How This Yoga Teacher Went From Nearly Giving Up On Teaching To Tripling Her Income In Less Than Two Years

I fell in love with yoga.

I took Yoga Teacher Training.

I wanted to start teaching right away.

But, nobody came to my classes.

And, I was broke.

Is that your yoga teaching story?

This was Shayna Hiller’s yoga teaching story, but she didn’t stop there.

Source: http://www.shaynahiller.com

She thought about giving up, but just couldn’t.

So, she figured out how to make money as a yoga teacher.

She believed in herself and her ability to make money doing the thing that she loved the most, in less than two years from when she nearly gave up on teaching yoga altogether.

And now, she’s helping other yoga teachers build their yoga business as well through her YouTube videos, her free ebook, her online course, and her one-on-one business coaching services, Build Your Personal Yoga Business.

I recently came across one of Shayna’s amazing YouTube videos, so I asked her if she would do an interview with me to tell me more about how she built her yoga business and how she’s helping other yoga teachers.

Here’s what she had to say.

You can also watch our full interview here:

Tell me a little about your background. How long have you been a yoga teacher, where do you teach?

I have been teaching yoga for 15 years. I’m originally from New Jersey. I went to college, and then I found that I still just didn’t really find a passion.

And while I was in college, I got exposed to yoga. And I just fell in love with it, so I needed to figure out how could I learn more about this. Because I knew it was affecting me, not just on a physical level, but also energetically, emotionally, spiritually. And I was only 18 years old.

So I decided to do a yoga teacher training because my yoga teacher at the time was encouraging me. She said, “Listen if you have the time, go to Costa Rica.” So I did my training there. And, I’ve been teaching ever since.

I live in LA and I currently only teach at one studio. I teach only four public yoga classes a week. The studio is called The Yoga Collective in Venice Beach, Calif.

Source: https://www.facebook.com/ShaynaHiller/

And this is new, because for many years, probably for the past decade, I have been teaching all over, at like five studios, sometimes up to 20 classes a week.

So, for me to actually be able to say, with joy, that I only teach four yoga classes a week, yes, it’s pretty awesome I have to say.

You also have an e-book and e-course on how to build your yoga business. How long have you been helping other yoga teachers build their businesses? How did that get started?

Source: Shayna Hiller

I’ve been doing that for about 2-1/2 years. I got started with that because after my yoga teacher training and after teaching for several years I got really steeped into yoga and meditation as a practice for myself and teaching.

And then, just by who knows what magical graceful energies, I was exposed to the idea of entrepreneurialism, and finding your purpose, and finding your voice, and all of this stuff about how I have some mission to serve.

I started investing in various programs for entrepreneurs or people who wanted to take their life and their career to the next level.

I must say that even though I was curious about it, I had a lot of resistance because in the beginning of my yoga career I was not comfortable with charging money for my services. I hadn’t learned anything about business. And I do not come from a family of entrepreneurs, so I just felt strange about it.

Yet there was still something here. I saw other people who were serving on a much bigger level and opening up to that flow of abundance.

So I had a really good friend who was also a yogi. And he’s also an entrepreneur, and he told me, “Listen, if you want to make more money, why don’t you start thinking of yourself as an entrepreneur instead of just running around to teach yoga at studios all the time?”

And I’m like, “Well, how?”

He goes, “Well you have information that people want, you’ve been making a living teaching yoga for the past 10 years, so why don’t you teach people how to do that and just give them something for free.”

So, I wrote the ebook and I started doing some YouTube videos and that’s how my business started in that realm of helping yoga teachers build their business. And, you could call it, their confidence. Because if you have confidence, you can do anything.

Tell me about what it was like when you first started teaching yoga and when you nearly gave up on teaching yoga?

Yeah, well going back to running around and teaching 15 to 20 classes a week, when I first started teaching yoga…

Some people do yoga teacher training and they don’t even have the intention of teaching or they just do it for their own personal growth. And they never teach.

But, I wanted to teach immediately and I started right away.

And nobody came to my classes.

I was teaching at a very small women’s fitness center and I didn’t know what I was doing. I was getting paid maybe $15 a class.

And because I didn’t have any formal business training, or understanding of really what my vision was, I felt like a chicken without a head. And it kind of just escalated. I was still living in New Jersey at the time.

I moved to New York City and I was teaching there, and taking the subway all over the city, teaching back-to-back classes, and not feeling inspired. And not being able to make ends meet.

