Network Magazine summer 2015 | Page 32

HOW TO CONVERT TRIALS INTO MEMBERSHIPS By asking the right questions during trial offers you can move prospective members and clients along the ‘stages of change’, from considering your services to signing on the dotted line. WORDS: AMANDA BRACKS he fitness marketplace is more diverse than ever, and with so many different offerings available, it can be daunting for those unfamiliar with exercise. What’s the difference between the big chain clubs and that little 24-hour club around the corner? Between that ‘training studio’ and the ‘CrossFit box’ you’ve heard people talking about? For the uninitiated it can be hard to know what to do. Trial offers are a great way to allow these people to experience what you have to offer and gain an understanding of the culture, atmosphere and service provided at your fitness facility. Trial offers can range from a twosession F45 pass or a personal training session at Fitness First, to a seven-day pass at the local leisure centre or three complimentary classes at a yoga studio. You can promote the trial through a variety of marketing channels, from Google Ad Word campaigns, lead boxes, letter box drops and local alliance networking, to downloads from your own website, Facebook offers or referral promotions. When you get a bite to the bait on the hook – which is essentially what a trial offer is out there for – you need to understand where the person is on the ‘stages of change’ model. People need to move away from pain and towards pleasure to be able to make significant changes in their lives – and starting a regular exercise program is a big change for most people. They don’t want to sweat, they don’t enjoy puffing and they certainly don’t want to give up the foods and things that give them so much temporary pleasure but are realistically doing long term damage to their health and wellbeing. When someone is attracted to your business from a trial promotion they are on the second tier of the stages of change model, contemplation. According to marketing guru, Philip Kotler, the stages of change model, when used T 32 | NETWORK SUMMER 2015 by social marketers for the health industry, would look like this: 1 Precontemplation: the person is in denial, not recognising they have a problem 2 Contemplation: the person knows they ‘should’ do something about their issue 3 Preparation: person takes steps towards changing 4 Action: the day they join your facility or sign up with you as a client 5 Maintenance: when the person has been exercising for six months or longer and adopts the change permanently. So how do you get someone from contemplation down the stages of change into preparation and then into action, allowing them to trade in their trial pass and The 30-second article • Trial offers are a great way to showcase to prospective members what makes your fitness business different • When someone is attracted to your business from a trial promotion they are in the ‘contemplation’ phase of the ‘stages of change’ • A series of astute questions will help you move prospects from the contemplation stage to the action stage • Don’t send people into trial classes and training sessions until you have identified their problems and provided a long term plan to solve them.