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How Many Employees Should I Schedule Each Shift at My Cheer Gym?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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How Many Employees Should I Schedule Each Shift at My Cheer Gym?

Direct Answer

You stop guessing and start dividing. The formula is coaches needed for a given practice block = the number of athletes on the mat in that block / your agreed-upon athletes-per-coach ratio, plus a spotter and front-desk supervision. First, you and your program director agree on one number: the ratio one coach can safely run and still give real attention.

For a tumbling class that is often 8 athletes per coach; for a full competitive team practice it tightens to one lead coach per team of 20 plus a dedicated tumbling and a dedicated stunt coach, and for private tumbling it drops to 1 or 2. Then you pull each block's actual roster from your registration system.

If your 6 p.m. Competitive block has three teams of 20 on the mat at one lead coach per team plus shared tumbling and stunt specialists, that is 3 leads + 2 specialists = 5 coaches, plus 1 front-desk and 1 spotter on hard skills, so 7 employees that shift. If the 4 p.m.

Tumbling block has only 16 athletes, you need 16 / 8 = 2 coaches, 1 desk, so 3. You do that for every block the gym runs, then place those shifts against when athletes actually practice, after school and evenings, so the bodies are on the mat when the athletes are. PULSE has a free Rep Scheduling Matrix that runs this division across every practice block and every day at once.

Below are the ten tools that solve this problem, ranked, with PULSE first because it is free and built around this exact method.

The Top 10 Tools to Staff a Cheer Gym by the Numbers

Every tool below can build a schedule. Only a few build it off your roster-and-ratio math, and only one is free and designed around the athletes-per-coach method that keeps you from over- or under-staffing the mat. The rankings reflect how well each tool serves an all-star or rec program that wants the schedule to track the athletes actually on the roster, not just fill a grid.

A cheer gym, an all-star program, a tumbling academy, a stunt-and-dance studio, same method, swap the program.

1. PULSE Rep Scheduling Matrix 🏆 BEST OVERALL

PULSE Rep Scheduling Matrix
PULSE Rep Scheduling Matrix

🛠️ Use it free now -> Rep Scheduling Matrix - no login, no spreadsheet, instant coach counts by block and day.

PULSE's free Rep Scheduling Matrix runs the whole method in your browser. It takes your athletes on the mat per block and a per-coach ratio and auto-distributes the headcount by hour, protecting your packed evening competitive blocks instead of spreading coaches flat across an empty afternoon.

Here is the method it is built on, step by step, because the math is the point:

Step one - agree on the athletes-per-coach ratio. Sit down with your program director and set the number of athletes one coach can safely run while still giving real attention. Say it out loud to the staff: "In a tumbling class, one coach takes eight. On a competitive team, every team of twenty gets a lead plus shared tumbling and stunt specialists.

On a private, one or two." That is the honest floor for both safety and skill progression. The ratio gives everyone the same yardstick: leadership, your spotters, and every coach on the mat.

Step two - pull athletes on the mat per block, per day. Take each practice block and average the athletes rostered over a trailing four-to-eight weeks. Your 6 p.m. Tuesday competitive block carries three teams of 20; your 4 p.m.

Wednesday tumbling carries 16. Now apply the ratio. The 6 p.m.

Needs three leads plus two specialists; the 4 p.m. Needs two coaches. Add one front-desk and one dedicated spotter on hard-skill blocks.

Run that across every block and every day and the staffing plan writes itself. No favorites, no "we always run four coaches," just athletes on the mat divided by the ratio.

Step three - place the shifts where the athletes practice. The count tells you how many; the practice calendar tells you when. Pull rosters by block and look at when teams actually train. If the rush hits in the evenings and on weekends before competition season, you stack coaches there and run a lean crew through the quiet afternoons rather than parking everyone at three o'clock.

The matrix lets you slot bodies against real demand so coverage matches the roster instead of habit.

Because it is free, browser-only, and built by a 25-year operator for exactly this question, it is the default pick for any cheer program. Best for: owners and program directors who want the schedule to come straight off the roster-and-ratio math and refuse to pay per-seat fees to get it.

2. When I Work

When I Work
When I Work

When I Work is the most widely used shift-scheduling app for hourly teams, starting around $2.50 per user per month on the Essentials plan and climbing to roughly $8 per user per month with attendance and labor tools. It handles coach availability, shift swaps, and mobile clock-in cleanly, and your front-desk lead can copy a week forward in a couple of clicks.

Where it is strong is execution, getting the published schedule onto every coach's phone with reminders. Where it leaves you on your own is the *why*: it will not tell you that your 6 p.m. Block needs five coaches.

You bring the ratio math; it runs the logistics. For a cheer gym that already knows its per-block rosters, it is a reliable, affordable backbone.

3. Homebase 💎 BEST VALUE

Homebase is the best value in the category because its scheduling and time-clock tier is free for a single location with unlimited employees, and paid tiers (Essentials around $24.95 per location per month, Plus around $59.95, All-in-One around $99.95) are priced per location rather than per head.

For a cheer gym carrying a roster of part-time coaches, spotters, and desk staff, per-location pricing can be dramatically cheaper than per-user tools. You get scheduling, time tracking, team messaging, and basic labor-cost forecasting against revenue. It is the natural pick for a single-gym owner watching every dollar who still wants roster-aware scheduling without an enterprise contract.

