Network Magazine summer 2014 | Page 10

THE OF CLIENT RETENTION: EMPATHY 101 By understanding your client’s world, you can forge a strong connection and turn your training sessions into their place of refuge. WORDS: KATE SWANN & KRISTINA MAMROT n this series on client retention, psychologists Kate Swann and Kristina Mamrot provide unique insights into what makes your clients tick, and how to keep them coming back week after week, month after month, year after year. Client retention is the name of the game. Right? To retain clients, it’s essential to establish a strong connection. Your new client needs to feel welcome and valued. And to do that, you need to get into their heads, understand what’s going on for them, and work out what makes them tick. I The 30-second article • To forge a strong connection with clients you need to understand what’s going on for them • In addition to their stated fitness goals, clients are often seeking a refuge from the chaos of their lives • Empathy is very different to sympathy • Empathy requires you to make eye contact, listen carefully, ask questions, not make assumptions, and consider how you would feel if you were living your client’s life. • By being empathetic you can make your client feel cared about and valued, which in turn will increase the likelihood of you retaining them as a client. 10 | NETWORK SUMMER 2014 Now be warned: this isn’t a one-sizefits-all approach. Every person who walks through your door is unique. Sure, there will be common denominators, but never make the mistake of swinging into auto-pilot. Let’s go back a step and take a look inside your new client’s head as he’s on the way to the gym for his first session with you. Let me introduce you to Brett. Brett’s 35, married and the father of a new baby. He’s in sales and marketing and is working hard to climb the corporate ladder. Brett’s been fit and sporty most of his life until – yep, you guessed it – he married the girl of his dreams. Boy, can that girl cook! (research tells us it’s common for men to put on weight once they marry). Now with the nipper in the picture, there’s no time for that run after work. When Brett walks through the door at the end of the day, he walks into the middle of the witching hour. Junior, the dream girl, and the dog all desperate for his attention, the dripping tap needs to be fixed, milk needs to be picked up… you get the picture. Despite the chaos of his life, Brett doesn’t want to give in and buy larger clothes. He wants to keep his waistline, maintain his fitness, and perhaps even bulk up a little. He figures if he joins a gym and organises training sessions, he’ll have to go, and his better half’s supportive. He’s going to train in the morning so it doesn’t disrupt his schedule – he just needs to get up an hour earlier. What your client really wants So let’s take a look at Brett’s expectations as he steps through the door for his first session with you. Brett tells you he wants to: • lose a bit of weight • improve his fitness. What Brett isn’t telling you, however, is that he wants to: • muscle up so he ‘looks hot’ • have a place he can escape from his responsibilities without causing friction at home or feeling (too) guilty • take a break from sales figures, targets and nappies • get some order and routine back into his life. And you thought he was just there to train… All of this is important for you to understand, as Brett’s personal trainer. Because when the going gets tou