Months of dieting, countless hours in the gym and weekends spent at home to avoid drinking temptations are sacrifices University of Idaho senior Angel Sigman has to endure for a few minutes of competitive-fitness fame.

In less than a month Sigman will compete in her first National Gym Association fitness competition in the bikini division. As it is her first competition, she said it can be difficult to balance all the while in college.

“It’s hard as a college student because there’s not a lot of students who watch what they eat or work out like I do … I really don’t have much (of) a social life. I stay home on the weekends to avoid the temptation of the bars and drinking,” Sigman said.

Sigman said it’s hard because her friends normally have free time on the weekends and they want to go out to the bars, but said she still goes to movies with them or has gym dates to get in social time. The temptations of beer, pizza and other college staples aren’t the end of the struggles Sigman faces. The price of competing without sponsorship is high and difficult for a college student to afford.

“It’s hard in college because it’s hard to afford rent without working your butt off, but to balance it out with school, work and everything else, that’s tough,” Sigman said.

The price of women’s bodybuilding competitions vary depending on entrance fees, lodging and travel, but some of the essentials necessary for catching the judges’ eyes are also pricey. Spray tanning that will show under the bright stage lights is approximately $100, and Sigman’s custom-fit bikini cost $200.

“I’m hoping that maybe someone will see me in the audience, like a supplement company or just a really nice, generous person that’s like, ‘I want to make your dream come true,’” Sigman said.

One of those dreams, Sigman said, is becoming a professional model for the International Federation of Body Building and to appear on the cover of Oxygen, a women’s fitness magazine.

Sigman said competing in events such as the Northwest Natural Pro-Atlas Bodybuilding and Figure Championships April 30 are opportunities to make her known in the fitness world.

“Competing opens so many door because if a photographer sees you, and maybe will go up to you later on about a shoot,” Sigman said.

Getting the attention of sponsors or photographers is always a goal for Sigman when competing because she said they would help her fitness career.

“It’s who you know and who you meet, you have to pretty much be your own agent when you start out in this sport,” Sigman said. “You have to sell yourself because in the fitness industry it’s a very dog-eat-dog world.”

There are four different categories in the competition Sigman is entering: Women’s body-building, figure, fitness and bikini.

“Figure is not as muscular as the women body building. They wear five-inch heels and have two-piece suites. They’re symmetrical and you can see their muscles,” Sigman said.

The fitness category is almost exactly like figure but contestants do gymnastic routines on stage to music.

“Bikini is the last category and they’re not as muscular as figure or fitness, but they still have that tone,” Sigman said. “They look like fitness models and it’s pretty much like a fitness pageant.”

Sigman said the fitness and body building categories have poses to do in order to show off their muscles where as the bikini contestants do a “model walk” across the stage.

In order to get ready for the stage Sigman said she works out two hours a day, six days a week.

Sigman also eats a strict diet consisting of six to eight healthy meals a day. She said she prepares these meals on Sunday so they are packed and ready to go for her busy week. Currently Sigman is carbohydrate-cycling, which means she rotates between a day of high-carb intake, normally around 120 grams, and low-carb days, around 60 grams of carbs. Sigman said she will adjust her workouts to her diet so she has more energy for the days she works large muscle groups like legs.

“Today is a low-carb day and I feel sluggish, fatigued — well more than usual,” Sigman said. “Sometimes I’ll get confused, just have slower thinking.”

High protein, low-carb diets are proven to shed fat, but Sigman said it alternates every day, and fluctuating between high and low carbs helps so the body doesn’t get used to a certain way and hit a plateau.

Sigman encourages anyone who has a passion for fitness to give body building a try.

“If you have the drive, compassion dedication and discipline then go for it. Because not only will you be happy with how you look but you’ll be so much more confident as an end result,” Sigman said.

Sigman said the change has to come from within, and no amount of nagging from a spouse, family or friends can change someone.

“It’s your competing against yourself. It’s being the best you can be,” Sigman said. “Husbands telling their wives, ‘You’re fat, go work out’ won’t work, you have to want it for yourself.”

Months of dieting, countless hours in the gym and weekends spent at home to avoid drinking temptations are sacrifices University of Idaho senior Angel Sigman has to endure for a few minutes of competitive-fitness fame.

In less than a month Sigman will compete in her first National Gym Association fitness competition in the bikini division. As it is her first competition, she said it can be difficult to balance all the while in college.

“It’s hard as a college student because there’s not a lot of students who watch what they eat or work out like I do … I really don’t have much (of) a social life. I stay home on the weekends to avoid the temptation of the bars and drinking,” Sigman said.

