AMONG MANY types of membership
strategies, fitness center tours
produce the highest percentage of
pro.spects from leads, and memberships
from prospects. A membership
salesperson who has
mastered the art of the tour can
be assured to generate quality
prospects and membership sales.
But, there are key steps involved
in staging a successful facility tour.
Start with a Q&A
Begin the tour with a relaxed
Q&A session. Sit down in an
open, non-intimidating setting
and offer prospects water. Then,
talk to them about why they want
to join, their favorite activities,
goals, etc. This information will
not only increase the chances of
the membership sale being closed,
but can prove invaluable in setting
up the tour. This feedback can
also be used to improve membership
growth and retention.
Find their “hot spots”
Potential members are knowledgeable,
and giving them a
“canned” tour is one of the worst
things you can do. It can turn
prospects off, and detract from
the level of professionalism of
your staff members. The tour
should be personalized for each
prospect, based on the priorities
indicated in the Q&A session. Use
that information to identify the
prospect’s “hot spot,” and start the
tour there.
Introduce prospects to your
facility’s experts in their indicated
areas of interest. If the tour has
been scheduled, arrangements
should be made for the experts to
be present. If the tour is unscheduled
and an expert is not available,
the fitness director or an
assistant can fill in.

Never lead off a tour of the fitness
area by saying, “this is our
cardiovascular room,” or, “we have
Nautilus equipment.” These are
obvious statements that indicate a
lack of professionalism and
understanding of the prospect’s
specific needs. Instead, focus on
what sets your fitness center apart
from other clubs, and what those
differences mean to the prospect.
Focus on the staff, service, members,
programming, etc. — not
the equipment.
“Want to try the facility today?”
Give prospects the opportunity
to use your fitness center that day.
Better yet, connect them with
another member or a staff person
who can provide any needed
assistance.
Introduce a member
From a sales perspective, nothing
nothing
is stronger than the testimony
of a member to show a prospect
the value of your facility. The
introduction between a prospect
and a member should be short
and brief. A satisfied member can
be your best salesperson.
Provide printed information
Prospects should be provided
with the facility’s brochure before
the tour begins. This way, they can
reference information presented
in the brochure during the tour.
In addition, the tour should
include a brief review of the
fitness center’s programs
and/or events. It is important
that the prospect gets a feel for
the various activities and traditions
of your facility. This situation
also represents a great
opportunity for prospects to
ask questions, and gives the
salesperson the chance to elaborate
on the level of member
participation in the facility.
Ask for the sale
After the tour is complete, the
salesperson should sit down with
the prospect in a non-intimidating
setting and ask if he or she has
any further questions. After providing
answers, the salesperson
should ask for the sale. If the sale
doesn’t occur, the salesperson
should give the prospect a guest
pass, and then follow up at a later
date to see how his or her visit to
the facility went.
Steps to success
A well-planned membership
tour is one of the most effective
things a facility can do to help
bring about membership sales.
Collectively, these steps can provide
fitness centers a pathway to
success.

AMONG MANY types of membership
strategies, fitness center tours
produce the highest percentage of
pro.spects from leads, and memberships
from prospects. A membership
salesperson who has
mastered the art of the tour can
be assured to generate quality
prospects and membership sales.
But, there are key steps involved
in staging a successful facility tour.
Start with a Q&A
Begin the tour with a relaxed
Q&A session. Sit down in an
open, non-intimidating setting
and offer prospects water. Then,
talk to them about why they want
to join, their favorite activities,
goals, etc. This information will
not only increase the chances of
the membership sale being closed,
but can prove invaluable in setting
up the tour. This feedback can
also be used to improve membership
growth and retention.
Find their “hot spots”
Potential members are knowledgeable,
and giving them a
“canned” tour is one of the worst
things you can do. It can turn
prospects off, and detract from
the level of professionalism of
your staff members. The tour
should be personalized for each
prospect, based on the priorities
indicated in the Q&A session. Use
that information to identify the
prospect’s “hot spot,” and start the
tour there.
Introduce prospects to your
facility’s experts in their indicated
areas of interest. If the tour has
been scheduled, arrangements
should be made for the experts to
be present. If the tour is unscheduled
and an expert is not available,
the fitness director or an
assistant can fill in.