I was living in a studio apartment with a roommate. Literally, our beds were two feet apart and I loved her and I loved the apartment, but I mean, that’s all I could do, you know?

I was sharing a studio and I was like alright, this is it, this is the life of a yoga teacher. And I subscribed to that. I believed that. It was kind of a dead end street for me and it I was very close to giving up, because I was like, this path cannot move me to abundance and I have to create something else.

And then I just chose to pivot and even if I didn’t know how it was gonna look, I felt like because I was exposing myself to other modalities of career, understanding abundance and purpose.

I’m like, but I’m good at teaching yoga, I like it. So how can I make this more lucrative?

I knew that if I gave up, I knew it intuitively, I couldn’t give up actually. I couldn’t. I wanted to.

I started looking for jobs at retail stores. It was getting to that point, but I knew I needed to figure out a way.

And that’s where I started using my resources, using tools, reading books and started taking action, which was scary.

So then, how were you able to turn your career around and start making money? Is it just luck?

A lot of people, a lot of clients, say, “It’s just luck.”

I say there’s no such thing as luck.

We all have an intuition. We all have some sort of inner intelligence and guidance that we can either listen to, or not.

And listening to it usually will require some sort of an action that we normally don’t take.

It’s kind of like being in a yoga class when an instructor is like, “All right, it’s time for inversions.” And I’m like, I’m gonna go to the bathroom now, right?

Go into it even if you can’t do a handstand. You still are going to go through and experience what that’s like — whoa, this is scary. I’ve never done this before. Or, wow this is exciting.

Source: https://www.facebook.com/ShaynaHiller/

The way in which we relate to it is unique and personal.

But just because it’s scary does not mean it’s bad.

So for me what really shifted things is, I had always had this dream of moving to California, moving across the country. I was like, how am I ever going to afford that? I used to get caught up in the logistics of things. How am I going to get yoga teaching jobs?

And call it grace, call it timing, I don’t know what it was. But something came in, and I just chose. I figured it out, and I used my savings.

I found a six month lease in a studio apartment that was much less money than what I was paying in New York City. And it was my own.

Was it glamorous? No, but it was right in the heart of Venice Beach, where I wanted to be.

I contacted one yoga studio. I told myself, even though I can’t pay my rent on one yoga studio, I contacted them. It was somehow aligned, and they said, “Yes, when you get here let’s have a meeting, we’d love to have you teach for us.”

And to me that was like a grounding cord. I’m like, I’ve got a place to teach, and I’m going to trust the rest.

And I shipped my car and within 10 days I moved to LA, and I’ve been there ever since, and it’s been five years.

It’s grown, and it’s evolved. And I think through meditation and trusting in the unknown, but taking that leap of faith based on intuition, not based on greed, not based on fear, but really based on, I need to do this for my health.

And that’s what I teach. I think it’s important to guide people into making sure that it is their intuition and being okay with one step at a time, nothing abrupt.

I did it in a very step-by-step manner. But ultimately, I did go into something that I didn’t know how it was going to turn out. But, if I didn’t do it, I would have regretted it.

That’s what turned things around.

And, choosing to see myself as an entrepreneur.

I think a lot of yoga teachers are very attached or at the mercy of a studio.

But, you’re not necessarily an employee, you’re an independent contractor.

And we’re kind of desperate to get classes and desperate to sell. At least I was, so I know how that feels.

It wasn’t until I started seeing myself as, “I’m a business,” “I have a say,” “I can say no to things,” and “I can name my price.” And whoa, that’s kind of crazy. And I started to own that.

I started to gain the confidence around that and it started to align what I wanted financially, and energetically.

Is it really possible for yoga teachers or yoga studio owners to make money and have a thriving business?

One hundred thousand percent yes.

One million percent yes.

To the extent that you believe that’s true, absolutely.

And studio owners as well.

For studio owners, obviously, having yoga teacher trainings as part of your program or workshops is probably crucial, depending on where you live, and how much your overhead is, and thinking outside the box.

For yoga teachers, yeah, that’s what I teach.

I teach people how to be creative, how to think outside of the box.

Yoga teaching is not limited to a studio.

That doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t teach in the studios. It’s a wonderful way to gain exposure, to share your skills, to even find your voice so that you can develop the confidence to perhaps offer corporate programs, or workshops, or retreats, or work one-on-one with clients privately.

I’ll give you this little tidbit, but yoga is not just postures right? As we all know, yoga is life. And if you study yogic philosophy it’s everything from your food, to your self care, to meditation, your breaths.

