Showing posts with label Personal Trainer Marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Personal Trainer Marketing. Show all posts

Monday, 28 March 2011

Working out of a Budget Gym - Good or Bad for PTs

A new trend on the fitness scene is budget gyms, gone are the days of £60 a month membership with a £250 joining fee as more and more of £14.99 a month with no contract gyms spring up.  What we need to know as PTs is does attaching yourself to one of these gyms do your business good or harm...

...Well...

I am resident in such a gym and have come to the following conclusion

- There are members who are members of these gyms because thats all they can afford
- And there are members who are members because its convenient/close to work etc. and can afford your extra fees

So as long as your marketing targets this demographic then it shouldn't make a difference, the strategy I used to get these clients is with an early riser bootcamp, run 3 times a week and I charge £50 per person per month.  So I kind of had a gym inside a gym, use of the facility but with my 12 people paying a premium.  So if you look for them, you can find them

plus, budget gyms will usually have less rent, less competition and have less of a corporate feel to them leaving you with more freedom to build you business in your vision

Thursday, 17 March 2011

Tell me to F**k off but...

Its always tough to approach people in the gym, particularly if you are not like me and actually naturally shy (shut it those who know me! :))

If I need to approach lads my own age or maybe younger than me, rather than swagger over with male bravado, I'll say something like

"Mate, tell me to f**k off if you like but you probably best off doing deadlifts rather than hamstring curls..."

And leave it at that, this seems to work to start a good conversation on the level

Just a thought...

Friday, 11 March 2011

Posters and your PT Business

When I first started in Fitness Marketing in 2002, posters worked a little, and they still do work if you have a large number of them placed in strategic places and we are talking about 30 of them...The old adage is that someone has to see a poster 7 times before it sinks in


Heres an example of one thats worked for me, as you can see its bold, clear and wth a clear call to action.  However, I advocate the use of leadboxes over posters.  This is what a leadbox looks like



A lead box requires a prospective client to take the time to fill in their details and post it in the box, hence the quality of the leads you get tend to be of a higher quality, plus you are in control of getting back to the prospective clients, I advertise my Fat Blaster Program and Early Riser Bootcamp Programs via this way and it works very well, just be sure to contact every lead you get and keep hold  of the details for future marketing efforts.  Use both, but lead boxes are cheap, very effective and something that not many PTs seem to have caught onto

Monday, 31 January 2011

10 possible reasons that your fitness business is failing

1.        You are reliant on “pay as you go” rather than monthly billing
2.       You are embarrassed to ask for money
3.       You don’t have systems in place for marketing and sales that you stick to
4.       You don’t look for clients outside the gym
5.       You don’t run group training sessions
6.       You’re  not that competent trainer that you can guarantee results
7.       You take yourself too seriously
8.       You’re not professional enough
9.       You work too much on the wrong things
10.   You don’t know where to start when it comes to marketing and selling your services
 Any more?