Never lead off a tour of the fitness
area by saying, “this is our
cardiovascular room,” or, “we have
Nautilus equipment.” These are
obvious statements that indicate a
lack of professionalism and
understanding of the prospect’s
specific needs. Instead, focus on
what sets your fitness center apart
from other clubs, and what those
differences mean to the prospect.
Focus on the staff, service, members,
programming, etc. — not
the equipment.
“Want to try the facility today?”
Give prospects the opportunity
to use your fitness center that day.
Better yet, connect them with
another member or a staff person
who can provide any needed
assistance.
Introduce a member
From a sales perspective, nothing
nothing
is stronger than the testimony
of a member to show a prospect
the value of your facility. The
introduction between a prospect
and a member should be short
and brief. A satisfied member can
be your best salesperson.
Provide printed information
Prospects should be provided
with the facility’s brochure before
the tour begins. This way, they can
reference information presented
in the brochure during the tour.
In addition, the tour should
include a brief review of the
fitness center’s programs
and/or events. It is important
that the prospect gets a feel for
the various activities and traditions
of your facility. This situation
also represents a great
opportunity for prospects to
ask questions, and gives the
salesperson the chance to elaborate
on the level of member
participation in the facility.
Ask for the sale
After the tour is complete, the
salesperson should sit down with
the prospect in a non-intimidating
setting and ask if he or she has
any further questions. After providing
answers, the salesperson
should ask for the sale. If the sale
doesn’t occur, the salesperson
should give the prospect a guest
pass, and then follow up at a later
date to see how his or her visit to
the facility went.
Steps to success
A well-planned membership
tour is one of the most effective
things a facility can do to help
bring about membership sales.
Collectively, these steps can provide
fitness centers a pathway to
success.

IN URBAN markets and suburban
markets with a high concentration
of businesses, corporate membership
sales present an opportunity for
fitness centers to develop large reservoirs
of leads and prospects, which
often result in high closing rates. For
many facilities, the corporate market
represents a majority of their membership
growth opportunity. In reality,
the process of generating
corporate leads and prospects, then
closing those leads, is different than
the typical sales process.
The corporate mindset
To gain corporate members, learn
about what corporations are seeking
when they purchase corporate
memberships. The University of
Michigan’s Health Management
Research Center produces an annual
report that offers a useful overview
of the cost benefit data that corporations
typically consider when they
evaluate the need for a corporate
membership program. Another
resource is the 1998 International
Health, Racquet and Sportsclub
Association publication The Corporate
Market: How to Capture and
Keep Corporate Memberships.
In general, most corporations
purchase corporate memberships
to use as a tool for recruiting
high-caliber talent, help improve
employee morale and productivity,
reduce healthcare-related costs,
improve the image of the company,
and/or reduce worker’s
compensation costs, absenteeism
and work-related disability.
The corporate market
Develop a list of the most
appropriate corporations to pursue
by using the following guidelines:
• Identify which corporations are
represented by your current members,
and talk with those members,
or contact the company directly.
• Compile a list of companies
that fall within your market area.
While not as effective as using
your membership roster, this
strategy is a good alternative.
• Identify the decision-makers
at these corporations. In most
cases, he or she is in either the
human resources or medical
departments. In smaller companies,
it might be the manager or
president of the company.
• Learn about the company’s
values and needs. Make an effort
to learn as much about a company
as you can. Start the effort by
searching the company’s website.
Develop a presentation package
Prepare a professional presentation
about your facility and the
value of corporate memberships.
Get an audience at the company.
This is often the most challenging
aspect of corporate sales.
Some steps that can be helpful in
getting your foot in the door
include member referral, building
relationships in the community
and forwarding a personalized
invitation to the corporation.
Make the first appointment a
learning experience. In corporate
sales, the first appointment is not
designed to close the sale, but rather
as a means to learn about the company’s
needs and wants, and to
present general information about
the benefits your facility can offer.
The basic goal of this first meeting
should be to have the contact agree
to allow you to forward a proposal
that is specific to the company.
Forward a customized presentation.
Prepare a customized proposal
that is relevant to what you
have learned about the company in
your first meeting. It might include
an invitation for the contact to use
the facility, or an invitation that
allows employees to have one week
of complimentary usage. Some fitness
centers develop special corporate
activities, such as featured
evenings for targeted companies.
Maintain contact. Follow up
the proposal with a call to confirm
that it was received, and inquire
about scheduling another meeting
to discuss the proposal. Be vigilant;
it may take a few months
between the time you forwarded
the initial proposal and your next
meeting with the company.
Prepare for additional meetings
and counterproposals. You will
typically have to deal with additional
meetings and revised proposals.
It is a rare event that a club’s
first proposal is the one the company
accepts.
Throw a party for the company.
Once the company agrees to
your proposal, a special function
should be held at your facility welcoming
the company.
Assign a corporate representative
It is essential to assign a staff
person to represent the account and
maintain ongoing contact with the
company representative. Have this
person meet with the designated corporate
representative on a regular
basis. These meetings should include
providing information about the
usage of the facility by company
employees and other relevant data.
Maintaining regular contact with the
company can help assure ongoing
support from the corporation.
Considering the odds
Corporate memberships are a
high-risk but high-reward approach
to membership sales. While they
can lead to a relatively large number
of sales, they can also lead to a high
level of turnover. All factors considered,
however, the effort to sell corporate
memberships is a venture
well worth undertaking.

