Q: “With natural disasters occurring around the world in Japan, New Zealand and, most recently, the American South, what steps should a health club that’s been affected by such a disaster take to begin the recovery process?”

A: Responding to a national disaster is all about prioritization. The extent of the damage to both the club and the regions infrastructure will determine what these priorities are. You may have to go through a simple clean up or find new premises.

One thing that should be at the top of the list in all circumstances is staff. Make sure that they feel safe and their home life is as secure as possible. Not only will every staff member’s situation be different (some may be relatively unaffected, others may have lost their homes, or loved ones), but how they react to this will vary considerably. We all know how home life issues can distract people at work, and a natural disaster is an extreme case of this. Until people feel safe in their home life, their ability to constructively add value to any recovery process of a club is hindered, and the workplace may be one of the few places where any scene of normality takes place for some months.

Another important consideration is preparing for an insurance claim. Before starting any remedial work, photos should be taken and as much evidence recorded to support any insurance claim. For business more significantly affected, a loss of business, or business interruption claim may also need to be prepared, and this will often require substantial financial calculations to be made before a claim can be. Of course this assumes that the club has the correct type and level insurance – and it is a timely reminder to all to ensure that the club is insured for not only the likely, but the unlikely, and potentially catastrophic events. (After all until 2010 everyone knew that Christchurch was not on a fault line, and did not have large earthquakes. Oh how wrong we all were!)

Most clubs insure physical assets well, but many do not fully insure business interruption and more significantly, depopulation insurance (the terms used in different countries may vary – but any insurance broker should know these terms) – and unfortunately it’s too late once the disaster strikes.

A: From an insurance standpoint, be sure your facility is covered for disasters, before they strike.

If your club is in a flood zone, you will need to secure flood insurance. If your club is not in a flood zone you still have the ability to purchase flood insurance through the NFIP (National Flood Insurance Program). If your club is in an earthquake zone, you will want earthquake coverage. For wind damage caused by storms or tornadoes, ensure that your existing property and casualty insurance provides wind and hail coverage.

Property insurance covers building repair or replacement when damage is caused by the stated covered causes of loss. If your building is badly damaged or destroyed, it can take months to get running again. So be sure to secure business interruption insurance to pay your ongoing expenses while you get your business back on track.

Another disaster planning coverage is contingent business income coverage. This covers you for business income loss caused by the inability of a service you depend on to provide such service, such as a local power or water supply company.

Be sure that all your insurance is with an A+ rated company with the resources to actually pay your claim. There have been instances where lower-rated companies have been so burdened by claims that their ability to pay claims is jeopardized. This is not the case with an A+ rated company. It has the resources necessary to pay all claims.

A: The best way to emerge from a disaster is to prepare ahead of time. All membership and accounting data should be backed up at an off-site, secure location; you should have an up-to-date list of all your FFE items, especially fitness equipment (photos or videos are helpful); have an email data-base for your entire membership; assure adequate insurance to cover loss of income while you are rebuilding; have a Facebook Fans page, Twitter, and LinkedIn accounts. After a disaster, communication with your staff, members and the community is critical. Use email, phone chains, your social networking and local media to frequently update your plans.

Q: “With natural disasters occurring around the world in Japan, New Zealand and, most recently, the American South, what steps should a health club that’s been affected by such a disaster take to begin the recovery process?”

A: Responding to a national disaster is all about prioritization. The extent of the damage to both the club and the regions infrastructure will determine what these priorities are. You may have to go through a simple clean up or find new premises.

One thing that should be at the top of the list in all circumstances is staff. Make sure that they feel safe and their home life is as secure as possible. Not only will every staff member’s situation be different (some may be relatively unaffected, others may have lost their homes, or loved ones), but how they react to this will vary considerably. We all know how home life issues can distract people at work, and a natural disaster is an extreme case of this. Until people feel safe in their home life, their ability to constructively add value to any recovery process of a club is hindered, and the workplace may be one of the few places where any scene of normality takes place for some months.

