
MJM Yachts launches She’s the Captain: why hands-on helm training matters before summer
The story in brief
MJM Yachts has launched She’s the Captain, a free women-focused training program delivered through the brand’s dealer network. According to MJM, the initiative was developed with Captain Lauren Warren, owner of Upper Chesapeake Boat School and a USCG 100-ton licensed captain.
The real interest for owners and regular boat users is not just the branding of the program. It is the format: practical instruction on the water, centered on maneuvering, handling, and calm decision-making in real situations.
Why it matters for owners
Many owners spend first on the hull, electronics, or light refit work and only later on crew training. In practice, the order often should be reversed: stronger helm skills first, upgrades second.
A well-designed hands-on course can affect very practical points:
- less stress during marina maneuvers
- better role-sharing on board
- more autonomy for someone who is usually kept in a passive role
- better decision quality in coastal boating
- easier, more frequent use of the boat beyond only the simplest outings
That is why the MJM launch matters more than it may appear. It is not about a new model or accessory. It is about one of the factors that most directly shapes safety and real usability: the people on board.
What the program includes
In its official description, MJM presents She’s the Captain as a supportive women-only learning experience designed both for people who are new to boating and for those who want to sharpen existing skills.
The topics listed by the builder and the program materials include:
- docking and close-quarters maneuvering
- helm controls and familiarity with onboard systems
- navigation basics, rules of the road, and situational awareness
- line handling, knot tying, and docking strategies
- on-water practice in realistic scenarios
That structure matters because it moves training away from generic theory and toward the situations that actually create mistakes, tension, or avoidance: marina entry, crosswinds, communication between helm and crew, and fast but controlled decisions.
The key point: dealer-led training with dates already on the calendar
One useful market signal is that the program is not staying abstract. MJM is already placing it into dealer event calendars. The brand’s events page lists a Legasea Marine session in Virginia on May 15, 2026, and another event with Reed Yacht Sales in Michigan on May 30 and 31, 2026.
That matters to boaters for two reasons.
1. Easier access
When training runs through dealers, it can become part of the normal ownership path: delivery, shakedown runs, early-season use, upgrades, and after-sales support.
2. Better continuity
If the format works, it can become more than a one-off event and instead turn into a recurring part of the owner-dealer relationship. That is the point worth watching: useful training is not the kind that impresses people for one afternoon, but the kind that leaves a crew more capable three months later.
How to judge whether this kind of course is worth your time
For an owner or family crew, the value is not in the course title but in how the instruction is built. Before signing up, it is worth checking five practical points:
- how much time is actually spent on the water
- whether maneuvers are repeated rather than shown once
- whether the course covers navigation and decision-making, not only docking
- whether the instruction matches the participant’s real skill level
- whether the crew leaves with simple procedures they can repeat on later outings
In other words, the useful course is the one that changes onboard behavior after the boat is back in the slip.
What to watch next
She’s the Captain is worth following not as an isolated marketing move, but as a test of a real market demand: accessible, practical training connected to ownership.
If more builders or dealers adopt similar formats, the signal will be clear. Boat companies are recognizing that selling a boat better also means helping more people use it safely and consistently.
For Batoo readers, the takeaway is straightforward: before peak season, time invested in helm competence can matter more than many accessories. And when training is structured around real scenarios, the benefit shows up quickly in maneuvering, crew autonomy, and overall calm on board.
Sources et références
Pour renforcer la fiabilité et le contexte, cet article cite des sources externes pertinentes sur le sujet.
- MJM Yachts Launches Empowering New Learning Experience: She’s the Captain
BoatTEST · 2026-05-10T00:00:00.000Z
- She’s the Captain
MJM Yachts
- Upcoming Events
MJM Yachts
Vous pourriez aussi aimer

TowBoatUS Danville on Kentucky Lake: what it changes for onboard assistance and safety
4 min de lecture
USCG 2026 boating safety survey: why it matters to owners before summer
5 min de lecture