And so, as a yoga teacher you can offer life coaching. I don’t call it life coaching. You can call it wellness coaching, because yoga, and life, and wellness, and health are all in the same umbrella.

Now, I think it’s important as a leader, as a yoga healer to feel comfortable enough to share your magic in that way, which is why it’s important to do training.

It’s important to do even business training. It’s important to continue building yourself so that you have the confidence.

And that’s why I start by sharing things for free. I have a YouTube channel. I build loyalty. I build trust with my people. And that’s a beautiful exchange.

Let’s talk about marketing. What kind of marketing do you as a yoga instructor? Social media, blog, paid traffic, word of mouth?

As a yoga teacher, these days, I don’t really market myself other than I teach yoga. I don’t even put my schedule up, since I only teach at one studio.

I used to, and for new yoga teachers, I would recommend to choose two social media outlets. Unless of course you happen to be passionate about four, and you can somehow have the energy and time to tend to all the social media outlets.

Source: https://www.instagram.com/shaynahiller/

But I don’t. In fact, I’m even getting away from Facebook a little bit unless it is paid ads, which I only use for retreats and sometimes workshops.

I also create events and I’ll invite people to events whether it’s a retreat or a workshop.

But if you’re a new yoga teacher and you’re teaching at the studios, it’s nice to put your schedule up so people know what you’re doing, but make sure you’re consistent about it.

I have a Facebook business page, which I don’t use as much anymore, but I did.

I feel like there are phases for marketing. And for yoga teachers it’s important to know that, so that you can use it, but not start feeling like you’re forcing it because things are gonna flow and change.

And so I’ve gone mostly to Instagram, and to Instagram stories for marketing things like retreats.

I primarily do my four public classes, monthly workshops at local yoga studios, and retreats abroad.

In the beginning of my career I ran retreats that not only did I not break even, but I had to pay. I lost money. And I wanted to quit. I was like, what the hell, this doesn’t make logical sense.

And gratefully, I had my own business coach at the time that says, “You know what, this is actually the beginning.” Being okay to not make money, but have an experience and learn. And I actually needed that.

I needed to actually run a retreat and figure out all the kinks. And then from there I kept going. And I quadrupled my attendance the following year because I stayed the course.

And then for my yoga business program, YouTube is owned by Google. So, I started a YouTube channel.

I actually did a Google keyword search to figure out what people were looking for.

And people are looking for how to make money teaching yoga, for how to become a yoga teacher, for how to succeed as a yoga teacher.

Because I know for myself I struggled.

So because I went through it, I feel like we can only teach what we have experienced.

And you’ll experience more, we’re all growing in our lives.

But there is probably a hurdle that you’ve overcome. And I was trying to figure out what that was. And I was trying to figure out something super glamorous.

And I figured out how to go from wanting to give up on teaching to making enough money to live in Venice Beach, Calif., on my own you know? And having free time and traveling, and all of this magical stuff.

So, I decided to create an info product for that, but I started with YouTube.

And I have to say that, I’ve grown my mailing list. I’ve been selling product purely from YouTube. It’s magical. So if you are willing to put yourself out there, and you have something to offer people, it works.

I do have my ebook, which upsells to my course. It’s a really powerful tool.

Occasionally I do paid ads, but I’m not big with that right now. I probably could be but not yet, not right now.

What’s been the most effective marketing method for you? Why do you think that is?

YouTube for sure.

YouTube and word of mouth I would say are probably the most powerful because they have a big reach.

Don’t underestimate the power of word of mouth. And getting out there with physical human beings and going on a coffee date.

And doing workshops or whatever it is, because especially with all the social media and technology, it’s easy to hide behind the screen.

And while that can be effective, your energy is the most effective, your physical presence.

What about blogs? Have you done much in the way of blogs?

Yes. I mean I have a website. I was writing regular blogs on my regular Shayna Hiller website.

I don’t really do it for my yoga business, but my blogs have shifted more to my YouTube channel because I feel like I’m better at speaking on video than I am at writing. I think we all have a modality that works.

A lot of my business coaching clients, when I present the opportunity, hey, why don’t you do a YouTube channel, it’s like a hard no. It’s not gonna happen.

But what I do get often is, well I love writing. And there’s this really sincere knowing, and desire, and energy in that direction. I say, go ahead because I don’t have that.

And I felt when I was blogging that I was forcing myself to do it. And it would take me so long. But I felt like I should, so for many years I forced myself.