Sigman said it’s hard because her friends normally have free time on the weekends and they want to go out to the bars, but said she still goes to movies with them or has gym dates to get in social time. The temptations of beer, pizza and other college staples aren’t the end of the struggles Sigman faces. The price of competing without sponsorship is high and difficult for a college student to afford.

“It’s hard in college because it’s hard to afford rent without working your butt off, but to balance it out with school, work and everything else, that’s tough,” Sigman said.

The price of women’s bodybuilding competitions vary depending on entrance fees, lodging and travel, but some of the essentials necessary for catching the judges’ eyes are also pricey. Spray tanning that will show under the bright stage lights is approximately $100, and Sigman’s custom-fit bikini cost $200.

“I’m hoping that maybe someone will see me in the audience, like a supplement company or just a really nice, generous person that’s like, ‘I want to make your dream come true,’” Sigman said.

One of those dreams, Sigman said, is becoming a professional model for the International Federation of Body Building and to appear on the cover of Oxygen, a women’s fitness magazine.

Sigman said competing in events such as the Northwest Natural Pro-Atlas Bodybuilding and Figure Championships April 30 are opportunities to make her known in the fitness world.

“Competing opens so many door because if a photographer sees you, and maybe will go up to you later on about a shoot,” Sigman said.

Getting the attention of sponsors or photographers is always a goal for Sigman when competing because she said they would help her fitness career.

“It’s who you know and who you meet, you have to pretty much be your own agent when you start out in this sport,” Sigman said. “You have to sell yourself because in the fitness industry it’s a very dog-eat-dog world.”

There are four different categories in the competition Sigman is entering: Women’s body-building, figure, fitness and bikini.

“Figure is not as muscular as the women body building. They wear five-inch heels and have two-piece suites. They’re symmetrical and you can see their muscles,” Sigman said.

The fitness category is almost exactly like figure but contestants do gymnastic routines on stage to music.

“Bikini is the last category and they’re not as muscular as figure or fitness, but they still have that tone,” Sigman said. “They look like fitness models and it’s pretty much like a fitness pageant.”

Sigman said the fitness and body building categories have poses to do in order to show off their muscles where as the bikini contestants do a “model walk” across the stage.

In order to get ready for the stage Sigman said she works out two hours a day, six days a week.

Sigman also eats a strict diet consisting of six to eight healthy meals a day. She said she prepares these meals on Sunday so they are packed and ready to go for her busy week. Currently Sigman is carbohydrate-cycling, which means she rotates between a day of high-carb intake, normally around 120 grams, and low-carb days, around 60 grams of carbs. Sigman said she will adjust her workouts to her diet so she has more energy for the days she works large muscle groups like legs.

“Today is a low-carb day and I feel sluggish, fatigued — well more than usual,” Sigman said. “Sometimes I’ll get confused, just have slower thinking.”

High protein, low-carb diets are proven to shed fat, but Sigman said it alternates every day, and fluctuating between high and low carbs helps so the body doesn’t get used to a certain way and hit a plateau.

Sigman encourages anyone who has a passion for fitness to give body building a try.

“If you have the drive, compassion dedication and discipline then go for it. Because not only will you be happy with how you look but you’ll be so much more confident as an end result,” Sigman said.

Sigman said the change has to come from within, and no amount of nagging from a spouse, family or friends can change someone.

“It’s your competing against yourself. It’s being the best you can be,” Sigman said. “Husbands telling their wives, ‘You’re fat, go work out’ won’t work, you have to want it for yourself.”

A major problem in the health club industry is customer retention – it may well be the industry’s single largest issue. Hence the constant aggressive push to get members signed up and in the front door, at a rate faster than they are exiting out the back door. I have seen figures showing that as many as 40% of members churn in the average health club, regardless of the exact numbers, it is a known fact in the industry that it is a higher number than any health club manager wants it to be; and obviously any reduction adds directly to the club’s bottom line.

Equally plenty of members renew their memberships year in, year out. Accordingly, any member retention strategy should involve two key components: 1) identifying those members at risk of leaving and 2) targeting those at risk with appropriate interventions.

It is beyond the scope of this article to go into intervention methods. However, I will address the identification of members at risk of terminating their memberships (‘at risk’ members) – and how predictive analytics can be applied to help with this.

