1. The coach in the gym urges you to adopt a psychology similar to hunger marketing when you apply for a card. He often tells you that we only have a preferential quota of 100. If we apply for a card now, it will be 999 a year. However, if the discount quota is used up, the headquarters will take it back and the original price will rise to 1699. This is the psychology of marketing, which makes you pay the bill quickly. In fact, when the gym was sold to the outside world, he said so for a year 10 months. He said the same thing to the new coach. Zhang communicated well with new customers, saying that our preferential price has a time limit, and then found all kinds of strange reasons to reach the preferential price, but in fact it is so much money.
2. Private education courses. The coach of the gym will recommend some private education courses to the customers or users who apply for the card. It is this kind of tutoring from 1 to 1. He will tell you how to use professional equipment, how to make a reasonable plan, then help you correct your movements and make a reasonable training plan for you, so that you can achieve your fitness goals faster and safer. In essence, there is nothing wrong with buying private lessons, but you must distinguish who is buying private lessons, because the fitness instructor's level is completely different, and you see his own body is different. This is the most basic common sense.
Don't just pop up at the gym and a guy says he's a coach, and then ask you to buy his course, and you'll believe him. The most basic point is that you should look at his own exercise results first. He is not qualified to teach you if his own body is not well controlled. Then communicate with the front desk or the manager in charge of the gym whether you are a professional coach in the gym and whether you have professional qualifications to avoid being cheated.