I’ll blog for other companies sometimes just for cross promotion.

But I think that my blogging these days goes more into my captions for Instagram.

I write poetry. And my blogging comes in the form of poems these days, so again, on that note of flow and evolution, I think that our voice and our message comes through in different ways.

For some people it’s blogs, for some people it’s videos, for some people it’s poetry, for some people it’s dance. For some people it’s a beautiful piece of art. For some people it’s a meal. You know? So I don’t blog as much anymore.

There’s a subtle energy I believe. If you’re forcing something, and it doesn’t mean that you don’t have to put forth effort.

What kind of content do you share with your audience (on social media and/or blog)?

I am a certified health coach, in addition to being a yoga instructor, so I share a lot about self love. And that’s really my mission right now.

So through the body, through nutrition, and I share through poetry, I share through images of food, self care and self love.

Now as a yoga business coach, I share a lot of the problems, and the issues and the blockages that yoga teachers are facing such as finding their voice, confidence, the potential blocks to being able to make more money.

I have about 50 or 60 videos on YouTube that happen to cover topics such as how to weave spirituality into a yoga class. How to adapt your yoga classes to meet the needs of your students. How to hold space literally, the blocks to self confidence, gaining a healthier relationship with money.

People from all over the world are emailing me every single day saying, “Hey I’m having this problem, what happens when a student is doing their own thing in class and I’m trying to hold space but they’re kind of blocking the energy, how do I deal with that?”

“How do I market my own retreat or even start to figure out what my truth is so that it can differentiate me from other yoga teachers?”

How to avoid competition, all of this.

So, I go very detailed with the yoga business.

And as a yoga teacher, really what I share in my content is what inspires me and that inspires others.

I also share my struggles with my eating disorder in the past and how I overcame that.

And how yoga has actually helped me improve the quality of my life, my business, my relationships. You know, it’s all connected.

I try to share from personal experience as opposed to, hey I know this. You know what I mean? Like I know more.

But people want to know why. Who are you? So I share from experience as well.

I love all the value that you’re sharing. You’re not selling all the time, right? You have to give value, you have to help, you have to come from a place of wanting to help before you can sell.

That is so important.

And I remember the first time I heard that.

I’ve taken several business trainings as well, and the first time I heard that, I got pissed.

I swear.

I was like, what? I don’t want to. I don’t have time.

How am I gonna have the means to create free products? That’s a waste of time.

And I wanted to get right to the product. I wanted to get right to the selling.

And I was proven that, that doesn’t work.

And I invested thousands of dollars into a website, and I was going to create all this stuff. And it was like crickets.

Like, why isn’t anyone coming? Because I had no free content.

And I actually didn’t really care. I was actually, at the time more concerned with myself. And now I’m not.

I’m more concerned with helping people, because all it takes is truly helping someone and having that reflected back.

“You helped me. I was able to gain five private yoga clients based on what you said.”

Or, “I feel more confident, and I was feeling anxious and now I feel hopeful.”

That’s the fuel that keeps me doing this.

And the money, I can truly, honestly swear, say, is secondary.

It’s like a bonus. I find, oh my God, I made a sale. Wow!

But I get more excited when I find an email coming in from a client telling me about a success that they had.

You probably have more money coming in because of that attitude that you have and because of that focus on just wanting to help.

Yeah. Because there’s value, and energy, and prosperity come in so many forms.

And you know, these are things that I heard of course. I had heard them in the past, they inspired me, but still there was this disbelief or something.

Source: Shayna Hiller

They’re like, sounds good, but give me money you know?

But it’s very subtle. And this is why I think it’s connected.

So much to yoga in general and the path of yoga, and non-attachment, and service, and karma yoga, and finding your passion, and alignment.

I believe that we all have a unique mission.

And it doesn’t have to be that I’m the next Gandhi. It doesn’t have to be this big out there.

It can be very subtle and in the background.

And I feel that through meditation and self care, it can help support that trusting in that deep inherent knowing of what we’re meant to do.

How does sharing information, or even, DOES sharing information on your social media pages, or blog, or your YouTube channel, bring in new clients?

Yeah, it always does.

I used to post offers more directly, saying things like, “Hey, by the way I offer health coaching sessions, and I have package rates, and contact me for more information.”

I probably haven’t done that in five years because on your Instagram or Facebook profile, you put what you do. And if you post enough, people are going to be interested enough to click on you and figure out, she’s a yoga teacher, or she’s a health coach.