Like all businesses health clubs have limited resources, and it is absolutely pointless for a club to invest resources to try and retain each and every member, when a good deal of them are not at risk in the first place. If a member is identified as ‘at risk’ there is a strong business case to be built around investing resources in trying to retain that specific member (theoretically you could afford to invest up to $1 less than the cost of acquiring a new member, and still be ahead of the game), conversely if they are not ‘at risk’ and are going to re-sign anyway, you may just as well burn the money as hand it over to that specific individual in the form of an incentive or time invested.

The other consideration is, it is far easier to pro-actively try to retain 2,000 members than 4,000 member, so by segmenting, and making the size of the task more manageable, it increases the likelihood that a health club will do something – and if we know nothing else, we know that doing something is usually better than doing nothing.

So we have a clear business case for identifying which members are most at risk of churning. Our next mission then, would be to take our database of current members and identify which ones specifically are ‘at risk’ and which ones are ‘loyal’. Ideally we would take it one step further than this, and be able to rank our whole customer database in rank order from those statistically ‘most at risk’ to those ‘least at risk’. The benefit of doing this, is that it provides our sales/retention staff with a sequenced work list, which they would start at the top of and work their way down sequentially. This simple act in itself would give us comfort that our resources are being focused on those that most require them – a form of retention triage if you will. This can even be taken one step further, and we can – again using statistical methods – determine the statistically optimal place in the list to stop.

Though we have a business case, and a reasonably clear vision of what would be useful, the problem is that for the managers of most health clubs, the scenario outlined above is closer to science fiction, than something they perceive they can practically deploy within their club. So the status quo prevails: 1) do nothing, 2) treat all customers as equally at risk, or 3) perform some random haphazard interventions with no real science behind who is targeted and who is not.

So to get to the point of execution, and movement from theory to reality, let’s discuss how we would take this utopian vision and turn it into an actionable reality. Ironically for many health clubs this vision can be actualized faster than it took me to write this article – literally.

Most health clubs have a reasonable amount of data on their members. Let’s imagine that we have all the data about every member of our club for the last five years, lined up in an Excel spreadsheet. Every row is a unique member, every column is the information we know about that member. The columns we call input columns as they are the inputs that help us make our prediction about that persons future behaviour, these would contain things such as: her age, her marital status, change of marital status, # of visits in January 2010, number of visits in January 2009, etc. payment method, # of address changes, average time she spends in health club, etc, etc it would be no problem to have 100 or even 500 columns, and in the very last column (our target column) we add a label ‘loyal’ or ‘at risk’. Anybody that terminated their membership previously is labeled ‘at risk’ and ‘anybody’ who re-signed is labeled as ‘loyal’. We would eliminate from the spreadsheet anyone who had not had been with us a year yet, as we don’t have any conclusive information about their behaviours.

Now I will skip over the math here, which nobody would want to try at home, but you can take it on good authority that there are patterns within all the input columns that can help to predict the customers propensity to churn. This is as you would well expect, for example prior to terminating a membership, a member may start coming in less frequently, and if this data is recorded this would show up, or a change in marital status may impact an individuals propensity to re-sign, and most likely it is an aggregation of many factors. Typically a human cannot detect these patterns, but there are software applications that can, and once the patterns are defined, the software can look at the patterns in an unseen group of members and make a prediction as to each individuals propensity to churn, and then output these members in a sequenced list as described previously, complete with the optimal point in the list to stop making interventions.

To explain it a slightly different way, we are: 1) consolidating historical data about behaviours that we think may be correlated to an individual churning from historical members 2) we are letting software examine that data for patterns and how they relate to how a member churned or did not 3) that relationship is frozen in a ‘predictive model’, and finally 4) the model is applied to unseen members to statistically predict their behaviour (vis a vis churning or not).

I would encourage anybody interested to visit www.11AntsAnalytics.com and watch the 11Ants Model Builder QuickStart tutorial video, which will better show the process (the data is different, but it won’t require much imagination for it all to make perfect sense). Feel free to email me if you have questions about this – doing this sort of thing is ten times easier than most people imagine.

FITNESS LIFE MARKETING...Selling to the 50-Plus Market

FITNESS LIFE MARKETING...Selling to the 50-Plus Market

When people call your facility, or walk into your business, odds are that they are there because they are seriously looking at buying a membership. This is especially true if the prospect is older than 50. These seasoned consumers have, in many cases, done their research long before they sit in front of your sales staff. However, your sales staff’s effect on their final decision is immense. How do you know if your current sales staff is suited to sell to adults who are 50-plus? The following nine traits are a good place to start.

1. The right attitude

Sales staff should be positive, pleasant, confident, resilient, empathetic and professional. They must also enjoy spending time with older people. If they don’t love older people, they shouldn’t be selling to them.