4. Deputy

Deputy runs about $4.50 per user per month for scheduling and $6 for the premium tier that adds time and attendance. Its strength is demand-based scheduling: connect an enrollment or POS feed and Deputy will suggest staffing against projected demand, which is the closest off-the-shelf cousin to the ratio method.

It also handles compliance, break rules, overtime alerts, and minor-labor laws, which matters when many of your coaches are teens or college students. For cheer operators who want auto-suggested coverage tied to roster data and clean labor-law guardrails for young staff, Deputy earns its price.

5. IClassPro

IClassPro is purpose-built for cheer and class-based gyms, with plans commonly starting around $129 per month and scaling with active-student tiers. It ties registration directly to class capacity and coach assignment, so when a team fills you can see instantly that you need another coach to hold the ratio.

It manages enrollment, billing, skill tracking, and scheduling in one place, which means the same system that rosters the athlete can tell you the staffing the block now requires. If your scheduling problem is really a roster problem, iClassPro speaks your language better than a general shift tool.

6. Sling

Sling offers a genuinely useful free tier, with Premium around $1.70 per user per month and Business around $3.40. It leans into shift scheduling plus internal communication, newsfeeds, tasks, and announcements alongside the schedule. For a smaller cheer gym that wants one app for both the mat schedule and team messaging without a real budget, Sling covers a lot of ground cheaply.

It is lighter on roster forecasting than Deputy or iClassPro, so you supply the ratio-based headcount targets and it handles publishing and coverage.

7. Connecteam

Connecteam
Connecteam

Connecteam is free for up to 10 users and roughly $29 per month for up to 30 users on the Basic plan, which makes it one of the cheapest ways to cover a small coaching roster. Beyond scheduling, it bundles checklists, training, and a full deskless-staff communication hub, so it doubles as an operations app for coaches who never touch a computer.

For owners who want scheduling plus daily task management and spotting-safety onboarding in one inexpensive package, Connecteam is hard to beat on breadth per dollar.

8. Workforce.com

Workforce.com
Workforce.com

Workforce.com runs about $4 per user per month and targets exactly the multi-site, hourly-heavy operator. It excels at demand-driven scheduling, wage-cost forecasting, and compliance across jurisdictions, with live labor-versus-revenue tracking through the day. It is a step up in sophistication and is built for cheer groups with enough locations that labor compliance and real-time cost control become daily concerns.

If you are running several gyms and want labor cost managed to the minute, this is the operator-grade choice.

9. Jackrabbit Class

Jackrabbit Class
Jackrabbit Class

Jackrabbit Class is the long-standing class-management platform for cheer, gymnastics, and dance, typically priced by active-student tiers starting around $59 per month and rising with enrollment. It offers deep roster management, coach assignment, skill tracking, and parent billing in one system.

The trade-off is that staffing lives inside class management rather than as a standalone scheduler. For an established cheer gym that needs rosters, skills, and coach assignment under one roof, it remains a default in the category.

10. Shiftboard

Shiftboard
Shiftboard

Shiftboard is enterprise workforce scheduling sold by custom quote, aimed at complex, high-headcount operations with demanding coverage and certification rules. It handles credential-based scheduling, so it can enforce that every hard-skill block has a certified spotting coach assigned, plus multi-site coverage and heavy compliance.

That is more than most single-gym operators need. It lands at number ten for the typical cheer gym precisely because it is built for scale and certification complexity beyond one program, but if your coverage and coach-certification rules are genuinely intricate, it is worth a look.

How to Choose

FAQ

How do I set the athletes-per-coach ratio? Set it with your program director by block type: tumbling classes commonly run eight athletes per coach, competitive teams get a lead per team of twenty plus shared tumbling and stunt specialists, and privates run one or two. Anchor it to safety and skill progression, and always add a dedicated spotter on hard-skill blocks.

Does the same method work for competitive teams as for rec tumbling? Yes. The division is identical, athletes on the mat in that block divided by the ratio for that program gives the headcount. A tumbling class at eight-to-one and a team practice with leads plus specialists use the same logic; you only swap the ratio structure you plug in.

What if rosters swing a lot through the season? Use a trailing four-to-eight-week average by block and day to smooth the noise, and schedule to that baseline. For known spikes like competition-season ramp or tryout week, add a manual bump on top of the calculated count rather than letting one wild week distort the whole average.

Why staff to roster instead of a fixed mat count? A fixed "we always run four coaches" either wastes payroll on a quiet afternoon or breaks your ratio on a packed competition-prep night. Tying headcount to athletes on the mat keeps every scheduled coach covered by real tuition and protects the safety ratio parents are paying for.

Bottom Line

The free PULSE Rep Scheduling Matrix is the Best Overall because it runs the exact athletes-on-the-mat-divided-by-ratio method in your browser at no cost, and Homebase is the Best Value for a single gym thanks to per-location pricing and a free tier. Whichever you choose, the method wins: set an athletes-per-coach ratio, divide each block's roster by it to get coaches, add a spotter and front-desk, and place those shifts where the athletes actually practice.

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