So I don’t post, “come and be my client,” but I’ll post things on eating, or where I’m teaching, or an upcoming retreat, or just things I’m doing with my life that people will ask questions.

They’ll say, “Hey, what was that food you were eating?” Or, “What was the recipe of that?” And I’ll give them the recipe.

Or I’ll tell them the answer, and I’ll also say, if you want to know more I’m happy to talk more.

And sometimes people will ask very intricate questions that I literally don’t have time to answer. Or they’ll ask a question that’s specifically geared towards them, and I don’t know enough about them, and my response would not be adequate to them.

So I’ll say, “Listen, you know, you should sign up for a coaching session with me because I won’t be able to answer this unless I know more about you.” And rarely would someone say no. They’re like, “Oh really?” Because it’s a personal invitation.

So it definitely leads to clients.

And YouTube especially because what I share on YouTube is valuable information and it’s also segmented so it’s partial and it’s connected to my ecourse or private one-on-one business coaching.

What are your top tips for yoga teachers who might be struggling financially, or who are just getting started and trying to bring new clients in?

Top tips — watch my YouTube channel, because it’s free. And I’ll give you 50 tips on that.

One is, just try to meditate on or envision what you really want to be doing with your career. Instead of getting lost in desperately trying to find yoga classes.

Another is, start to see yourself as an entrepreneur, as a business.

Do things that make you happy.

Do things that inspire you.

Source: Shayna Hiller

In a market, in a business, that has to do with serving others and healing, you yourself have to. More so than someone who’s sitting in a cubicle all day working for someone else.

As someone who’s going to be out there serving others to stay inspired, you have to stay inspired.

Self care is even more imperative for a yoga teacher.

And it’s so easy, I know from experience, to skip that part. And then all of a sudden I’m like, why am I not inspired to teach anymore? And that comes through.

Be willing to ask for help.

Be willing to get a coach.

Be willing to start healing your relationship with money because you deserve to make money for what you’re doing because money is an energy.

These are some tips. There’s many others, but hopefully that’s enough to get the ball rolling and to get you thinking in a different direction.

And none of this will take away from the spiritual component. In fact, it will enhance it.

I thought of myself to be a certain type of person for many years. I used to teach for free because I thought that money was dirty and I shouldn’t be charging because this is yoga.

And it’s like whoa, I’m a different person now because I opened up to that flow.

And it has actually grounded me deeper because money is our root chakra.

And if we’re not going to get down and dirty, and connect with that, it’s hard to sustain in this society.

If you want to go move somewhere and become a monk, sure, don’t ask for money, it’s fine.

But know that there’s so much more abundance. And abundance comes in all senses of the word. For you, for your clients, for your students, when you open up to it.

How can people find you to get more info?

Instagram: @shaynahiller, @buildyouryogabiz

Facebook: Shayna Hiller

Website: http://www.buildyouryogabiz.com/

YouTube: Build Your Personal Yoga Business

Lessons Learned From Shayna

I had an amazing time interviewing Shayna and learning from her experiences.

Here are a few key points I think are the most helpful for yoga teachers, or other health and wellness professionals as well, who may be struggling.

    • Listen To Your Intuition: Shayna had to look inside herself and determine if being a yoga teacher was really what she wanted to do. She knew she loved it, but was that it, or was it something else? Look inside yourself to determine what you really desire. Meditate or envision what you really want to be doing with your career.
    • See Yourself As An Entrepreneur: This was a turning point for Shayna, when she she realized that she wasn’t an employee of a yoga studio, but she was a business herself, as a yoga teacher. She could ask for the rates that she wanted. She didn’t have to work at places that she didn’t enjoy. She had choices and a voice.
    • Be Willing To Take Risks: Shayna decided to move to California from New York on a chance because that’s what she really wanted and felt moved to do. She took a risk to do something that she loved.
    • Think Outside The Box: Figure out what you can uniquely provide to your students or to a yoga studio that you would like to teach at. Provide life coaching, wellness coaching, health coaching, in addition to yoga teaching. Think about what makes you unique and create a new offering that other yoga teachers aren’t.
    • Choose Two Social Media Outlets: Don’t spread yourself too thin on social media. Choose a couple that you like to do and stick to those.
    • Provide Valuable Content To Your Audience: Whether you’re doing YouTube videos like Shayna, or you’d rather blog, share Instagram stories, or post updates on Facebook, make sure that what you’re sharing is valuable to your audience. Don’t just sell. Offer free information first before you try to sell anything. If you provide value first, the selling will come easily, without much effort.
    • Be Willing To Ask For Help: Whether it’s from a business coach, like Shayna, or by outsourcing your marketing or content creation, or just asking a friend or another business owner for advice, be willing to ask for help, if you need it.