IN URBAN markets and suburban
markets with a high concentration
of businesses, corporate membership
sales present an opportunity for
fitness centers to develop large reservoirs
of leads and prospects, which
often result in high closing rates. For
many facilities, the corporate market
represents a majority of their membership
growth opportunity. In reality,
the process of generating
corporate leads and prospects, then
closing those leads, is different than
the typical sales process.
The corporate mindset
To gain corporate members, learn
about what corporations are seeking
when they purchase corporate
memberships. The University of
Michigan’s Health Management
Research Center produces an annual
report that offers a useful overview
of the cost benefit data that corporations
typically consider when they
evaluate the need for a corporate
membership program. Another
resource is the 1998 International
Health, Racquet and Sportsclub
Association publication The Corporate
Market: How to Capture and
Keep Corporate Memberships.
In general, most corporations
purchase corporate memberships
to use as a tool for recruiting
high-caliber talent, help improve
employee morale and productivity,
reduce healthcare-related costs,
improve the image of the company,
and/or reduce worker’s
compensation costs, absenteeism
and work-related disability.
The corporate market
Develop a list of the most
appropriate corporations to pursue
by using the following guidelines:
• Identify which corporations are
represented by your current members,
and talk with those members,
or contact the company directly.
• Compile a list of companies
that fall within your market area.
While not as effective as using
your membership roster, this
strategy is a good alternative.
• Identify the decision-makers
at these corporations. In most
cases, he or she is in either the
human resources or medical
departments. In smaller companies,
it might be the manager or
president of the company.
• Learn about the company’s
values and needs. Make an effort
to learn as much about a company
as you can. Start the effort by
searching the company’s website.
Develop a presentation package
Prepare a professional presentation
about your facility and the
value of corporate memberships.
Get an audience at the company.
This is often the most challenging
aspect of corporate sales.
Some steps that can be helpful in
getting your foot in the door
include member referral, building
relationships in the community
and forwarding a personalized
invitation to the corporation.
Make the first appointment a
learning experience. In corporate
sales, the first appointment is not
designed to close the sale, but rather
as a means to learn about the company’s
needs and wants, and to
present general information about
the benefits your facility can offer.
The basic goal of this first meeting
should be to have the contact agree
to allow you to forward a proposal
that is specific to the company.
Forward a customized presentation.
Prepare a customized proposal
that is relevant to what you
have learned about the company in
your first meeting. It might include
an invitation for the contact to use
the facility, or an invitation that
allows employees to have one week
of complimentary usage. Some fitness
centers develop special corporate
activities, such as featured
evenings for targeted companies.
Maintain contact. Follow up
the proposal with a call to confirm
that it was received, and inquire
about scheduling another meeting
to discuss the proposal. Be vigilant;
it may take a few months
between the time you forwarded
the initial proposal and your next
meeting with the company.
Prepare for additional meetings
and counterproposals. You will
typically have to deal with additional
meetings and revised proposals.
It is a rare event that a club’s
first proposal is the one the company
accepts.
Throw a party for the company.
Once the company agrees to
your proposal, a special function
should be held at your facility welcoming
the company.
Assign a corporate representative
It is essential to assign a staff
person to represent the account and
maintain ongoing contact with the
company representative. Have this
person meet with the designated corporate
representative on a regular
basis. These meetings should include
providing information about the
usage of the facility by company
employees and other relevant data.
Maintaining regular contact with the
company can help assure ongoing
support from the corporation.
Considering the odds
Corporate memberships are a
high-risk but high-reward approach
to membership sales. While they
can lead to a relatively large number
of sales, they can also lead to a high
level of turnover. All factors considered,
however, the effort to sell corporate
memberships is a venture
well worth undertaking.

What steps can you take to create happier members and employees, and increase member retention?
NEXT TO MEMBERSHIP sales, membership retention is the topic that generates the greatest level of interest among facility management circles. Almost everyone realizes that when a fitness center drives retention, thereby reducing attrition, membership growth in that facility is significantly enhanced. Not only does the facility increase its membership base, it also establishes a business environment where it can charge more for the experience it provides. But how can you enhance membership retention? Read on to find out how to create and sustain a culture of service within your fitness center.
The membership retention profit chain
The membership retention profit chain is a relatively simple process that begins with establishing a strong service culture and ends with higher levels of membership retention.
As Figure 1 illustrates, the first step a fitness center should take to affect its membership retention levels is to establish a service culture. What is a service culture?

