Are you a Massage Therapist aboard a cruise ship?!


Question:

Are you a Massage Therapist aboard a cruise ship?

My little sister is in Massage Therapy School and she asked me to ask you guys if any of you are Massage Therapists on board a cruise ship or if any of you have first hand knowledge of someone who does now or has in the past worked as a massage therapist on a cruise ship. How much money do you make? Are you happy with it? How are the working conditions? Would you recommend it? Anything you want to share about your experience will be most appreciated and welcome. Thank You all in advance!

Additional Details

2 months ago
This first answer guy didn't read the question. Nobody is chasing money, she wants info.


Answers:

Not to be negative, but I heard from a few friends that it wasn't worth it. It sounds amazing you get to be on vacation, enjoying a view, meeting all kinds of people....



But, in reality this is what I was told...so this is second-hand knowledge...

You are on commission so you have to try and lure these people in to you for massages.

Many are non-tippers, because they have paid for their cruise and assume you make tons of money.

There is NO vacation. You work, go to your room to sleep/eat/shower/whatever, and then you are back to work the following morning.

People don't usually get massages over and over the entire week, so you don't have repeat clientele. They do it for the experience and luxury of it and then they move on.

You can go a whole day with no clients because if there is an event on the ship such as a dance or a concert, nobody is thinking about you!
Granted, there could be a thousand people on the ship, but you might only get about 2 handfuls in a week, depending on the way the waves roll....and how good your selling and upselling skills are.

If you are gone for a few months on the cruise ship you might get a mental drain because you are stuck on the ship and have no family or friends around. Depending on the weather, you might get a really bad rough sea trip and nobody wants to get a massage when the ship is bouncing around on the water. Because you are part of the crew you might get a "crew cabin" and they are the size of walk-in closets. You might not be able to participate in any of the cruise activities because you are "working" and are not allowed to party hard and get wild... You are expected to work long hours.

My opinions were only second-hand advice from fellow friends who did go the cruise-ship route.




The consumer health information on answer-health.com is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for any medical conditions.
The answer content post by the user, if contains the copyright content please contact us, we will immediately remove it.
Copyright © 2007-2011 answer-health.com -   Terms of Use -   Contact us

Health Categories