Two Brain Business Online Training
Two Brain Business Online Training
Two Brain Business Online Training
ONLINE TRAINING
IN 24 HOURS
THE TWO-BRAIN BUSINESS
STEP-BY-STEP PLAN
TWOBRAINBUSINESS.COM
Add Online Training in 24 Hours: The Step-by-Step Plan
The coronavirus pandemic is causing widespread panic, social distancing and government-
mandated gym closures.
Level 1
Price this level to be slightly more expensive than your most popular group rate. (During COVID:
Offer it at the same rate they’re paying but make sure they know it’s a more expensive service.)
Delivery: Group programming tailored to each client individually. Text twice per day, before
and after the workout.
Tools: Text or email—or step up with a software platform like TrueCoach. But that’s optional.
No video.
Level 2
Price this service about 33 percent more than the base package.
Delivery: Group programming tailored to each client individually, plus nutrition plans and
tracking.
Level 3
Price this level of service to be about twice as costly as the base package.
Delivery: Personalized programming and a personalized nutrition package, with regular online
video goal reviews and nutrition plan updates.
Tools: MyFitnessPal, text, email, video for 1:1 calls.
Delivering Value
With each of these levels of service, the value is entirely in the 1:1 messaging with the client.
The client must clearly understand how the program will move him or her toward goals.
General programming will not maintain its value for long. It’s a commodity for the online
trainer.
The online training Two-Brain recommends is based on 1:1 contact with the clients on a regular
basis. The personal contact is recommended to maintain engagement in the programming and
with the gym.
The methodology Two-Brain refers to does not include Zoom videos and one-on-one video
training; we acknowledge that others are “testing” some of these other forms of online training
right now. We are collecting data as it becomes available on all methods and will share it.
In you are using any of these methods, you should consult with your insurance provider to
determine if additional insurance is required for coverage.
2
How to Pivot to Online Programming
If you're in Growth Phase at Two-Brain Business, open up your Roadmap and go to Revenue
Diversity, Milestone 10. (Need help? Ask your mentor.)
If you're in the Incubator, we'll teach you how to sell online training step by step in Growth
Phase. But for now: If your gym is in danger of being shut down, you can offer to coach people
online. This could even create a huge opportunity for you after this crisis ends!
First, keep taking your No-Sweat Intros. Offer people an option to do them over Skype or Zoom.
Second, if people are nervous about attending group classes, offer to deliver their workouts
online. Tell them that this is a new premium service, but you'll provide it at the same price as
their monthly membership for now.
$149 Base
$225 Core
$399 Max
“We don’t want you to lose the buffer of health and immunity we’ve built together. These
programs are more expensive than your current membership, but we’re going to give them to
you for the rate you’re currently paying for as long as this crisis lasts.”
If they're doing workouts at home, you have to have 1:1 conversations with them. Don't just
post “today's workout.” Actually take the time to email each client and say, “Here's how this
will help you.”
You can use the same rationale with multiple clients or the same workout with different
rationale.
For example, you could send a 4-round workout of 400 m runs and 50 squats to a competitive
sprinter and someone who wants to lose 30 lb.
To the sprinter: “I picked this workout to improve your ability to buffer lactic acid when your
heart rate exceeds 165 BPM. Think about your final 100 m while you're doing it.”
To the weight-loss client: “Today, we're going to alternate periods of localized fatigue with a
more aerobic recovery phase. I want you to be able to metabolize fat during the workout. So do
3
the first run at a jog and note your time at the end. Try to keep that jog time within 20 percent
of the first one if you can, but your priority is to do the squats unbroken.”
To the new person: “Our goal today is to keep moving. It's OK to slow down but try not to stop.
I'd like you to record your split times each round and send them to me so we can analyze your
performance. We'll pick the next few workouts based on those results.”
To the veteran: “My goal for you today is to see how localized fatigue affects your general
performance. Instead of being limited by hitting a high HR, I want to see what happens when
lactic acid builds up. So there's a small mental component here, too. To help, please try to do all
of the squats unbroken, hit the first run hard, and keep all your other run times within 20
percent of your fastest time.”
This stuff adds value and relevance, and, in my experience, actually improves their
performance, too.
We put 31 at-home workouts for you to copy, modify and use on the Two-Brain Coaching blog.
You can start there if it helps.
Here is an example of a simple process one of our mentors, Ana, is using in her gym:
3. The coach reaches out based on the profile of each client and follows progress.
○ Example: “Based on your goals and your available equipment at home, here is
your workout for today.”
4. The coach uses the programming daily and can modify or change it for specific clients
via text or email.
○ Example: “Based on your goal of improving your endurance with upper-body
gymnastics movements, try to do the push-ups unbroken in each round.”
4
5. For personal training clients, it will be personalized programming.
In short:
● Flex clients typically receive a combination of in-person meetings and online training.
● If you can’t meet with someone personally, do the meetings via Zoom.
● Typically, coach and client meet once per month or up to once a week.
● Coach provides the programing design and accountability (app, text, email, Facebook,
Zoom).
Zoom-led course—A coach runs Zoom classes from the gym at a set time daily. Several gyms
are trying this. Early data shows that interest among clients drops after three to seven days. We
will continue to collect data on retention rates and engagement rates and report back.