TomO
0
Hi, Val. Hope you're having a great day!
Coach, I think most PT's are not "evil." Most of them are just young kids trying to make their way. They earn very little. In my gym, for example, the company for which all the PTs work charges something like $40 for a 1/2 hour session. The PT is lucky to see $15 of that. If they don't keep a constant stream of people coming in, they really don't earn much more than $25k per year.
I believe the vast majority of the problems come from ignorance, and the fact that most people are simply unwilling to pay more for highly qualified trainers. Someone like Steve would be worth $400 per hour, but would anyone be willing to pay him that? Maybe in L.A., the Hollywood types would hire him, but anywhere else they would ask why he was so expensive. Since the clients are just as ignorant about what they need as the trainers, it tends to be a viscous circle.
On top of that, they must get a HUGE number of people who say they are "motivated" but are unwilling to count calories, don't want to press themselves too hard in cardio, and think weight lifting will give them "unsightly bulges." I mean, how much of that are you going to argue with for $25? Pretty soon you give up and cave in to what the customers expect you to do.
Coach, I think most PT's are not "evil." Most of them are just young kids trying to make their way. They earn very little. In my gym, for example, the company for which all the PTs work charges something like $40 for a 1/2 hour session. The PT is lucky to see $15 of that. If they don't keep a constant stream of people coming in, they really don't earn much more than $25k per year.
I believe the vast majority of the problems come from ignorance, and the fact that most people are simply unwilling to pay more for highly qualified trainers. Someone like Steve would be worth $400 per hour, but would anyone be willing to pay him that? Maybe in L.A., the Hollywood types would hire him, but anywhere else they would ask why he was so expensive. Since the clients are just as ignorant about what they need as the trainers, it tends to be a viscous circle.
On top of that, they must get a HUGE number of people who say they are "motivated" but are unwilling to count calories, don't want to press themselves too hard in cardio, and think weight lifting will give them "unsightly bulges." I mean, how much of that are you going to argue with for $25? Pretty soon you give up and cave in to what the customers expect you to do.