A service culture is an interlocking system of customs, habits and conventions emanating from values that help establish an environment where the facility’s employees are passionate about and empowered to deliver whatever is needed to create personally relevant and memorable experiences for other employees and members of the facility. Establishing a service culture may possibly be the most challenging business practice that fitness centers face in today’s business environment.

The business challenge of creating a service culture

How hard can it be to create a service culture?
On the surface,the task may seem relatively straightforward. On the other hand, it
is far from that. Creating a service culture requires passion, commitment,
discipline, vision, patience and a clear understanding
that the business rewards of undertaking such an effort are not
immediate. The reason so many businesses talk about great customer
service, but can’t match their words with their reality, is that
they are unwilling to commit to do what it takes to deliver on
their “lofty” statements. In a business climate where looking
beyond current sales numbers or the next quarter’s EBITDA targets
is status quo, it takes courage to step back and embrace the
need to establish a service culture that can sustain long-term business
growth and profitability.Steps to establishing
a service cultureWhat actions can managers
take to create a great service culture
and initiate the journey to
service excellence and memorable
member experiences? The
following steps can be particularly
helpful:

1.Begin with core values that center on a service heart.
The core essence of any culture is
its values, whether it is the culture
of a group of people or the
culture of a business. As such,
the heart and soul of any business
culture lies in values that
drive the behavior of each
employee and the organization
as a whole.Within any business,
particularly a fitness center,
these values are the foundation
of the service spirit. Countless examples exist of successful club operators that have established values that foster a service heart and spirit. Examples of the service-oriented values that these organizations promote include the following:
Fitcorp: “Quality” and “customers”
Larry North Fitness: “Happy to do it” and “reaching out and fostering relationships”
Red’s: “Hello and goodbye” and “do whatever it takes”
Western Athletic Clubs: “We reach out to others” and “we believe in each other”
2. Embrace the commitment to service values starting at the top. In every business culture, values and traditions are sustained by the organization’s leaders who embody those values and traditions. Insightful leaders understand a facility’s values are only words unless they model those values in their day-to-day leadership style. At Red’s, one of the first people to greet members with a “hello,” and one of the last to say “goodbye,” is Red himself. Not only does Red greet his members, he also greets his employees. Anyone who spends time with Jim Gerber, CEO of Western Athletic Clubs, will immediately notice that he is fully committed to reaching out to his employees and members. His actions underscore his belief in and support for his “people.”
Larry North Fitness in Highland Park, Texas, is another facility that reflects the service-oriented value structure of the owner. Larry is always espousing the ‘happy to do it” attitude with both his employees and the facility’s members through his actions.
The late founder and long-time chairman of ClubCorp, Robert
Dedman, made it a practice to write personal notes to ClubCorp
employees on a weekly basis.Why? Because he knew if he wanted his
team to treat members and guests
like kings, he needed to make sure
his employees felt like royalty.
3. Establish courses of
action that reinforce the
appropriate values and service
culture. Creating and then sustaining
a service culture requires
a team of competent, committed
employees. By the same token, a
culture involves a compelling mix
of artifacts, myths, legends,
heroes and storytellers. In the
business world, to foster a great
service culture, a fitness center
must have people and stories that
embody the facility’s values and
cultural practices. Examples of
various steps that can be undertaken
to help establish and/or
reinforce a service culture within
a facility include the following:
Sharing stories about employees who embody the culture and values.
Creating recognition for employees who embody living the facility’s service culture.
Empowering people to act
on the culture by eliminating
political and positional hurdles.
The underlying concept is to
allow people to innately deliver
the desired culture, rather than
having to ask permission to do so.
Avoiding making business decisions that are counter to the club’s service culture. One counter-productive decision can do more to harm an organization’s culture than 10 well-aligned decisions.
Educating continuously. The core of a fitness center’s educational and orientation programs should be grounded in teaching and acting out the values and service culture practices. A service-oriented culture requires continual reinforcement, given the fact that even the best employees will occasionally fall out of line if the facility doesn’t have the right process in place to teach the service culture.
Documenting the culture. Facility management should identify specific ways to communicate service values and cultural practices. Whether it’s through wallet cards, such as those used at Red’s, or the posters and handbooks used at Larry North Fitness, a facility needs to keep its service culture visible.
4. Encourage communication. A properly focused service culture involves an open-door policy by management. Management must be willing to listen to and respond to feedback from its employees and members. Management should foster a trusting environment that encourages and allows for open and honest feedback to be