2. Know the basics

A professional salesperson must know all the elements of the sales process. Examples include a needs assessment with solutions, overcoming objections and closing the sale. To be great at sales, staff should blend these elements into their personality, and use them to move the sales process forward. But rather than an obvious series of steps that lead to closing the sale, this process should seem more like a conversation that ends with the customers getting what they want. Think of the sales role as being a personal concierge — someone who finds what the customer wants and needs.

3. Know the product

You need a first-rate understanding of how the product can, and will, improve the quality of life for older clients. Well-seasoned salespeople know when they don’t have the answer to a question, and will find someone who can answer it.

4. Education

Look for ways for your sales staff to learn new skills. Examples include role playing, courses, conferences, regional meetings, seminars, night school, DVDs, CDs and books.

5. Study life and people

Teach your sales team to observe what people say, how they say it, why they say it and when they say it. Have them make notes and learn from others. Have them ask buyers and non-buyers why they chose to buy from them or not.

6. Be ethical

American author, teacher and humorist Leo Rosten once wrote, “I never cease being dumbfounded by the unbelievable things people believe.” Your team will fight against the belief that sales people will say anything to get the sale. Remind your sales staff that being a great 50-plus salesperson means that they must stand by what they say, and ensure that what they say stands.

7. Work hard and smart

Make sure your team knows the difference between hard work and smart work. Time is valuable, and wasting time can prove costly. Your sales staff members need to learn how to prospect for new customers, plus have the training and ability to recognize who potential clients are. Great salespeople understand that they create their pay — wasting time is wasting money.

8. Ask for the sale

According to Malcolm Gladwell, author of The Tipping Point and Blink, everyone has the knowledge needed to make decisions in the blink of an eye. So, what holds a customer back? Is it fear? Is it that he didn’t get enough information to help justify the purchase, or she didn’t like the salesperson? Whatever it is, one thing is sure: Trying to get people to buy your products before they have reached their stage of readiness is like trying to get a toddler to eat creamed spinach. All that happens is a messy situation.

9. Follow up

Think about how often you have bought a product from a salesperson because she had a product that met your needs and she was right there in front of you? Then, the salesperson you spoke to a few months earlier called a few weeks after he was supposed to, and felt frustrated to miss out on your business. Your team needs to know that the key to increasing sales performance is timely follow-up with customers.

The right person for the job

Exceptional salespeople are individuals with the knowledge, skills, training, attitude and discipline to succeed. Help your salespeople hone their skills every day so that they can join the ranks of the great 50-plus sales professionals.

Sponsored by: Fitness Life Marketing 1-888-541-0714 ext2

 Article Research Contributor: Amerishape Weight Loss

Colin Milner
Is this the Best Fitness Marketing Ever?

Is this the Best Fitness Marketing Ever?

Club owners and managers,…..What do you think?  Would you do this?

Send us your comment.

As part of an ad campaign, the health club chain Fitness First has turned a bus stop bench in the Netherlands into a scale that displays people’s weights on a large LCD screen.

Public shaming can a pretty powerful motivational tool and all, but I wonder: Should we be outraged or impressed? Then again, is this even good marketing in the first place?

Sponsored by: Fitness Life Marketing 1-888-541-0714 ext2

 Article Research Contributor: Amerishape Weight Loss

http://www.good.is/post/is-this-the-best-fitness-marketing-ever/

FITNESS LIFE MARKETING ....AMERISHAPE.......How To Handle Health Club Sales Objections

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FITNESS LIFE MARKETING ….AMERISHAPE…….

How To Handle Health Club Sales Objections

Objections to membership sales can be viewed as the most difficult part of the entire sales process for a health club sales person. This is especially true if the objection is viewed as an obstacle rather than an opportunity to help the guest get the results they are looking for. Here are some suggestions on how to handle health club membership objections effectively.

1. With the effective use of a needs analysis, always try to anticipate objections early in the health club tour and membership presentation. Too many health club sales people wait until objections come to them instead of trying to anticipate what they will be. Eliminate the objections as you go along, and the membership process will be much easier.

2. Never rush your response to a guest’s objection. Hear them out. Listen, even if you’ve heard it a thousand times before. Health club salespeople often respond too quickly and actually will over-talk their guests in these situations. This will often create friction with the guest which will likely lead to them not joining your club.

3. Repeat the objection back to your guest. This will buy you some time to think, plus it will also show that you are interested in what they have to say. It will also help you to be sure that you understand exactly what the guest is saying.

4. Don’t forget that that an objection to joining your health club is many times a “buying signal” because the guest still has questions. If they had no interest in your club or in joining, why would they still be talking to you?

