Are You Getting The Most Bang for Your Butt With Your Personal Trainer?
Posted in General News on May 2nd, 2009 by adminThe current economy is affecting everybody, but one industry that’s especially taking it in the shorts is personal fitness training. If you want to be physically challenged, motivated to achieve, and successfully attain your fitness goals, there is probably no better investment than a personal trainer. The problem today, however, is that people are debating whether even a gym membership is necessary, let alone the high cost of a personal trainer.
Gyms and personal trainers might be a luxury in this economic downturn, but exercise is always a necessity no matter what. The only piece of equipment necessary in order to exercise is a good pair of sneakers. That said, if you can afford more and you want to invest in your body rather than another pair of designer shoes, a personal trainer can be worth his or her weight in gold. The onus is on you, though, as a consumer to pick the right personal trainer for you or change personal trainers if your fitness goals are not being met.
The most important part of choosing a personal trainer happens before any contract is signed and money paid. There is an old cliché that before you work out in a gym, walk around and see the different bodies of the people working out and work out where they are. Because they are obviously doing something right! The same goes for personal trainers. Be a spy in the weight room for a couple of weeks before committing to a personal trainer. Pay close attention to how trainers train their clients. Talk to people who use personal trainers and get feedback about what they like and what they wish was different about the personal trainer they work with. This is no different than a dating relationship. You are doing your homework to see if the trainer is worth a “first date.”
For example, you wouldn’t go to a new hairdresser if you didn’t like the way she did people’s hair. When you are looking at the way personal trainers train, ask yourself the following questions. Are the exercises the trainer is having the client do creative and innovative? If you are already familiar with and doing these exercises on your own before you even start exercising with a personal trainer, than that personal trainer will be of no value to you. A good personal trainer should change the exercise routine every time they train. The exercises should not be predictable because they have done the same ones in the same order each time. In addition, the routine should not be able to be easily duplicated by you at home or in the gym, or else that trainer is unnecessary in your fitness plan.
Does the personal trainer you are interested in working with pay attention to his clients? When other members walk by, does he stop training his client and talk to other people? For the entire hour you are training, the attention of the personal trainer needs to be entirely on your exercise program. There shouldn’t be cell phone conversations or in-depth conversations with anyone, not even with the people being trained. A good personal training relationship is rooted in helping you achieve your personal fitness goals. Anything that takes away from that is a negative in the relationship.
The point is these are questions that can be answered through personal observation and asking around well before you plunk down the big bucks for a personal trainer. It is important to remember even once you have hired a personal trainer that they can and should be replaced if they are not fulfilling their end of the bargain. Personal trainers, if they are the right personal trainers for you, can make all the difference in the world to enhancing your level of fitness and transforming your body. If you do your due diligence in hiring, the benefits of exercising under the guidance of a personal trainer can be life changing. Your body is worth much more than a new outfit.