shared with management, employees and affected members. It is also essential that management take appropriate actions concerning such feedback. Among the examples of how management can facilitate the process of soliciting feedback include the following:
Walk the floor and leave the office door open. Management needs to spend time interacting with employees and members.
Conduct focus groups. On a quarterly basis, focus groups should be arranged for employee and member groups. This time should be used to initiate and encourage dialogue that involves qualitative discussions revolving around either the employees’ or the members’ experiences.
Use a real-time member feedback system. A system should be provided, such as comment cards, that enables employees and members to share their feelings about an experience when it happens. Furthermore, management should provide real-time followthrough, so that everyone knows the feedback was received and an appropriate action was taken.
5. Eliminate the sacrifices. If a facility truly wants to have a great service culture, it constantly needs to ask itself, “What sacrifices do its employees have to make to work for the facility?” and “What sacrifices do the members have to make to experience the fitness center?” In this context, “sacrifice” refers to the practices and policies that a club enacts that causes its employees and/or members extra time, less convenience, less comfort, etc. A service-oriented facility has everyone looking for ways to reduce the inherent sacrifices, rather than finding ways to increase the level of sacrifices. If something takes extra time, if it requires an extra step, if it requires seeing one more person, then it is creating sacrifices. All factors considered, the more a fitness center eliminates such sacrifices, the stronger its service culture will be.
6. Create a service recovery process to patch the leaks.
Mistakes happen even in the best service culture, and people have less-than-desirable experiences. According to information shared by Dr. Leonard Schlesinger in an article he wrote for Harvard Business Review entitled The Service Profit Chain, customers who have a bad experience can be turned around and even converted into business apostles with the proper service-recovery process. Data exists that indicates that 95 percent of customers will make a repeat purchase if their “poor” experience is dealt with promptly and correctly. The underlying keys of a great service-recovery process include the following:
Listen. A fitness center should have a process in place that ensures that its employees and members are listened to whenever they have an unfavorable experience.
Empathize.When management listens, they should not take a position other than one that considers the feedback from the employee’s or member’s perspective. Empathy requires that preconceived notions do not interrupt or otherwise cloud the listening process.
Apologize. It is imperative that whoever is doing the listening also apologizes, both personally and on behalf of the club, if appropriate.
Respond.Management should be proactive once the first three steps are taken. As a general rule, not only will the initial management action be to correct the issue, but also to let the person who had the unfavorable experience know that the issue will be addressed as soon as possible.
Communicate the response. Management, regardless of whatever action they ultimately decide to take, should personally inform the individual who brought the issue to their attention about what steps they decided to take.
Follow up. Following a response, appropriate feedback should be provided to everyone involved. More than worth the effort
Creating a service culture that fosters memorable and lasting member experiences is one of the greatest, yet rewarding, challenges to operating a successful fitness center. At a minimum, the process of creating a service culture takes passion, commitment, patience and vision. Fortunately, the energy and resources required to establish and sustain a service culture in fitness centers will be worth the effort for everyone involved.

What steps can you take to create happier members and employees, and increase member retention?
NEXT TO MEMBERSHIP sales, membership retention is the topic that generates the greatest level of interest among facility management circles. Almost everyone realizes that when a fitness center drives retention, thereby reducing attrition, membership growth in that facility is significantly enhanced. Not only does the facility increase its membership base, it also establishes a business environment where it can charge more for the experience it provides. But how can you enhance membership retention? Read on to find out how to create and sustain a culture of service within your fitness center.
The membership retention profit chain
The membership retention profit chain is a relatively simple process that begins with establishing a strong service culture and ends with higher levels of membership retention.
As Figure 1 illustrates, the first step a fitness center should take to affect its membership retention levels is to establish a service culture. What is a service culture?

A service culture is an interlocking system of customs, habits and conventions emanating from values that help establish an environment where the facility’s employees are passionate about and empowered to deliver whatever is needed to create personally relevant and memorable experiences for other employees and members of the facility. Establishing a service culture may possibly be the most challenging business practice that fitness centers face in today’s business environment.

The business challenge of creating a service culture

How hard can it be to create a service culture?
On the surface,the task may seem relatively straightforward. On the other hand, it
is far from that. Creating a service culture requires passion, commitment,
discipline, vision, patience and a clear understanding
that the business rewards of undertaking such an effort are not
immediate. The reason so many businesses talk about great customer
service, but can’t match their words with their reality, is that
they are unwilling to commit to do what it takes to deliver on
their “lofty” statements. In a business climate where looking
beyond current sales numbers or the next quarter’s EBITDA targets
is status quo, it takes courage to step back and embrace the
need to establish a service culture that can sustain long-term business
growth and profitability.Steps to establishing
a service cultureWhat actions can managers
take to create a great service culture
and initiate the journey to
service excellence and memorable
member experiences? The
following steps can be particularly
helpful:

