On the surface, a Carnatic music institute in Chennai and a Western guitar school in Pune seem completely different. One teaches ragas and talas; the other teaches chords and tabs. One follows guru-shishya tradition; the other is more structured and curriculum-based. But behind both is the same operational reality.
The Shared Problems
Whether your students are learning Bhairav or blues, every music institute deals with the same three things:
- Tracking who showed up and who didn't
- Getting students to practice consistently between lessons
- Collecting fees on time without damaging relationships
How Carnatic Institutes Are Different
Carnatic music often has more informal structures — classes happen at the teacher's home, batch sizes are smaller, and fees are lower. This means the margin for administrative waste is thinner. An hour spent chasing fees or reconciling attendance is a larger percentage of your week.
How Western Music Schools Are Different
Western music schools often have more students, multiple teachers, and batch-based scheduling. The challenge here is coordination — making sure the right teacher is with the right student at the right time, and that parents are getting consistent updates across a larger team.
One System for Both
Raaga is built to serve both contexts. The free plan (up to 15 students) is sized for a solo Carnatic teacher. The Growth plan (₹499/month, 100 students) serves mid-sized Western music academies. The Pro and Enterprise plans support multi-teacher and multi-branch operations.