5. If you think a guest’s objection is just a smokescreen, ask if they are interested in your club and in getting results. Smokescreen objections can be a real time waster for health club sales people, and even the most seasoned health club professionals can fall into this trap. Some club guests will feel overpowered by a confident health club sales person and their only escape is to create a “false objection” to joining your club. A simple way to rid yourself of this problem is by further probing in order to make sure that the objection to becoming a member is genuine.

6. It is important to remember that, statistically speaking, a minimum of three objections are needed before a person will buy. However, many health club sales people give up after the first objection without realizing that this person would have joined their club if they had persisted a little more.

7. Objections are simply part of the health club sales process. Without them, there would be no need for salespeople and you would be out of a job. So don’t let them stop you from reaching your goals. The true health club professional doesn’t ever let objections get in the way of end goals.

8. Listen carefully to objections you receive about joining. They will hold valuable clues about the guest’s needs and desire. A real objection can often reveal important information that is worth noting because even if your guest doesn’t buy on this occasion you may know what buttons to push the next time you speak to them.

9. The better your tour and the better your membership presentation, the fewer objections you will hear – it’s that simple. It’s important to give your presentation in a way that your guest clearly understands. This will help you avoid objections that arise from not clearly understanding what you have said. Practice.

10. It wouldn’t be sales if people never objected. Many guests who join your club simply enjoy the “going-back-and-forth element” of buying, and health club sales people should be aware of this.

Now, let’s go sell!

Sponsored by: Fitness Life Marketing 1-888-541-0714 ext2

 Article Research Contributor: Amerishape Weight Loss

Your Health Club's Website

Your Health Club's Website

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FITNESS LIFE MARKETING……7 Strategies to Improve the Effectiveness of Your Health Club’s Website!

You never get a second chance to make a first impression. This is especially true when it comes to your health club’s website. In this day and age, your prospects will seek you out on the Internet long before they stop in or even call. So you want to make sure your website offers an attractive peek into what they can expect as members of your club. Here are 7 strategies to help make sure your website drives prospects to your club.

First and foremost, you need a way to collect visitor information. This is probably the most important element of an effective health club website. You already know you need to collect visitor information when a prospect visits your club. Apply that same strategy to your website! It is as simple as offering a 14 day trial membership in exchange for your visitor’s email address. The best way to do this is to have an opt-in form on your site, that is linked to an autoresponder system such as Aweber or Constant Contact. By collecting their information, you will have the opportunity to send them information about your club, fitness and nutrition tips, and a method of communication if they forget to redeem their trial membership.

Try to use pictures of your actual members on your site. Too many websites have the same stock photographs on their website. Images of real members from your club as well as your staff members are always more powerful than using images of people who are obviously models. Prospects will be turned off if you have a site loaded with pictures of people they cannot relate to. I recommend a “Gallery” of photos somewhere on your site.

Set up a “Partners” page on your website. This works well for a couple of reasons. First it looks like you’re a major part of the community. Prospects will likely see stores where they’ve shopped, and in turn feel comfortable with you through a mutual connection. But more importantly, this provides you a great opportunity to offer something of value to your neighbor businesses in exchange for something they can do for you.

Emphasize your most important message on your home page. If you’re the best, make sure you tell them you’re the best. If you’re the biggest club, the only 24 hour club, the club with the best service, the “guaranteed results” club…you have to tell them right away! What is it that is your best selling feature…your Unique Selling Proposition? What makes you different from the other fitness options in town? You want to make sure they know this right away. Make sure there is no doubt what message you want a visitor to know right away.

Always use dark font against a light background. Too many websites try to get fancy and put a dark background with light colored font…this is a mistake. If someone tries to read more than a few sentences of light text against a dark background, it will strain their eyes. Menus and headers can use a darker color, but the main content area needs to be white or a very light color.

Limit the number of menu tabs on your site. I’ve seen some websites that have up to 20 different menus on their site! I say no more than 6. You can easily develop subcategories for each of these. For example, don’t have a tab for group fitness and boot camp and massage and tanning and personal training and childcare. Have a tab called “Services” and have each of these a subcategory. Drop down tabs are especially useful for this.

Make sure your website is better than your competitors’ sites. This one probably goes without saying. If your prospects look at your website and look at your competitor’s website, they will call or visit the one that they like most. Make sure your site is prettier, more user friendly, and more informative than the websites of your competitors.

Sponsored by: Fitness Life Marketing 1-888-541-0714 ext2

 Article Research Contributor: Amerishape Weight Loss

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