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Health Club Management Handbook - Did you know…?
Research round-up
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Did you know…?
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Dr Melvyn Hillsdon and Dr Paul Bedford share their lessons for boosting member retention, based on their latest studies
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10% of online joiners never visit the club
Ten per cent of those who join online never even enter the club. They then purchase just two months of membership before cancelling. Meanwhile, members who join online and visit the club only once continue to pay for five months before cancelling their membership.
Creating activities that prompt member visits – even just one visit – appears to have a significant return on investment.
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Six Months
Creating a routine boosts retention
Routine is a strong predictor of retention. Members who create a routine – visiting their club at the same time and on the same day each week – stay on average six months longer than those who visit on a more ad hoc basis.
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2 weeks
The gap between joining and first visit strongly predicts future behaviours
Those who take longer than two weeks to make their first visit are less likely to establish a sufficient visit frequency to retain membership or achieve results, and are therefore at a much higher risk of quitting.
Those who join and make their first visit to the club quickly are more likely to establish a visit frequency of at least four visits per month.
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40%
Friends do make a difference
It’s long been believed that members with a workout partner or buddy are more likely to remain as members than those who train alone. Now data has put numbers behind the theory: members who made a friend at the gym in the last three months are 40 per cent less likely to cancel than those who haven’t.
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Photo: SHUTTERSTOCK.COM |
Friends do make a difference |
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23%
Wearables may not be the magic bullet we were hoping for
About 27 per cent of members report tracking their behaviour with an app – a figure that’s higher among younger members, and among male rather than female members.
So what’s the impact of using an app or tracking device on membership retention? Overall, app users have very similar retention rates to non-app users. But there’s one exception: in male members aged over 25 years, tracking app use is associated with a 23 per cent increase in the monthly risk of cancellation.
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3 Minutes
How fitness coaches speak to members can have a direct impact on subsequent behaviour
The more a conversation encourages members to express their perceptions of the personal benefits of increased gym attendance, the more likely they are to attend more regularly.
Borrowing from the principles of motivational interviewing, we can describe a brief motivational intervention – a three-minute chat will suffice. Ask questions like:
What do you think is good for you about exercise?
What, for you, are the three most important reasons to work out regularly?
On a scale of 0–10, how motivated are you to make another visit to the club within the next week – and why do you think that is?
What might you need to do to make your next visit happen?
Summarise their answers to each question back to them.
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There are gender-specific hassles and uplifts that influence retention
When members visit our clubs, they can experience a range of enjoyable uplifts and a range of negative hassles which correlate with retention rates.
Completing a challenging workout is the most highly cited uplift for males and females. For females, the second and third most cited uplifts are reception staff speaking to them and encouragement from fitness staff. For males, it’s achieving fitness goals and being spoken to by reception and fitness staff.
The main negative hassle experience reported by both males and females is club staff not speaking to them. For males, queuing for gym equipment is also a common hassle, whereas for females it’s dirty changing facilities.
When the various hassles and uplifts are compared, among women, reception staff communication is most strongly related to retention; for men, the key factor is having to queue for equipment.
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Originally published in HCM Handbook 2017 edition
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