1.Begin with core values that center on a service heart.
The core essence of any culture is
its values, whether it is the culture
of a group of people or the
culture of a business. As such,
the heart and soul of any business
culture lies in values that
drive the behavior of each
employee and the organization
as a whole.Within any business,
particularly a fitness center,
these values are the foundation
of the service spirit. Countless examples exist of successful club operators that have established values that foster a service heart and spirit. Examples of the service-oriented values that these organizations promote include the following:
Fitcorp: “Quality” and “customers”
Larry North Fitness: “Happy to do it” and “reaching out and fostering relationships”
Red’s: “Hello and goodbye” and “do whatever it takes”
Western Athletic Clubs: “We reach out to others” and “we believe in each other”
2. Embrace the commitment to service values starting at the top. In every business culture, values and traditions are sustained by the organization’s leaders who embody those values and traditions. Insightful leaders understand a facility’s values are only words unless they model those values in their day-to-day leadership style. At Red’s, one of the first people to greet members with a “hello,” and one of the last to say “goodbye,” is Red himself. Not only does Red greet his members, he also greets his employees. Anyone who spends time with Jim Gerber, CEO of Western Athletic Clubs, will immediately notice that he is fully committed to reaching out to his employees and members. His actions underscore his belief in and support for his “people.”
Larry North Fitness in Highland Park, Texas, is another facility that reflects the service-oriented value structure of the owner. Larry is always espousing the ‘happy to do it” attitude with both his employees and the facility’s members through his actions.
The late founder and long-time chairman of ClubCorp, Robert
Dedman, made it a practice to write personal notes to ClubCorp
employees on a weekly basis.Why? Because he knew if he wanted his
team to treat members and guests
like kings, he needed to make sure
his employees felt like royalty.
3. Establish courses of
action that reinforce the
appropriate values and service
culture. Creating and then sustaining
a service culture requires
a team of competent, committed
employees. By the same token, a
culture involves a compelling mix
of artifacts, myths, legends,
heroes and storytellers. In the
business world, to foster a great
service culture, a fitness center
must have people and stories that
embody the facility’s values and
cultural practices. Examples of
various steps that can be undertaken
to help establish and/or
reinforce a service culture within
a facility include the following:
Sharing stories about employees who embody the culture and values.
Creating recognition for employees who embody living the facility’s service culture.
Empowering people to act
on the culture by eliminating
political and positional hurdles.
The underlying concept is to
allow people to innately deliver
the desired culture, rather than
having to ask permission to do so.
Avoiding making business decisions that are counter to the club’s service culture. One counter-productive decision can do more to harm an organization’s culture than 10 well-aligned decisions.
Educating continuously. The core of a fitness center’s educational and orientation programs should be grounded in teaching and acting out the values and service culture practices. A service-oriented culture requires continual reinforcement, given the fact that even the best employees will occasionally fall out of line if the facility doesn’t have the right process in place to teach the service culture.
Documenting the culture. Facility management should identify specific ways to communicate service values and cultural practices. Whether it’s through wallet cards, such as those used at Red’s, or the posters and handbooks used at Larry North Fitness, a facility needs to keep its service culture visible.
4. Encourage communication. A properly focused service culture involves an open-door policy by management. Management must be willing to listen to and respond to feedback from its employees and members. Management should foster a trusting environment that encourages and allows for open and honest feedback to be

