Educational in more ways than one

Educational in more ways than one

Club Learning provides exceptional support to franchisees through its unique business model.

Club Learning offers an educational franchise opportunity with a difference. The company started six years ago with a home-study service and three years ago started to work with tuition centres. Last year, Club Learning made the move to franchising as its preferred means of expansion.

Comprehensive learning support with targeted tuition
The Club Learning study programme method provides learning support that follows the national curriculum for its students. It automatically generates

reports for parents to see their children’s progress, and the Club Learning method makes it easy for the franchisee to give extra value and support in the tuition sessions they run.

The franchise offering


The offering to franchisees is unique as well. Club Learning provides:
• Suitable tuition centre venues (including payment for them)
• Laptops or netbooks to use in study centres
• Extensive training and ongoing support in finding customers for the business
• A large exclusive area to develop a business in

All franchisees have to do is to find customers and run the tuition centre tuition sessions. Club Learning takes care of all the other aspects of customer support and administration.

The Club Learning franchise offers so many different ways of finding and servicing customers. There are home-study students, tuition centre students, pupil premium in schools sessions, home-educated children, combination with sports coaching, and more.

Here are some examples of successful Club Learning franchisees:

Bile Aka
Bile was the first Club Learning franchisee, who started in Peckham and now has 350-plus students after two and a half years. He predominantly runs a version of the home-study model.

Modupe Adedapo
Modupe, franchisee for the Gorton and Moston territories in Manchester, started in February this year. She is a single mum with a full-time job and now has 60 students signed up in her franchise, which means she will soon be giving up her other job to concentrate on really getting her business going.

Kate Towers
Kate in Blackpool has been running her own independent tuition centre for 10 years. She wanted to expand her business into other parts of the region, so she signed up as a franchisee a few months ago. She already has a regular tuition session (which ran over the summer holidays) providing extra learning support to children in an after-school learning club.

Projected earnings
As overheads are taken care of by Club Learning, a new franchisee can swiftly reach profitability and should realistically expect an income of £20,000 in the first year, and triple that by year three.

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