want to share it with others.
Hi Amy, thank you for sharing this. I used to be ‘afraid’ to share with others that I am a yoga teacher. However yoga has literally transformed my life that now I love sharing what I do. If it is a gift, then it is meant to be shared. HOW it is shared is really dependent on the individual’s experiences with yoga, who are we to judge which way is the right/best way?
I love how you said it ~ ‘Be unapologetic about your offering’. You are a gift Amy! Keep rocking! xoxo
As a yoga student, I am not offended by yoga teachers promoting themselves. As a group of very given people with gifts to offer the world, why not get the word out to more people so you can do more good?!
Thanks, Peggy! It is great to get the student’s perspective.
great source or information , I love to read more on yoga topics next time