Working to a
different tune
By Martha E. Mangelsdorf, Globe Correspondent, 6/30/02
Each month in "Transitions," we profile individuals who have
made significant changes in their work lives - and highlight the
techniques they used to make the changes.
Robin Flint,
43
Career transition: Going back to school to train as a
piano technician, and then starting her own business.
What she used to do: Before studying piano technology,
Flint was working as a medical secretary.
What she does now: Flint tunes, repairs, and renovates
pianos.
Making the switch: A routine piano tuning literally
changed Robin Flint's life.
Years before, in high school, Flint had loved music. She was
involved in band, orchestra, chorus, and drama club. ''Music was
everything,'' she recalls. In college, she started out as a music
therapy major. But she found, as she puts it, that ''I just didn't
have the discipline, the desire or the talent, frankly'' for the
music requirements, and she moved on to another course of study. ''I
literally didn't play the piano for 20 years.''
That changed with her 40th birthday in 1998. To celebrate, Flint
bought a piano. ''That just woke everything up,'' she says. ''I
remembered everything I loved about playing piano and having music
in my life.'' With the new purchase came a free tuning. And when the
piano tuner arrived, Flint was fascinated. She asked if she could
watch the tuning. The technician agreed, and Flint says, ''I had a
million, billion questions.''
At the time, Flint knew she was ready to change careers. Her work
as a medical secretary was reliable and she says she'd learned a lot
working for a well-known Boston-based ear, nose, and throat
specialist. Flint says she was good at secretarial work but wanted
to try something different.
She'd been thinking about computer hardware, because she knew she
wanted to work with tools and with her hands, solving technical
puzzles. But, as she watched the woman tune her piano, Flint had
another idea. ''Suddenly it occurred to me that this is really
something I could do,'' she says.
As Flint remembers it, the piano tuner invited her to an open
house at the North Bennet Street School in Boston's North End. The
school, which was founded in 1885 to offer job training to
immigrants, today offers training for a variety of craftsmanship
trades: piano technology; violin making and restoration; jewelry
making and repair; carpentry; preservation carpentry; cabinet and
furniture making; lock-smithing; and bookbinding. Almost
immediately, Flint knew the place was for her.
''The minute I walked in there, it smelled right,'' she says. As
she learned about the work of piano technology, ''it seemed too much
fun to be real.''
Attending the North Bennet Street School isn't cheap. Current
tuition for the piano technology program is $11,550 per year, said
Andy Levinsky, the school's director of external relations. But with
student loans, Flint and husband Stephen Gore were able to manage.
''We just found a way to make it happen,'' says Gore, who is a
computer technical-support specialist. Giving up her job and her
salary to go to school full time took faith: ''We're regular people,
needing both salaries,'' says Flint.
The piano technology program at the North Bennet Street School is
full time and can be taken as either a one- or two-year course. The
first year covers topics such as tuning and basic repairs, and the
second, optional year focuses on piano restoration and rebuilding.
Flint says she had originally planned just to take the first year,
starting in the fall of 1999, but, after she got started, decided to
take both. The program is decidedly hands-on; students begin right
away working at the piano for part of the day.
After graduating in 2001, Flint became self-employed. Today, she
enjoys a mix of work. Doing business as Lady Piano Tuner (http://www.ladypianotuner.com/)
she does tunings and repair on the South Shore. She says she also
has been doing repair work in another piano professional's workshop.
Flint clearly relishes her new career. ''I love everything about
it - even the dirt,'' she declares. More specifically, she says she
enjoys tuning, figuring out why something doesn't work and fixing
it, working with her hands and with power tools, and getting to meet
new people. Although the work is ''physically rigorous'' and
involves both a lot of repetitive motion and time in the car driving
from place to place, ''this is just an incredibly great fit for
me,'' she says. Gore agrees: ''The sparkle and energy that she has
about her work - it's really, really nice to be around.''
Flint thinks she's already making more than she did as a medical
secretary. She acknowledges that it helps that she doesn't have to
buy health insurance since she is covered by her husband's plan. In
the first few years, self-employed piano technicians may find their
income meager as they build their businesses, says Debbie Cyr, a
piano rebuilder and tuner who works for David Betts, head of the
piano technology department at North Bennet Street School. (Cyr
provided that initial tuning to Flint's piano.)
Once established, a piano technician who is self-employed in the
Boston area should, Cyr says, be able to gross $60,000-plus, before
expenses and taxes. Technicians can also opt for employment at
organizations ranging from piano dealers to university music
schools, she says. Those who complete the two-year program and work
as employees (rather than going out on their own) start at about
$29,000 upon graduation, said Mary Richards, director of student and
alumni services at North Bennet Street School. With eight to 10
years experience, those graduates who choose to work for someone
else rather than themselves might make between $40,000-$50,000, plus
employee benefits, Richards says.
Demand for piano technicians is high nationwide because there are
only a few programs in the US and Canada that train them, says Cyr.
She reports that the school could never fill all the jobs that come
to it from around the country.
Boston boasts two piano technology programs. There is also the
New England Conservatory School of Continuing Education, which
offers a two-semester certificate program in piano technology, said
Dorothy Messenger, a public relations and marketing assistant at the
school. Cyr says that because some students stay in Boston after
they finish their studies, ''we certainly have enough'' technicians,
although the market isn't saturated.
While she says that piano technology was historically a
male-dominated field, Cyr estimates that about 15-20 percent of
today's technicians are women.
Today, one of Flint's sources of new customers comes from an
arrangement whereby she provides warranty tuning for a piano
retailer - just like the tuning that made such a difference in her
own life.
''I love pianos,'' she says. ''I have no illusions of being a
musician or anything: I don't play that well. But taking care of
them, and fixing them, is such a great way to express my love for
the instrument.''
Martha E. Mangelsdorf (m_e_mangelsdorf@hotmail.com)
is a freelance business writer and editor.