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Focus on more than just sales—or risk filling a leaking bucket.
Let’s be clear: most gym owners are doing a lot of the right things. Driving membership sales, growing revenue, and investing in lead generation are essential pillars of a successful fitness business. But when gyms start to struggle—or plateau—it’s rarely because the team stopped trying to sell.
The problem is, they’re focusing on the top line while ignoring the foundations underneath it. And if you're not careful, you end up stuck in a cycle of trying to sell your way out of issues that aren't actually sales problems.
Here are the five most commonly missed areas we see in gyms that are underperforming—and why they matter more than you might think.
Sales bring people in, but retention keeps your business afloat. If you're losing 5% or more of your members each month (and most clubs are), you could be watching hundreds of members slip away every year.
The cost? Massive. Not just in lost revenue, but in marketing spend and staff time trying to replace them. Understanding and tracking your attrition rate allows you to spot early trends, fix onboarding issues, and improve engagement—all before someone hits "cancel."
🛠️ What to do: Track monthly attrition, exit reasons, and length of stay. Don’t guess—measure.
Many gyms are generating leads but don’t have a clearly defined, consistently delivered sales process. That’s like fishing with no hook—you’ll catch some, but you’ll lose a lot.
Low conversion rates usually signal issues with follow-up, poor enquiry handling, inconsistent tours, or a lack of structure. And here’s the truth: more leads won’t solve a broken process.
🛠️ What to do: Audit your sales journey. Train your team. Use scripts as frameworks, not crutches. Track enquiry-to-join conversion and follow-up effectiveness.
This is one of the most important (and most ignored) numbers in the business. If your average member stays for 6 months, your revenue looks very different to a club with 12–18 months of retention.
You can sell 100 memberships a month, but if people only stick around for a short time, you're constantly working harder to stay in the same place. Extending member lifespan is one of the fastest ways to improve profitability.
🛠️ What to do: Calculate your average length of stay and aim to improve it month by month. Focus on early engagement, onboarding, and touchpoints during the first 90 days.
Your team drives your member experience, sales performance, and culture. But many gyms only invest in training when there's a crisis—or worse, never at all.
Lack of regular feedback, poor communication, and unclear expectations lead to underperformance and disengagement. If your team isn’t being developed, neither is your business.
🛠️ What to do: Implement regular 1-1s, run purposeful team meetings, and train staff in both sales and service. Clarity, consistency, and culture come from leadership.
Most clubs put all their effort into getting someone to join… and then drop the ball. A poor or non-existent client journey is a guaranteed way to increase cancellations and decrease referrals.
What happens in the first week? First month? Three months in? If you don’t know—or if your answer is "we send them an email"—you're missing the chance to create real loyalty.
🛠️ What to do: Map out your full client journey, from first contact to long-term member. Build in meaningful touchpoints, support, and opportunities to engage.
It’s not that sales and revenue aren’t important—they absolutely are. But if you’re only focusing on the front door and ignoring what’s happening behind the scenes, you’ll always be fighting uphill.
Fixing the leaks, improving the systems, and developing your people will give you a business that doesn’t just grow—but sustains that growth over time.
Need help with any of the above? At Black Raccoon Consulting, we specialise in building gyms that perform—top to bottom. Get in touch, and let’s make your gym work for you.
Guests have included: Casey Conrad, Dave Wright, Richard Synnott, Andy King, Bobby Verdun, Mel Tempest, Lisa Keucker, Steve Jensen, Richard Grey, Micahel Boyle and many more