Watch The Full Interview

Asking For Help

If you do need more help creating valuable content for your yoga or health/wellness business and reaching more of your dream customers, I would love to talk to you!

I help health and wellness businesses consistently bring in new clients every month using Omnipresence Content Marketing.

If you would like your yoga, health, or wellness business to become Omnipresent to your dream customers, let’s schedule a call today.

Schedule a Free Discovery Session With Me

5 Steps To Getting More Clients From A Personal Trainer Who Was Broke, Then Built A Fitness Empire

If you’re the owner of a fitness, yoga, or Pilates business, or run another kind of health or wellness business, you’re hopefully not broke.

But, you might still be on a shoestring budget and wondering what you should be doing to bring in new clients more consistently.

Bedros Keuilian actually was broke.

Bedros Keuilian (Source: http://ptpower.com)
Bedros Keuilian (Source: http://ptpower.com)

Now he makes a lot of money.

He created a fitness empire as the founder and CEO of Fit Body Boot Camp, named one of Entrepreneur Magazine’s Top 15 Franchises.

He is also “a fanatical reader and student of marketing, selling, personal development, and delivering world class client service.”

He also coaches and teaches fitness professionals how to get more clients.

In his “Fitness Marketing 101” video he shares his process for creating a funnel that helps fitness businesses turn leads into long-term clients.

Fitness Marketing 101Bedros calls this Fitness Marketing 101, but says in the video, “This isn’t ground level stuff that you should ignore.”

Instead, he says it’s “foundational stuff” that all fitness businesses should be doing to bring in new clients.

All health, wellness, and fitness businesses can learn from this model and implement these tactics to start bringing in new clients right away.

80% of Your Clients Come From the Internet

8020 RuleBedros first explains the 80/20 rule, which states that 80% of the causes come from 20% of the effects, or 80% of the sales come from 20% of the clients.

In this case, Bedros says that 80% of your clients come from the Internet, meaning Facebook or Google searches.

Which is why, even if you’re a local business, you still need to put a lot of effort into your online presence.

People find and research businesses online before they’ll ever go there in person.

And, before you tell me that Facebook is dead and no one uses it anymore, you should know that even as of early 2018, the Pew Research Center’s social media use study stated that 68 percent of U.S. adults report that they are Facebook users, and about three-quarters of those users access Facebook daily.

(Source: http://www.pewinternet.org)

There are other platforms, of course.

Instagram is a notable one, especially with the younger demographic, and especially in the health and wellness world.

But, the point is that your business needs to be online because that’s where you’re going to get the majority of your customers.

Because so much of your business will come from the Internet, that’s where you should focus most of your efforts.

Bedros talks through five steps to create a funnel on the Internet that converts leads into long-term clients.

Let’s break down those five steps.

Step 1: Get Some Leads

Step 1 LeadsAt the top of the funnel is Leads.

You have to create a place online that people can show some initial interest in your business.

Leads will progress through the funnel to become Prospects, then Short-Term Clients, then Long-Term Clients, if you follow this method.

To start getting these leads, Bedros recommends setting up a Facebook Business Page, which most businesses have already, but if you don’t, they’re easy to set up.

Once you have your Facebook Page set up for your business, you will start posting what Bedros calls “positive reinforcement messages” to your page, along with pictures of people working out (or using your services) in your facility regularly.

He recommends posting to your page at least three times a day.

Bedros also suggests tagging the clients who are in your pictures so their friends can see them working out, and you can start to build your audience on your Facebook page.

If you have just created a Facebook Page for your business, I would also recommend asking all of your existing customers to like your page.

You can do this through your email newsletters, a sign in your studio or office, as well as posting it on your website.

Tell your existing customers or clients that you have a new Facebook Page, you’re going to start sharing valuable content there, and you’d appreciate if they followed you.

Then, you need to make sure you are actually posting valuable content on your page.

I like to share three different kinds of content:

  1. Edu-tainment Content
  2. Customer Stories Content
  3. Offer Content

I explain each of those in more detail in this post about Omnipresence Content Marketing.

Step 1 Recap:

  1. Create your Facebook Business Page.
  2. Invite existing customers to like your page.
  3. Start posting valuable content to your page, tag your clients, and ask them to share.