Another important consideration is preparing for an insurance claim. Before starting any remedial work, photos should be taken and as much evidence recorded to support any insurance claim. For business more significantly affected, a loss of business, or business interruption claim may also need to be prepared, and this will often require substantial financial calculations to be made before a claim can be. Of course this assumes that the club has the correct type and level insurance – and it is a timely reminder to all to ensure that the club is insured for not only the likely, but the unlikely, and potentially catastrophic events. (After all until 2010 everyone knew that Christchurch was not on a fault line, and did not have large earthquakes. Oh how wrong we all were!)

Most clubs insure physical assets well, but many do not fully insure business interruption and more significantly, depopulation insurance (the terms used in different countries may vary – but any insurance broker should know these terms) – and unfortunately it’s too late once the disaster strikes.

A: From an insurance standpoint, be sure your facility is covered for disasters, before they strike.

If your club is in a flood zone, you will need to secure flood insurance. If your club is not in a flood zone you still have the ability to purchase flood insurance through the NFIP (National Flood Insurance Program). If your club is in an earthquake zone, you will want earthquake coverage. For wind damage caused by storms or tornadoes, ensure that your existing property and casualty insurance provides wind and hail coverage.

Property insurance covers building repair or replacement when damage is caused by the stated covered causes of loss. If your building is badly damaged or destroyed, it can take months to get running again. So be sure to secure business interruption insurance to pay your ongoing expenses while you get your business back on track.

Another disaster planning coverage is contingent business income coverage. This covers you for business income loss caused by the inability of a service you depend on to provide such service, such as a local power or water supply company.

Be sure that all your insurance is with an A+ rated company with the resources to actually pay your claim. There have been instances where lower-rated companies have been so burdened by claims that their ability to pay claims is jeopardized. This is not the case with an A+ rated company. It has the resources necessary to pay all claims.

A: The best way to emerge from a disaster is to prepare ahead of time. All membership and accounting data should be backed up at an off-site, secure location; you should have an up-to-date list of all your FFE items, especially fitness equipment (photos or videos are helpful); have an email data-base for your entire membership; assure adequate insurance to cover loss of income while you are rebuilding; have a Facebook Fans page, Twitter, and LinkedIn accounts. After a disaster, communication with your staff, members and the community is critical. Use email, phone chains, your social networking and local media to frequently update your plans.

Firms spend millions of dollars to discover how to get consumers to purchase their products, and invariably, the companies that succeed most impressively are those that understand the importance of appealing to the senses and psyche. Sight, sound, touch, taste and smell — all play major roles in getting someone to make a purchase. In addition, companies must also cultivate strong positive associations with their product, and do their best to eliminate any negative ones. Consider how a few industries utilize such techniques.

In supermarkets, for instance, the bread and milk – the two items most frequently bought – are deliberately placed at opposite ends of the store. In order to pick up these two necessities, the shopper must travel through miles of aisles, and, as a result, inevitably winds up buying more items than they had planned. By simply positioning two items strategically, the store increases its sales. Clubs can do the same.

Similarly, fast-food restaurants utilize the environment to maximize their returns. Colors are used to trigger desired impulses (e.g., red prompts people to “stop and take action,” while yellow triggers hunger), and the seats are made uncomfortable on purpose to discourage lingering.

In the health and fitness club industry, there are five basic areas of concern involved in selling a prospect: They are the information call, reception, interview, tour and close. Some of the most important conclusion that I’ve reached about each are outlined below.

The information call
Every person answering the phone in your club should be doing it the same way. “Good morning (or evening), (the name of your club), this is (person’s name). How may I help you? they should always give their name because callers feel more comfortable dealing with someone whose name they know. The prospect will usually indicate his or her reason for calling (perhaps they saw your ad in the Yellow Pages and would like additional information.) The stafer’s response could be, “Great, and your name is? and your number is?” Note that these are statements, not questions. In order to respond to a question, people have to stop and think, if only for a second, which explains why it’s sometimes difficult to get a person’s phone number. (“Why should I give them my phone number?” they wonder.) Try this technique: make statements. People respond to statements. “My name is (your name).” The other person will nearly always respond by saying, “I’m (there name),” Does this technique work every time? Of course not, but it works most of the time.