shared with management, employees and affected members. It is also essential that management take appropriate actions concerning such feedback. Among the examples of how management can facilitate the process of soliciting feedback include the following:
Walk the floor and leave the office door open. Management needs to spend time interacting with employees and members.
Conduct focus groups. On a quarterly basis, focus groups should be arranged for employee and member groups. This time should be used to initiate and encourage dialogue that involves qualitative discussions revolving around either the employees’ or the members’ experiences.
Use a real-time member feedback system. A system should be provided, such as comment cards, that enables employees and members to share their feelings about an experience when it happens. Furthermore, management should provide real-time followthrough, so that everyone knows the feedback was received and an appropriate action was taken.
5. Eliminate the sacrifices. If a facility truly wants to have a great service culture, it constantly needs to ask itself, “What sacrifices do its employees have to make to work for the facility?” and “What sacrifices do the members have to make to experience the fitness center?” In this context, “sacrifice” refers to the practices and policies that a club enacts that causes its employees and/or members extra time, less convenience, less comfort, etc. A service-oriented facility has everyone looking for ways to reduce the inherent sacrifices, rather than finding ways to increase the level of sacrifices. If something takes extra time, if it requires an extra step, if it requires seeing one more person, then it is creating sacrifices. All factors considered, the more a fitness center eliminates such sacrifices, the stronger its service culture will be.
6. Create a service recovery process to patch the leaks.
Mistakes happen even in the best service culture, and people have less-than-desirable experiences. According to information shared by Dr. Leonard Schlesinger in an article he wrote for Harvard Business Review entitled The Service Profit Chain, customers who have a bad experience can be turned around and even converted into business apostles with the proper service-recovery process. Data exists that indicates that 95 percent of customers will make a repeat purchase if their “poor” experience is dealt with promptly and correctly. The underlying keys of a great service-recovery process include the following:
Listen. A fitness center should have a process in place that ensures that its employees and members are listened to whenever they have an unfavorable experience.
Empathize.When management listens, they should not take a position other than one that considers the feedback from the employee’s or member’s perspective. Empathy requires that preconceived notions do not interrupt or otherwise cloud the listening process.
Apologize. It is imperative that whoever is doing the listening also apologizes, both personally and on behalf of the club, if appropriate.
Respond.Management should be proactive once the first three steps are taken. As a general rule, not only will the initial management action be to correct the issue, but also to let the person who had the unfavorable experience know that the issue will be addressed as soon as possible.
Communicate the response. Management, regardless of whatever action they ultimately decide to take, should personally inform the individual who brought the issue to their attention about what steps they decided to take.
Follow up. Following a response, appropriate feedback should be provided to everyone involved. More than worth the effort
Creating a service culture that fosters memorable and lasting member experiences is one of the greatest, yet rewarding, challenges to operating a successful fitness center. At a minimum, the process of creating a service culture takes passion, commitment, patience and vision. Fortunately, the energy and resources required to establish and sustain a service culture in fitness centers will be worth the effort for everyone involved.

April is such a happy month! The air is getting warmer, the days are getting longer and the flowers are starting to bloom. Of course it is tax-time, and soon we will have to mow the lawn and protect ourselves from the sun and heat. But spring is a time of renewal and a great time to renew our commitment to good health.

It’s a great time to put away our desires for the heavy comfort foods of winter and reach for abundant fresh fruits and vegetables. The price of produce is starting to come down as farms recover from the deep-freeze of winter. “Row-crops,” such as green beans, lettuces, peppers and broccoli are dropping as much as 50 percent in price from the winter.

So for many members, what better way is there to trim down for bathing-suit season without sacrificing nutrition than with heaping plates of colorful veggies? We should be composing our meals with as much fresh produce as we can at every meal.

The wonderful thing about fruits and vegetables is that you don’t have to do a lot to them to make them palatable. The fresher the produce, the simplest way to prepare them is best. Eat as many as you can with minimal processing — such as raw or steamed. If you prefer to grill, brush the vegetables lightly with a little olive oil and a sprinkling of fresh herbs when finished.

This is also a good time to explore the local farmer’s market or a CSA, Community Supported Agriculture, for local produce. Using a CSA would not only support local farmers, but also ensure that your produce has few food miles and is getting to you quickly from a nearby farm.

Here are the basics: a farmer offers a certain number of “shares” to the public. Typically the share consists of a box of vegetables, but other farm products may be included. Interested consumers purchase a share (a.k.a., a “membership” or a “subscription”) and in return receive a box (bag, basket) of seasonal produce each week throughout the farming season.

It would be a great project for a club to sponsor a CSA with its members. The club would become the drop point and the members would enjoy the benefits of ultra-fresh, seasonal foods.

Another great idea would be to give back to the members by putting out some fresh fruits on a decorated table right near the vending machines! I know it does seem sort of contrived, but it’s great to offer our members healthy choices at every opportunity.

What better way to convince our members that we really do care about their health than to offer them the best alternatives to processed foods?

April is such a happy month! The air is getting warmer, the days are getting longer and the flowers are starting to bloom. Of course it is tax-time, and soon we will have to mow the lawn and protect ourselves from the sun and heat. But spring is a time of renewal and a great time to renew our commitment to good health.

It’s a great time to put away our desires for the heavy comfort foods of winter and reach for abundant fresh fruits and vegetables. The price of produce is starting to come down as farms recover from the deep-freeze of winter. “Row-crops,” such as green beans, lettuces, peppers and broccoli are dropping as much as 50 percent in price from the winter.

So for many members, what better way is there to trim down for bathing-suit season without sacrificing nutrition than with heaping plates of colorful veggies? We should be composing our meals with as much fresh produce as we can at every meal.

The wonderful thing about fruits and vegetables is that you don’t have to do a lot to them to make them palatable. The fresher the produce, the simplest way to prepare them is best. Eat as many as you can with minimal processing — such as raw or steamed. If you prefer to grill, brush the vegetables lightly with a little olive oil and a sprinkling of fresh herbs when finished.

