Most trainers put a lot of energy into what happens during the session.
They get better at programming. They clean up their cueing. They learn more about anatomy, recovery, nutrition, all of it. Over time, the actual training usually improves quite a bit.
And that’s good. It’s also not where most clients decide whether they’re staying.
Clients experience way more than the hour they’re with you. They experience the lead-up, the follow-up, the random in-between moments that don’t feel important when you’re busy but absolutely register on their side.
How easy was it to get started?
Did anything feel confusing or awkward early on?
Did they ever feel like they were bothering you just to ask a basic question?
A lot of good trainers lose people here, not because the coaching is bad, but because everything around the coaching feels slightly loose.
Intake happens over text because it’s faster. Payment gets pushed to later because the session went long. Program details live partly in your head, partly in a notes app, partly in a message you sent once and forgot about.
None of this feels wrong when you’re doing it. It’s just how things tend to evolve when you’re juggling clients all day.
From the client side, though, it adds up. Not into a big complaint, just into a vague sense that things are being figured out as they go. That little bit of uncertainty shows up in small ways — missed check-ins, slower replies, less urgency to book the next block.
The upgrade most trainers ignore isn’t another certification or a better split.
It’s tightening the stuff around the training.
When scheduling, payments, messages, and programs all live in one place, it quietly removes a lot of those weird moments. There’s less back-and-forth. Fewer “wait, where was that?” situations. Fewer things that need to be remembered later.
Using GoGetter doesn’t suddenly make you more professional or turn your business into something it isn’t. It just takes pressure off the relationship. You’re not constantly filling gaps, and the client isn’t either.
Nothing about it feels flashy. It just feels easier to be a client.
And when it’s easy to be a client, people usually don’t overthink whether they’re staying or leaving. They just keep showing up.