The reception
You never get a second chance to make a first impression. How a visitor is greeted by the staffer at the front desk sets the tone for the entire sales presentation. The receptionist should greet the guest with a warm smile and say, “Welcome to (the name of your club), my name is (person’s name). How may I help you? Following the introduction, the visitor should be asked to fill out the guest register (printing clearly), while the staffer gets someone to show them the club. The receptionist is the link, the common denominator, here – seeing to the quest’s comfort and helping them connect with a membership director (MD).

An important part of the MD’s job is to deal with questions regarding cost. When doing so, don’t forget that, in this industry, we sell a percieved-value service. We have to help the quest visualize the changes that they want to make – physically, psychologically, even emotionally. We don’t sell a tangible product that can be delivered the same day, so we need to eliminate this potential objection to joining before it arises. We do so by presenting the “agenda.” Welcome the quest to the club, shake their hand, and ask if they’ve ever been in before. The MD can they introduce the agenda by indicating that they’d like to gather some information to find out what the guest hopes to accomplish by joining club. “Then I’ll take you on a tour of the facility, show you everything we have to offer, and, afterwards, we’ll come back and discuss membership rates, okay? (When asking a question that you’d prefer to have answered in the affirmative, nod your head up and down; when you’re hoping for a “no”, move it from side to side. People often mirror the images in front of them. If, for instance, you smile long enough, the person in front of you will generally start smiling.)

Every presentation should follow this basic agenda. It’s very difficult to show the club properly if you don’t know what the prospect is interested in, which makes the interview crucial. The idea is not to take them to the area they’re interested in first … but to take them there last. As a result, the level of excitement will be highest at the end of the tour, setting the stage for a successful close.

The interview
The purpose of the interview is to determine what the prospect’s goals are, their most likely objections to joining (e.g., time, money, spouse, or “I want to think about it”), and the most appropriate way to effectively respond to their reservations. This can be accomplished by asking five simple questions:

1.) “Are you married? If so, is your spouse in favor of your getting started on an exercise program?” If the quest answers yes to this question, it’s going to be a lot more difficult for them to use their husband or wife as an excuse to not join.

2.) “How long have you been considering an exercise program?” Most people will say they’ve been thinking about it for at least six months, which makes it difficult for them to later say that they need more time to make a decision.

3.) “What stopped you from getting started then?” The answer to this question will probably be their primary objection.

4.) “If I’m able to set up a program that will help you achieve your goals, would you be willing to commit three hours a week to your health and fitness?” The answer will more than likely be yes.

5.) Finally, “in an average week, what do you do for entertainment?” The reply, of course varies, but most people spend money to rent videos, have drinks with friends, etc. “I don’t know about you , but I know I could find $1.50 a day, out of that, to apply towards improving my health.: People don’t like to have things taken away from them, but they do like gifts, so we’re suggesting that they use some of their entertainment money to purchase the gifts of fitness and good health.

The Tour
Every club should have a tour agenda all employees follow that covers everything from how long the club has been in business to how many aerobics classes it offers a week. It’s not uncommon for MDs to give different answers to the same question. (e.g., one might say the club has 30 aerobics classes a week, while another will say 40), but there’s no need for this to happen if everyone is using the same script.

It’s a truism of life, and sales, that people do what they do for one of two reasons – to avoid pain or obtain pleasure. Everything we do – from the clothes we wear, to the car we drive, to the club we join – is predicted on this principle. Therefore, the club tour must assuage any fears the quest may have and replace them with feelings of pleasure. We can accomplish this most easily by putting them on some of the fitness equipment: three pieces of strength equipment and one cardiovascular unit is the minimum I recommend. A club membership, bottom-line, is about physical rewards, and there’s no substitute for actually experiencing them. Even if the prospect is dressed in business clothes, they can comfortably try out a leg curl or elliptical motion machine.

The Close
We must learn how to deal effectively with any objections the guest may have. As noted, we can be helpful and responsive about doubts relating to time, money, spouse, or needing “to think about it.” Let’s use the first objection – that of time – as an example: One of my favorite ways to deal with this issue is to remind the quest that we all have 160 hours in a week. It’s simply a matter of priorities. Each MD should have at least four strong responses to deal with each of the four objections. After you’ve overcome the objection, you should immediately return to the close. You can also avail yourself of what I consider an “alternative” close, one of which is, “How would like to take care of this today – cash or check?” Learn how to ask questions in order to maximize the chance of getting the response you desire. And, when you’ve asked the critical closing question – stop talking! The next person to speak will lose the negotiation. Don’t sell a membership, then buy it back because you didn’t know when to quit.

