Top Ten Worst Tricks of the Fitness Industry
By The Fit Advocate, Craig Pepin-Donat, International Fitness
Expert and Author of "The Big Fat Health and Fitness Lie"
Is joining a fitness center right for you? This is a choice that
you will have to make for yourself, but all of my experience tells
me that if you have the right mindset and focus on changing your
lifestyle, a quality fitness center probably provides the best opportunity
to achieve lasting results—with one small caveat…you
have to use it.
You could say that I am biased because of my background, but in
a quality club (which varies widely) you have several advantages
that you do not get with weight loss centers, diet programs and
books, home equipment, exercise videos and other alternative health
and fitness programs. Provided that the club is convenient to your
home or work and you have no problems getting there in a very short
period of time, a quality club will provide you with a wide range
of state-of-the-art equipment, classes, amenities and services along
with trained and certified staff members to help guide you. Most
quality clubs today also provide weight loss or weight management
programs. But before you visit your local club, here are some tips
to prepare you for the sales gimmicks and marketing tricks that
you will need to maneuver through.
1. Prepare To Be Sold — Looking back on
the thousands of fitness salespeople I have trained over 25 years,
the one lesson I always imparted was that if you want to be successful,
you cannot just focus on making money. Instead, the motivation of
a fitness salesperson has to be based on a genuine desire to help
people improve their lifestyle and achieve their goals. Every person
that you are able to help translates into financial reward. In other
words, help people make decisions that will improve their life and
the money will follow. Unfortunately, many fitness salespeople do
not care about you or your goals. They only care about the mantra
of the fitness industry, “Get the Gross” (meaning gross
revenue or cash) so that they can get paid. The best club organizations
in the world have commissioned sales people who are in competition
with each other to sell the highest amount of gross revenue so they
can maximize their paycheck or to win a sales contest. Unfortunately,
this structure creates an environment where the sales and management
staff may not necessarily have your best interests at heart. Although
there are those in the minority who are truly concerned with helping
people, the information I am providing you will help to protect
you from the rest.
2. Membership Specials — Most clubs offer
many different types of membership plans (prices) available based
on your individual needs. The truth is that clubs need enough membership
plans available to rotate various specials, promotions and discounts
each month. These membership discounts are used to create an urgency
to enroll with a close-out. Clubs can obtain as much as 25 percent
or more of their monthly sales during the last few days of a close-out.
This is when advertised specials, promotions and in-club sales contests
for the staff culminate into huge revenues and profits.
With multiple membership types, clubs can create enough promotions
so they can change the specials each month to keep the local consumer
agencies happy, keep the sales staff excited about new offers and
contests, and keep you thinking that if you join this month you
will get a better deal than next month. Most of these specials are
just not that special and should not be the reason that you join
a club. If you compare membership pricing in a given club from month
to month, you will find them to be almost identical throughout the
entire year. New specials and promotions provide the sales staff
with the ultimate weapon—the close-out with an impending price
increase.
Just remember that membership specials, promotions and discounts
are created to increase inquiries and entice potential members.
It is the same with all products and services sold around the world.
Understanding the process should save you a lot of time and enable
you to make an intelligent decision without getting caught up in
all the hype.
3. Hold Over Specials — This little trick
is when the sales staff tells you that there is a special promotion
that is ending on a given day in order to get you to enroll, only
to come back the next day and tell you that the special was held
over due to popular demand. The club industry routinely holds over
specials to milk a good promotion. Membership specials supported
by in-club signs, banners and flyers that read: “final days”
or “last day” will typically be held over at least for
a few days into the next month to give the management time to get
the sales staff prepared for the next special. If you happen to
wait for the new promotion to start, you will likely find that the
“new price” will not be far off from the prior month’s
promotion.
4. Month-to-Month Contracts — In the early
stages of the fitness industry, it was common that club memberships
were prepaid for a specific term. Rogue club operators would sell
lifetime memberships prepaid in advance only to go out of business,
leaving the consumer ripped off with no recourse. Consumer advocates
and lawmakers pushed for legislation to control the club industry
and contract terms in most states were reduced. In some states,
even the amount of money that can be prepaid has been limited.
As a result, many clubs have opted out of the prepaid business
model and moved to month-to-month memberships. Sounds great, right?
Wrong! The lie is that monthly memberships can also be based on
a contractual term, meaning you can pay it monthly, but you are
obligated to do so for a fixed time frame anywhere from one to three
years. Additionally, any initiation fees, enrollment fees, joining
fees or processing fees paid at the point of enrollment are legally
earned by the club when you join. If there is a refund provision
in the membership agreement, it will typically state that you will
only be refunded a prorated portion of the prepaid dues, not the
upfront fees. The only way you will see that money again is if you
cancel in writing within three days of the date of enrollment. Even
then, you may experience delayed refunds because once the club has
your money, they are not motivated to give it back.
5. Long Term Contracts — Be wary of any
club that doesn’t offer a month-to-month membership option,
which provides you with the ability to cancel your membership if
you are not using it even if you may not get your enrollment fee
back. The biggest industry offender in this regard is BallySM Total
Fitness. Numerous complaints and bad public relations resulting
from their advertising and high-pressure sales tactics has taken
the company to the brink of financial disaster. The problem is that
the original business model for Bally Total Fitness was designed
more like a finance company than a fitness company. It was based
on selling long-term contractual memberships with high interest
rates and few options for getting out of the contract. Memberships
are advertised with extremely low enrollment and monthly dues. A
typical promotion for Bally Total Fitness is something like $5 Gets
you Started. The catch is that the affordable enrollment and monthly
dues are based on a long-term contract (typically 36 months) that
generates big profits from huge interest rates.