Step 2: Turn Leads Into Prospects

Step 2 ProspectsOnce you’ve had your Facebook Business Page up and running for a while and have been posting good content, then it’s time to start turning those leads into prospects.

Bedros says that once your page has at least 200 likes, it’s time to start using Facebook to advertise to those fans.

But, you’re not advertising your services.

Instead, you’re using the ads to lead people from your Facebook page to what Bedros calls a “squeeze page,” but others call a landing page.

This is a web page that offers a free report, nutrition guide, maybe a free video training with three yoga poses that help with back pain, or some kind of free information piece that your audience will find helpful to download.

You give this report to people for free after they give you their email address.

Squeeze page
Leads come from your Facebook Business Page. Then, you drive those leads to a “squeeze page” to turn them into prospects.

Once someone has given you their email address, they have now turned from a lead to a prospect and moved down the funnel.

One note about Facebook ads — I would not just advertise to the people that like your page, because they may already be mostly existing clients of yours.

They’re already down at the bottom of the funnel.

Instead, with Facebook ads you can choose to advertise to the people that like your page and their friends.

This is why you want all of your existing customers to like your page.

You want to start spreading the message to the friends of your customers about who you are and the services you offer.

You want to turn your clients’ friends from leads to prospects and, eventually into customers also.

You can also create audiences within Facebook ads to advertise to people local to your area, if you need to reach beyond the people who already like your page, or if you’re still working to build the audience of your page.

Step 2 Recap:

  1. Create a landing page that offers something for free, in exchange for their email address.
  2. Start using Facebook ads to advertise this free offer to the people who like your page, plus their friends.
  3. Consider creating a local audience within Facebook to advertise this landing page to also.

Step 3: Turn Prospects Into Short-Term Clients

Step 3 Short Term clientsOnce you’ve collected some email addresses from your landing page, you now have prospects.

These people are more than just leads.

They’ve liked your Facebook page.

They saw your ad.

They liked what you were offering.

And now they’ve given you their email address.

They’re telling you that they’re interested in what you’re offering.

Now, it’s time to convert these prospects into short-term clients.

Once you have an email list, you should be sending emails on a consistent basis, at least once a month with updates on what you’re doing, offer some valuable information that will help them progress on their health and wellness journey, and offer specials, deals, tell about upcoming classes, etc.

It’s important to remember when you’re sharing content with your audience to serve first, and sell later.

Always offer value first before you try to sell.

But, for people that have just joined your list, you’ll want to send them a series of automatic emails.

An email newsletter tool like MailChimp or Constant Contact can send out autoresponder emails that you set up ahead of time.

The first email can go out right after someone signs up for your list welcoming them, giving them information about your business, and the benefits they can get from your services.

A series of three to five emails spread out over one to two weeks is a good way to introduce your prospects to your business, provide value in those emails, and then eventually offer them a short-term program.

In the video, for fitness businesses specifically, Bedros recommends offering a short-term program, or a “low-barrier offer.”

He gives examples like:

  • 14-Day Fat Furnace Program
  • 21-Day Rapid Fat Loss Program
  • 28-Day Fat Belly Program
  • 16-Day Sexy Slim Down

Bedros recommends that your short-term program is under 30 days, and is under $100.

You offer this short-term program to your prospects, who now “know, like, and trust you,” because:

  • They’ve seen your Facebook content, and maybe they’ve seen that their friends go to your studio or business.
  • They gave you their email address in exchange for that training or content you offered.
  • They’ve received your autoresponder email series that provided additional value and told them about who you are and what you can do for them.

So then, when you offer them this low-barrier offer that is under 30 days and under $100, it’s easy for them to say yes, and try you out for a low commitment.

Step 3 Recap:

  1. Send a series of autoresponder emails to prospects as they join your email list that introduces you and your services.
  2. Add all emails to your main monthly (or even more frequently) email newsletter list as well — always remember to serve first, and sell later.
  3. After providing value to the prospects on your email list, offer a short-term program — something that’s easy to say yes to.

Step 4: Turn Short-Term Clients Into Long-Term Clients

Step 4 Long Term ClientsYou now have new clients who are committed for 30 days or less.

That means you have 30 days (or less) to WOW them!

“Give them the best results, the best experience you can,” Bedros says.

He then recommends that you schedule a nutrition consultation with each of these short-term clients before the 30 days is up.

Nutrition Consult
Provide your short-term clients with a nutrition consultation before their short-term program is up, and offer them a long-term program.

