
Walk In The Shoes Of The Deconditioned
Over 65 million American adults are inactive and deconditioned. To attract them to health clubs, you've got to
understand their fear of failure about improving their lifestyles, the
embarrassment they often feel around fit people, and the preconceptions
that they have about exercise. Nothing teaches like experience: your staff needs to walk
in the shoes of the inactive before you can successfully market to this
segment.
Our view: Health clubs are looking for new
growth opportunities since the superfit segment is essentially tapped out in
many markets.
But business as usual will not win inactive customers, since these prospects are
often reluctant or fearful. In fact, almost
everything health clubs do scares off the inactive prospect--inexperienced
staff, lack of privacy in men's and women's locker rooms, poor or no instructional
signage on
equipment, equipment too small to be comfortable for overweight adults, overly
challenging goals too early in the process instead of an emphasis on incremental
progress through very small steps, lack of understanding of the psychology of
the unfit.
A couple of easy ways to improve your staff's sensitivity right now: 1) load up a weight vest and have each staff member wear it for a day. 2) get a free log-in to a website offering support for the overweight (diettalk.com is a good place to start) and have your staff members read a few postings. It'll open their eyes.
(c) 2004