You also have to be good at the social side of teaching, bushcraft and leadership.
Actually, I think that is slightly more important than to have really good technical bushcraft skills. You could make a nice living and just teach only very basic skills, provided that it's a really nice social experience at the same time. And perhaps even sometimes use a little of the expertise of others in the group to fill out your lack in knowledge and experience.
The really good teachers are the ones who are happy to learn from their students. And who are ready to acknowledge that they don't know everything. What teaching bushcraft really is about, is to help people grow and be confident in the outdoors. Not bolstering your ego.
So try to arrange some sort of nice outings or picknicks for friends, relatives and collegues. Bring your own. Just sitting around a campfire with something to eat and drink. Perhaps work in a little bit of bushcraft in the event. Demonstrate things. Let others demonstrate what they know. Experiment a little.
If you don't like organizing stuff like that for people you know, or if you have a hard time making others interested, then perhaps you should reconsider? Teaching isn't for everyone. We have all experienced bad teachers, I guess...
But if you can get people to enjoy outings like that, and ask for more and perhaps even try some of what you demonstrate, then you are on the right track. You just might be one of the really good teachers...
So start for free in a small scale in your spare time. Then when/if you feel good about it, try to get paid doing it.
You don't just need bushcraft experience, you also need outdoor teaching experience, and social skills, to be able to teach bushcraft so people feel good about it.