On a weekday evening, the class ends with their last practice activities: float, roll, kick, breathe. Parents nod as instructors mark progress on milestone charts. This is the heart of SafeSplash Swim School’s S.A.F.E.R. Swimmer Promise, a 2025 pilot that the company shared lifted enrollment, improved retention, increased revenue, and drew more first-time families. After ten months of results, SafeSplash moved the program from “pilot” to “standard,” rolling it out across its network in January 2026.
“We’re thrilled to make the S.A.F.E.R. Swimmer Promise available to every SafeSplash school across the country,” said Chris Harkness, President of SafeSplash Swim School. “This unlocks an incredible opportunity for all franchisees to elevate their impact, strengthen their operations, and benefit from the same performance gains we’ve already seen. It’s a win for our schools, our families, and the communities we serve.”
What The Pilot Actually Tested
Pilots work best when they build trust and remove guesswork. SafeSplash framed this one around an outcomes promise; for children ages four and older, master 10 essential self-rescue skills within one year or less, or families receive up to two complimentary months of lessons until goals are met. Backed by the National Drowning Prevention Alliance, the commitment tackles the question parents ask first; how long it takes for a child to learn to swim. By tying progress to a timeline, the pilot gave families visibility while giving franchisees a clear operating rhythm.
Internally, the company watched four yardsticks: enrollment, retention, revenue, and new family demand. Participating schools, SafeSplash reports, outpaced the rest of the system on all four. That matters; pilots often generate isolated wins, but this one connected safety outcomes to unit-level performance.
“The S.A.F.E.R. Swimmer Promise is helping us save lives, and it’s helping our franchisees grow,” Harkness said. “Families value transparency and measurable progress, and franchisees value growth and performance. This program delivers both, and the data makes it clear: when schools execute it well, their business directly benefits.”

From Test To Template: How Pilots Scale In Franchising
Franchise systems live on repeatable plays. The S.A.F.E.R. Swimmer pilot became a template because it did three things operators look for:
- It defined outcomes in plain language; ten self-rescue skills within a one-year window.
- It created a milestone map that travels; instructors can teach it, managers can audit it, parents can see it.
- It aligned purpose with performance; families get clarity, schools get a trust-building offer that supports growth.
With those ingredients, the 2026 systemwide rollout reads less like a marketing splash and more like operational standardization. The company, which includes brands such as Swimtastic, Saf-T-Swim, SwimLabs, and Miller Swim School, positions the Promise as part of a broader curriculum that spans beginner classes to competitive pathways.
Why This Matters Beyond The Pool
For franchise audiences, the lesson is bigger than swim lessons. The best pilots start small but answer a universal pain point, then back claims with data that owners care about. They also come with a training loop that preserves quality when the play expands. SafeSplash’s approach checks those boxes; measurable milestones for families, a service guarantee that lowers hesitation, and an operating framework that coaches consistency across markets.
If you strip away the water, this is a familiar pattern for any franchisor: test something that adds real value, quantify the gains, package the process, then scale it with accountability. The Promise just happens to do that while addressing water safety; a mission that resonates with communities and, as the company’s 2025 results suggest, with the unit economics that sustain a system.