This is also a good time to explore the local farmer’s market or a CSA, Community Supported Agriculture, for local produce. Using a CSA would not only support local farmers, but also ensure that your produce has few food miles and is getting to you quickly from a nearby farm.

Here are the basics: a farmer offers a certain number of “shares” to the public. Typically the share consists of a box of vegetables, but other farm products may be included. Interested consumers purchase a share (a.k.a., a “membership” or a “subscription”) and in return receive a box (bag, basket) of seasonal produce each week throughout the farming season.

It would be a great project for a club to sponsor a CSA with its members. The club would become the drop point and the members would enjoy the benefits of ultra-fresh, seasonal foods.

Another great idea would be to give back to the members by putting out some fresh fruits on a decorated table right near the vending machines! I know it does seem sort of contrived, but it’s great to offer our members healthy choices at every opportunity.

What better way to convince our members that we really do care about their health than to offer them the best alternatives to processed foods?

Starting with one location in California, the franchise attained status as the largest global co-ed gym in the world and includes locations with up to 12,000 square feet. The gyms contain with free weights, machines, cardio equipment and, in select locales, even movie theaters. The original Gold’s Gym, dubbed “The Mecca,” has been updated and is still operational.

Founder
Bodybuilder Joe Gold, who died in 2004 at the age of 82, was the mastermind behind Gold’s Gym. He opened the original Gold’s Gym in 1965 in Venice Beach, then sold the rights to his name in the early 1970s. The new owners turned Gold’s into a franchise. Gold got back into the gym business in 1977 to take the brand worldwide. As a machinist, Gold’s claim to fame was his skill at creating more effective weight lifting machines, providing an option to free weights. Arnold Schwarzenegger trained at Gold’s Gym in the late 1960s. The two had a long friendship, and Schwarzenegger ran Gold’s World Gym for about a year when Gold fell ill in 1991.

Locations
Gold’s Gym has more than 500 locations in the United States, as well as others across the globe. You’ll find gyms in Europe, Australia and Egypt as well as Indonesia, Peru and Ecuador. Only Alaska, Hawaii and seven states in the continental U.S. are without at least one Gold’s Gym as of April 2011. States without a Gold’s Gym are Vermont, Ohio, Wyoming, South Dakota, Arkansas, Mississippi and New Mexico.

Fitness” magazine ranks Gold’s Gym as the chain with the best sculpting studio in the nation. Gold’s body sculpting and strength training amenities include a wide range of free weights, personal trainers and exercise classes with names such as Body Attack and Body Pump that can tone and strengthen your muscles. Other gold stars go to Gold’s for free child care services during your workout. Gold’s larger locations even offer Cardio Cinema, which features cardio machines in a room with a movie screen, smoothie bars and physical therapists on the premises.
Health Club Marketing News, Amerishape, Fitness Life Marketing

Starting with one location in California, the franchise attained status as the largest global co-ed gym in the world and includes locations with up to 12,000 square feet. The gyms contain with free weights, machines, cardio equipment and, in select locales, even movie theaters. The original Gold’s Gym, dubbed “The Mecca,” has been updated and is still operational.

Founder
Bodybuilder Joe Gold, who died in 2004 at the age of 82, was the mastermind behind Gold’s Gym. He opened the original Gold’s Gym in 1965 in Venice Beach, then sold the rights to his name in the early 1970s. The new owners turned Gold’s into a franchise. Gold got back into the gym business in 1977 to take the brand worldwide. As a machinist, Gold’s claim to fame was his skill at creating more effective weight lifting machines, providing an option to free weights. Arnold Schwarzenegger trained at Gold’s Gym in the late 1960s. The two had a long friendship, and Schwarzenegger ran Gold’s World Gym for about a year when Gold fell ill in 1991.

Locations
Gold’s Gym has more than 500 locations in the United States, as well as others across the globe. You’ll find gyms in Europe, Australia and Egypt as well as Indonesia, Peru and Ecuador. Only Alaska, Hawaii and seven states in the continental U.S. are without at least one Gold’s Gym as of April 2011. States without a Gold’s Gym are Vermont, Ohio, Wyoming, South Dakota, Arkansas, Mississippi and New Mexico.

Fitness” magazine ranks Gold’s Gym as the chain with the best sculpting studio in the nation. Gold’s body sculpting and strength training amenities include a wide range of free weights, personal trainers and exercise classes with names such as Body Attack and Body Pump that can tone and strengthen your muscles. Other gold stars go to Gold’s for free child care services during your workout. Gold’s larger locations even offer Cardio Cinema, which features cardio machines in a room with a movie screen, smoothie bars and physical therapists on the premises.
Health Club Marketing News, Amerishape, Fitness Life Marketing

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