Run a Profitable Gym
Run a Profitable Gym is packed with business tools for gym owners and CrossFit affiliates. This is actionable, data-backed business advice for all gym owners, including those who own personal training studios, fitness franchises, and strength and conditioning gyms. Broke gym owner Chris Cooper turned a struggling gym into an asset, then built a multi-million-dollar mentoring company to help other fitness entrepreneurs do the same thing. Every week, Chris presents the top tactics for building a profitable gym, as well as real success stories from gym owners who have found incredible success through Two-Brain Business mentorship. Chris’s goal is to create millionaire gym owners. Subscribe to Run a Profitable Gym and you could be one of them.
Run a Profitable Gym
Episode 62: The Power of Stories
Episode 62 – The Power of Stories
Today we talk about using the power of stories to help grow your business, help your clients, and help you live a better life. Today I share some personal stories and strategies for how to connect better with clients when telling a story. I also talk with Jason Cohen about how he is using the power of stories to help veterans with PTSD.
The 2017 Two-Brain Summit is coming this June 3rd and 4th in Chicago. Be sure to register now!
In this Interview:
- My first phone call with Greg Glassman
- The "Hero's Journey" and how it applies to CrossFit
- How Jason Cohen is helping Veterans with PTSD
- Why stories are so effective for sales and marketing
Plus:
- Testimonials versus client stories
- The gamification of CrossFit and exercise
- Extrinsic versus intrinsic motivation
About Jason:
Jason Cohen is a former Marine where he was originally introduced to CrossFit. After five years he retired from the Marine Corps and got his degree at the college of Charleston. Jason then started coaching full time. He is now the founder of SemperFit Squad, a company that provides workout plans based around stories to help veterans with PTSD.
Timeline:
0:57 – The true power of great stories
1:56 – A personal story about Greg Glassman
3:20 – An introduction to telling great stories
4:09 – The hero’s journey within a great story
5:50 – The hero’s journey boiled down more simply and applied
7:33 – Why does the hero’s journey matter to you?
7:59 – Making Joe the hero of his own story
17:13 – The real happy ending for a client
17:39 – How does a coach fit into a story?
18:17 – Jason Cohen Introduction
19:03 – Jason Cohen’s Story
20:57 – How stories can help veterans diagnosed with PTDS
23:54 – Compelling someone with PTSD to get started exercising
25:43 – The gamification of exercise and CrossFit
27:06 – Moving people from extrinsic to intrinsic motivation
27:51 – Placing people into life like stories within a CrossFit gym
30:41 - Drawing people in to stories where they feel like the hero
31:14 – How does placing someone in a scene help someone with PTSD?
32:40 – Developing a platform for veterans in need with PTSD
33:35 – Where to find Jason’s scenarios to try them out
36:14 – Getting wrapped up in a story
37:05 – Where the mentor, or coach, in the hero’s journey comes in
39:36 – The first test for a client, the social test
41:44 – The second great test for a client, becoming injured
44:51 – The implementation of the prescriptive model by creating heroes
45:37 – Why are stories so effective for sales and marketing?
49:01 – Testimonials versus a client story
49:59 – A client’s primary barrier to signing up for CrossFit
50:20 – The 2017 Two-Brain Summit Announcement
SAMPLE:
Today's Mission:
It's June 6th 1944: D-Day. You're with the 101st Airborne flying high above the Douve River taking heavy anti-aircraft fire. Your unit's mission is to destroy 2 bridges over the river so the soldiers on Utah beach can push forward. As you approach your jump window, your aircraft takes a hard hit and loses its #2 (starboard) engine. The time to jump is now or never...GO GO GO.
As you hit the ground you check your map and realize you're over 1 click south of your drop zone. You've landed in thick marsh and walking through the mud is like dragging your feet through wet concrete. To make matters worse, you've got to get prone from time to time because enemy patrols saw your open chutes and are on the hunt for you and your men.
Your Mission:
Complete 5 Rounds of:
2