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

 Article Research Contributor: Amerishape Weight Loss

Fitness Life Marketing.....Marketing to Help Your Club Shine in the Summertime

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fitness Life Marketing…..Marketing to Help Your Club Shine in the Summertime

The dog days of summer may be upon us, but that is no reason to slow down on your marketing efforts. In fact it is the perfect time to re-examine your fall marketing plan, and if you’re lucky, even bring in a few new clients now! Ask yourself the following: Fitness Life Marketing

How much can we afford to spend in advertising, even if it doesn’t immediately bring in more funds?

Why would anyone choose to do business with us? What need do we fill? And do we convey that in our advertising?

What is the best use of our ad dollars?

While you are mulling over these questions, consider infusing one or several of the following marketing ideas into your plan.

Direct Mail
Fitness Life Marketing
Once you have decided on a marketing message, it is time to get the word out. You have two options when it comes to direct marketing. If you have the marketing dollars to support it, you can enlist the help of an ad agency and produce a beautiful campaign including postcards, door hangers, and ads for local newspapers and magazines. If not, consider using a direct marketing house that focuses on this industry such as Get Members. Such companies offer a costeffective, almost effortless option with palatable results. Either way, you must first decide on a focused campaign that allows you to stand out from the crowd.

Search Engine Advertising
Fitness Life Marketing
Advertising your club on major search engines such as Google and Yahoo! can further increase the exposure of your club to new clients. And you can actually target this advertising more than you might think allowing you to bring continuity to your overall advertising message. And if you are currently asking how potential members have found you, you already know that the Internet has become one of, if not the most popular mediums among consumers who are interested in joining health clubs!

Joint Promotions
Fitness Life Marketing
While you are relaxing some summer evening, take some time to look outside the box. Jot down several non-competing businesses in the area that you consider to be successful. Ask yourself, “How can we partner on a unique promotion that will benefit all parties?” This proven strategy produces dramatic results – for very little expense. It can also solidify your place within the community.

Niche Markets
Fitness Life Marketing
Summertime is no time to rest on your laurels. Take the opportunity to research emerging trends and niche markets. Between trade publications, member surveys, and the Internet, you have the opportunity to cross the threshold of autumn armed with the knowledge to set yourself apart from your competition. But don’t stop there; develop customized versions of your advertising appealing to the prospects in each niche. Offer specific solutions to meet unique needs and you’ll uncover new groups of customers eager to buy from you. And if you spot a new trend within your community before your competitors – and take action – you will most likely become the market leader in your area.

Opt-In Email Marketing
Fitness Life Marketing
Depending on your locality, your members may be out in the great outdoors or retreating from the heat at home. Either way, you can still reach out to them with a gentle reminder to stay in shape, or to bring a friend to your refreshing pool. You might even want to organize a member appreciation event that allows your members to enjoy your facility with friends and family. Whatever you decide to convey, sending email blasts to current and potential members in your area who have chosen to receive fitnessoriented emails from you is a great way to drum up business now as well as in the coming months. The key is to engage your audience without annoying them. As a rule of thumb, do not email market to your members more often then every 20 days, or you will find your opt-out list growing faster than your member base.

Adventurous Ideas
Fitness Life Marketing
If you can’t beat them, join them! If you members aren’t coming in the club right now, maybe you should consider taking your club to them. Simply organize a few summer outings to popular spots in your state. Sign up members and potential members for group activities with a healthy edge. Each adventure allows participants to enjoy healthy activities with like-minded individuals. The buzz you create around these mini adventures is the perfect plan to end the summer doldrums and increase activity in the club.

While many of your members and potential members may be on vacation this summer, your marketing efforts need not be. Summertime is a great time of year to revisit your marketing plan and experiment with creative new ideas. The end result will be a summer sprinkled with new members and a cornucopia of new memberships by Thanksgiving.

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

 Article Research Contributor: Amerishape Weight Loss

Fitness Life Marketing…..Marketing to Help Your Club Shine in the Summertime