The sales staff is notorious for not fully explaining the terms
of the agreement, bending the truth or flat out lying to the consumer
to get them to join. In 2004, a settlement was reached with the
New York State Attorney General’s office in which Bally Total
Fitness received a large fine, and was forced to change both their
advertising and sales practices. The lawsuit followed hundreds of
consumer complaints that deceptive ads and high-pressure sales tactics
tricked them into signing long-term contracts and misrepresented
the total price of the memberships.
6. Verbal Contract — When questions are
asked about the terms of your membership that place the sale in
jeopardy, some sales people will bend the truth while others flat
out lie to make the sale. Keep in mind that if you cancel within
three days, the sales person does not get paid. If you are able
to cancel for any reason beyond three days, it will not affect the
sales commission. With a commission and possibly winning a contest
at stake, the integrity of the sales person is put to task and you
just may be getting answers that the sales person thinks you want
to hear. When a dispute arises, it will be enough to say, “That
is what the salesperson told me.” All membership contracts
have the following words clearly outlined: “This agreement
contains the entire agreement and replaces any verbal or other written
agreement.” If you listen to your salesperson without understanding
the terms for which you are signing, you have no one to blame but
yourself. Issues related to contractual misunderstandings and verbal
promises made by the sales person that cannot be delivered are amongst
the top member complaints.
7. Low Annual Renewals — Extremely low renewal
rates are a great way to entice you to prepay your membership. Statistics
prove that when you prepay your membership, you will not likely
still be using the club when your membership expires, so the renewal
fee is insignificant compared to the initial enrollment. That does
not mean that prepaying your membership is a bad thing. If you are
willing to prepay your membership for a discount or for some free
membership time plus a highly reduced renewal fee, clearly you will
get a better value, if you use it.
Prepaid memberships are always based on a term contract and in
most cases you will not get any of your money back if you try to
cancel. There are limited exceptions that provide you with the right
to cancel or receive a refund such as if you move a specific distance
from any company club location or for medical reasons substantiated
by a physician. But you should be prepared to provide a lot of proof.
Also, if you buy a one-year membership and get the second year free
as an enticement to join, you will not get a penny back once the
initial year is over since the second year is considered free.
8. Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) — As
the industry and banking technology has progressed, the concept
of EFT was born which gave clubs a new opportunity for guaranteed
revolving revenue. These dues are the foundation for any successful
club business.
The truth about membership dues is that there are a significant
number of members that do not use the club and who also do not check
their bank or credit card statements. They actually forget they
are paying for a membership. Unbelievably, a large number of people
come back to get a refund on dues from years earlier after realizing
their account was being tapped for monthly dues. If you are one
of those people, you can forget about a refund. Unless you provided
a written cancellation within 30 days of your dues draft and you
can prove it, you will not be see a refund check from the club coming
your way in this lifetime. Those who find themselves in this situation
use the same argument that “The club data base will show that
I never used it,” but that makes no difference. You owned
the membership and therefore had the ability to use it. If you opted
not to use it, that is your problem; not the club’s.
There is nothing wrong with paying for your membership dues automatically
with EFT, just make sure you are checking your monthly statements.
Mistakes with electronic drafts happen all the time and member accounts
can be double billed, or over billed, and cancelled memberships
can sometimes continue to be billed. If you do not take the time
to check your own bank or credit card statements to make sure they
are correct, I can assure that the club will not contact you with
a refund notification.
9. Trial Membership Bait and Switch — Depending
on where you live, typically, you will have a variety of clubs to
choose from. If you have the opportunity, you should take your time,
be picky and join the best club to meet your needs. Above all, realize
that if you are not comfortable with the environment in the club
or the people who work there, you won’t use it. The last thing
you want to do is walk into the first club you visit and sign a
long-term contract only to find that you absolutely hate the club
environment or the staff.
There are few clubs that will not allow you to use the club for
a trial period before enrolling. The trick about guest passes and
trial memberships is that clubs will often give you an incentive
for enrolling in place of using the trial period. If you have done
your homework on other clubs and after using the club once you are
satisfied, cash in your trial period and take the incentive. If
you are tentative and unsure, use the trial period. From the club’s
standpoint, a trial is not the optimal solution since they know
that the more you think about joining, the more reasons you will
come up with not to join. It is a valid concern for clubs since
they do not make money until you enroll. No club has come up with
a way to make money on guests who want to think about it.
10. Closing the Sale — Club operators are
always particularly concerned with the closing ratio, or how many
presentations are given versus those who enroll. When operating
multiple clubs, statistical tracking is a large part of the basis
for how the sales staff and club management are evaluated. The enrollment
is so important that quite often, if the salesperson has difficulty
making the sale, they will call in the manager, assistant manager
or another more experienced salesperson to do what is called a turn
over (T.O.). This is also known as a higher-authority close and
is based on the idea that someone in authority can do things or
make offers that the salesperson cannot. This is a total fabrication.
The truth is that there are usually certain membership specials
always available to prospective members, but are purposely held
back by the salesperson so they can be used as a closing tool during
the T.O. Anytime another person enters the office during your presentation,
you know you are in the process of witnessing a T.O. in progress.
Remember one thing when visiting a club—no matter what your
reason for not joining, most clubs have trained their salespeople
to learn verbatim rebuttals to your objections. The rules of the
game are set up to place extreme performance pressure on the salesperson
to enroll guests, which translates into a high-pressure sales environment.
The club industry is full of young, hungry, commissioned salespeople
who are in competition with each other every month to achieve their
sales targets. Your cash is their bull’s-eye.
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