Network Magazine Winter 2018 | Page 58

GX SKILLS BUILDING RAPPORT TO KEEP ‘EM COMING BACK! The community aspect of group fitness is what makes participants return to class – and remain members of their club. Instructor Mel Morony looks at how to foster the connections that create this sense of community. he instructor enters the room, a couple of minutes before the class is due to start. They greet their participants who are already waiting for them while they set up their music. As they start their class, they trot out the requisite ‘injuries and medical conditions’ spiel and then ask if anyone is there for the first time. A couple of people timidly raise their hands, so the instructor gives a quick nod of welcome and continues with the class, hoping that the newbies will like the class enough to return the following week. Afterwards, while the instructor is packing up, they check in with the new participants to see how they went. The response ‘Yeah, good’ sounds positive, but could just be politeness. And that is that. Will they be back next week? Maybe, maybe not. While our group fitness instructor has done all that the gym might have asked them to do as far as delivering a class is concerned, they are running the risk of making their focus all about their product without getting to know the people that the product is being directed at. T 58 | NETWORK WINTER 2018 As group fitness instructors we are often reminded to build rapport with our people. Seldom, however, is it explained why – and even more seldom taught ‘how’. Generally, if any rapport building training is given to team members, it’s focused on those that sell memberships, and maybe those working at the front desk, with little attention paid to those in other areas of the club. So, why is rapport building so important? To understand the importance of rapport building in group fitness we need to look at the reason that a fitness club provides group fitness in the first place. The reason is not to be nice. It isn’t even to give people a better ‘shot’ at achieving their results than if they were to do it by themselves. Rather, it’s to increase the proportion of people that the club will retain as members. From a marketing perspective, it is a lot more economical to retain an existing member than to sign up a new one. One UK study, for example, found that people who participated