Personal Training Package Selling — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
The Assessment-to-Package Close is a 60-minute training for personal trainers and fitness sales pros (PTs, fitness managers, and membership advisors) who convert a fitness assessment into a paid training package — a different motion than selling a gym membership tour. It teaches a four-part discipline: a written pre-assessment goal brief, a measure-and-mirror assessment rule, a prescribe-the-package consultative recommendation, and a rebooking-and-retention close.
Built on IHRSA's retention research, certification standards from the American Council on Exercise (ACE) and the National Academy of Sports Medicine (NASM), and consultative fitness selling, this session teaches trainers to set a measurable goal before touching a single machine, to prescribe a package the way a clinician prescribes a plan, and to rebook the next session before the client leaves the floor.
Section 1 — Why Most Assessments Don't Sell Packages (5 min)
Open with the hard truth. A fitness assessment is the single best selling opportunity a trainer ever gets — a motivated person, on the floor, who came to change their body — and most trainers waste it by demonstrating exercises instead of diagnosing goals. IHRSA retention data shows members who train with a coach stay far longer and pay far more, yet most assessments end with *"so, want to train with me?"* and a shrug.
The package sells when the client sees the gap between where they are and where they want to be — and sees you as the bridge.
Set the frame on the whiteboard:
- The broken assessment: Trainer runs the client through a workout, exhausts them, says "you did great," then awkwardly asks if they want to buy sessions.
- The selling assessment: Trainer measures a baseline, ties it to the client's stated goal, prescribes a specific package to close the gap, and rebooks on the spot.
- The conversion truth: People buy packages when they believe the plan will work and trust the person delivering it — not when they're sold hard at the end of a sweaty hour.
End the segment with the ACE / NASM professional standard read aloud: *"You are a coach prescribing a plan, not a salesperson pushing a product."*
Section 2 — The Pre-Assessment Goal Brief (15 min)
The goal brief turns a workout into a consultation. Before the assessment, the trainer captures the client's real goal and motivation in writing. No goal, no package. Have the room fill one out for a real upcoming assessment right now.
Verbatim Pre-Assessment Goal Brief (trainer completes with the client):
- Client: [Name] — [Age] — [Training history: none, returning, current] — [Any injuries or limitations]
- The real goal: [Not "get fit" — get specific: lose 20 lbs by my daughter's wedding in June, deadlift my bodyweight, climb stairs without pain]
- The WHY behind the goal: [The deeper motivation — confidence, a health scare, keeping up with kids]
- The ONE baseline I'll measure today: [Body composition, a movement screen, a strength benchmark, resting heart rate]
- Their past obstacle: [What's stopped them before — time, motivation, not knowing what to do, injury]
- My job in this session: MEASURE AND MIRROR. Diagnose the gap. Prescribe a real plan. Rebook before they leave.
Coach the "one baseline" rule — drawn from ACE and NASM assessment protocols. You measure one clear baseline you can re-test in 30 days, so progress is provable. If the trainer wants to run six tests, push back: *"Pick the one number that proves the plan is working. Re-test it monthly."*
Show the bad example: *"Let's just see how you do on a full workout."* That exhausts the client and proves nothing.
Section 3 — The Measure-and-Mirror Assessment Rule (10 min)
The hardest discipline for a trainer who loves to coach. Drill it.
- Measure first, sweat second. Get the baseline number before the client is tired and emotional.
- Mirror the gap in the client's words. If they said "tone my arms for the wedding," show them today's number and the realistic 90-day number.
- Demonstrate competence, not exhaustion. A smart corrective on a movement fault sells more than crushing them with burpees.
- Connect every drill to the goal. "We're doing this because it directly builds toward your deadlift."
- End with energy left. A client who leaves capable and excited buys; one who leaves nauseous does not.
The one exception to measuring first: if you spot a movement compensation or pain, you address safety and form immediately — client welfare always overrides the sales flow.
What to NEVER say in an assessment (read these aloud, slowly):
- "You really let yourself go, huh?" (shaming a client destroys trust and is unprofessional)
- "This is the last day for our sale, so decide now" (false deadlines violate ethical selling and cheapen your expertise)
- "You'll definitely lose 30 pounds in two months" (guaranteeing specific outcomes is both unethical and physiologically dishonest)
- "Cardio alone will get you there" (oversimplified bad advice to make the sale easy erodes credibility)
- "My package is better than the other trainer's here" (trashing colleagues looks small and breaks team trust)
- Anything that mocks their current fitness or weight — the client is here because they want to change; meet them with respect.
The ACE code of ethics is clear: provide safe, effective, honest guidance and avoid exaggerated claims. In the assessment, you build trust by being a competent coach, not a closer.
Section 4 — The Prescribe-the-Package Conversation (10 min)
When the client sees the gap, the recommendation must feel like a prescription, not a pitch. Run it with the verbatim script.
Verbatim Package Prescription Script (trainer uses these exact words):
Trainer: "So your goal is to deadlift your bodyweight by your birthday in five months, and today your baseline is here. Let me show you exactly how we close that gap."
[Trainer walks through the plan on paper or screen. Specific. Realistic. Tied to the baseline number.]
Trainer: "To do this safely and actually hit it, you need two sessions a week with me for the first eight weeks to build the movement and the strength base. That's our 16-session package."
[Client reacts. Trainer pauses, lets the price land, does not fill the silence.]
Trainer: "Here's exactly what's included, what it costs, and what we'll re-test in 30 days to prove it's working. The number we measured today is how we'll know."
[Client asks questions. Trainer answers honestly, including what the package does NOT include.]
Trainer: "If this plan makes sense to you, let's get you started. Which two days each week work best for you?"
Consultative fitness selling shows that prescribing a specific number of sessions tied to a measurable goal converts far better than offering a vague "package options" menu. The trainer who acts like a clinician — diagnosis, prescription, follow-up test — earns the package.
Do NOT:
- Offer a confusing menu of five package sizes. Prescribe the one that fits the goal, then discuss alternatives only if asked.
- Hide the per-session price or auto-renew terms. Transparent, written pricing protects you and the client.
- Skip the re-test commitment. The 30-day re-measure is what justifies the package and sets up the renewal.
Section 5 — Rebooking, Retention, and the Package Math (15 min)
Package sales compound through rebooking and retention, not just the first close. Build the cadence on a whiteboard.
The math (for one full-time trainer):
- A 16-session package at $70 per session = $1,120 per package sale.
- If a trainer converts 6 assessments per week at a 50% close rate = 3 packages weekly = ~$3,360 per week in package revenue.
- The real money is retention: a client who renews 4 times a year is worth $4,480 annually versus a one-and-done at $1,120 — retention quadruples lifetime value.
Rebook-before-they-leave rule: IHRSA retention research is blunt — the single biggest predictor of a client coming back is having the next session already on the calendar. Never let a client walk out without the next appointment booked.
Common client objections (rehearse the comebacks):
- *"It's too expensive."* — "Let's break it down per session and compare it to the cost of not reaching your goal again this year. What's it worth to actually hit your birthday deadlift?"
- *"I can just work out on my own."* — "You absolutely can, and many people do — but you've told me that hasn't worked the last two times. The package is the accountability and the plan, not just the workout."
- *"Let me think about it."* — "Totally fair. What specifically do you need to think through — the schedule, the cost, or whether the plan will work? Let's solve that now so you're not putting your goal off another month."
Have each trainer name two upcoming assessments and the goal and likely package for each before they leave the room.
Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)
Each trainer leaves with three written commitments, posted in their locker or app:
- I will write a goal brief with one measurable baseline for every assessment this week.
- I will prescribe a specific package tied to the goal — like a clinician, not a salesperson.
- I will rebook the next session before every client leaves the floor — no exceptions.
Close by reading the NASM professional standard aloud: *"We coach honestly, we measure progress, and we earn the package by delivering results — not by pressure."*
Then send the room out with the assessment charter pinned in the team channel, and the reminder that the trainer who proves the plan works keeps the client for years.
FAQ
Q1: How is selling a training package different from selling a gym membership? A: A membership tour sells access and amenities; a package sells a coached outcome. The package motion is consultative — diagnose a goal, measure a baseline, prescribe a plan, prove it with a re-test. It's clinical, not transactional.
Q2: What if the client can't afford the package I prescribed? A: Prescribe what they need, then offer an honest smaller starting point — say, 8 sessions to build the foundation — rather than abandoning the plan. Never shame the budget; meet them where they are and earn the renewal.
Q3: Should I exhaust the client during the assessment to prove they need me? A: No. A client who leaves nauseous doesn't buy and may not come back. Demonstrate competence with a smart correction, measure a clear baseline, and leave them energized and confident in your plan.
Q4: How do I handle "let me think about it"? A: Find out what they actually need to think through — schedule, cost, or belief in the plan — and solve that specific objection on the spot. Vague stalls usually hide one concrete, solvable concern.
Q5: Is it okay to guarantee weight-loss results to close? A: Never. Guaranteeing specific outcomes is dishonest and against ACE and NASM ethics. Instead, commit to a measurable process and a 30-day re-test — that's both honest and more convincing.
Q6: When should I bring up package renewal? A: Build it in from day one with the 30-day re-test. When the baseline number improves, you show the proof and set the next goal — renewal becomes the obvious next step, not an awkward upsell.
Sources
- International Health, Racquet and Sportsclub Association (IHRSA), *Member Retention Report and Profiles of Success*, ihrsa.org.
- American Council on Exercise (ACE), *ACE Personal Trainer Manual and Code of Ethics*, acefitness.org.
- National Academy of Sports Medicine (NASM), *Essentials of Personal Fitness Training and OPT Model*, nasm.org.
- American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM), *Guidelines for Exercise Testing and Prescription*, 11th edition.
- Pat Rigsby, *The Fitness Entrepreneur's Handbook*, 2018.
- Thomas Plummer, *Making Money in the Fitness Business*, Healthy Learning, multiple editions.
- National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA), *Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning*, nsca.com.
- Todd Durkin, *The IMPACT Body Plan and Fitness Coaching Methodology*, 2010.