During this consultation, make sure to provide value first — talk to your clients about their health goals, give them recommendations on how to achieve those goals, including nutrition advice, as well as an exercise program.

But, during that consultation you are also going to offer them a long-term package to your facility — a 3-month, 6-month, or 12-month package.

Show them the different kinds of classes or services you offer, explain the benefits, and how signing up for the long term will help them meet their goals.

Depending on the kind of business that you have, this consultation or meeting may take different forms.

You could meet with them in person at your studio, it could be a check-in phone call, or you could even have a new series of autoresponder emails that go out to your short-term clients offering them a discount on long-term packages if they sign up before their initial program is over.

The personal touch of an in-person meeting or phone call with the owner, or an instructor or trainer is nice, if you can do that.

Once you get someone to sign up for a long-term program with you, you have successfully taken them all the way through your client-getting funnel.

Step 4 Recap:

  1. WOW your clients during their short-term program — give them the great results you promised them.
  2. Have a “nutrition consultation” (or something similar) with each short-term client before their initial program is over.
  3. During the consultation, offer a long-term program and show them the benefits they’ll get from signing up.

Step 5: Keep Using That Funnel

Step 5 FunnelOnce you have all the pieces of your funnel in place, and you are starting to move people through the different phases, you’ll want to start driving even more traffic into your funnel.

You can do this in a number of different ways. Bedros lists off a couple in the video, including:

  • Try out additional Facebook (and Instagram) ads to different audiences (especially local audiences) to your “squeeze” page.
  • Create and share YouTube videos with information about the kind of services you provide (or examples of exercises, showing a training session, showing your special equipment, etc.). Include the link to your landing page in the description of the video, so that when people find your video they’ll go to your landing page, see your free report/guide/training, and sign up for your email list.

Other ideas include:

  • Write blog posts with valuable content that help your audience and then use the call to action at the end of the post to lead them to your landing page.
  • Turn the blog posts into social media posts and ads, as well, to build your social media following, and continue to grow your audience (thereby filling in the top of the funnel with those leads).
  • Use the Omnipresence Content Marketing method to test out a lot of different kinds of content on your Facebook page and then boost that content for $1 per day, to help you gain a wider following on your Facebook page, as well as promote your landing page offering.
  • Email your current clients about a referral promotion. Ask them to share a link to your landing page to their friends, and offer a prize or a bonus to everyone who does that.

Speaking of referrals…

Remember at the beginning of the video, I said that Bedros says that 80% of your clients will come from the Internet, so that’s why he focused there?

The other 20% is from referrals (or other offline methods).

So, don’t forget that once you have long-term clients, treat them like gold.

They are also helping you as sales people.

If they think you’re amazing, they’ll tell people.

They’ll write reviews and recommendations, they’ll provide awesome customer testimonials or case studies, and they’ll help you get more customers.

Step 5 Recap:

  1. Keep using that funnel you’ve created.
  2. Keep directing traffic into your funnel. Try out different methods and find out what works best for you.
  3. Treat your existing customers like gold and let them help you fill up your funnel too.

Five-Step Client-Getting ReviewClosing

Bedros Keuilian is the master when it comes to fitness marketing. He’s been doing it for a long time, and this video is only one of MANY videos he’s made to help fitness professionals grow their business.

These strategies he’s proposed for your business work.

Here’s a quick review:

    • Step 1: Get Some Leads. Start your Facebook Business Page, if you haven’t already, and start posting helpful, valuable content regularly. Share with your existing customers and get them to like your page too.
    • Step 2: Turn Leads Into Prospects. Create a “squeeze page” that provides something of value to your leads in exchange for their email address. Use Facebook ads to start driving the leads from your Facebook page to that squeeze page.
    • Step 3: Turn Prospects Into Short-Term Clients. Use autoresponder emails to continue providing value to the prospects on your email list, and then offer them a short-term program. This is a low-barrier offer: less than 30 days and less than $100.
    • Step 4: Turn Short-Term Clients Into Long-Term Clients. Wow these short-term clients — show them everything you’ve got. Before the short-term program is up, provide a nutritional consultation (or some other kind of meeting/phone call) to provide additional value, and also offer a long-term program.
    • Step 5: Keep Using That Funnel. Rinse and repeat. Try new ways of getting more leads and getting people to that squeeze page. And, don’t forget to continue to provide amazing service to your long-term clients — they’ll help you fill up the other 20% of your client-getting.

Watch The Full Video

Need More Help?

If you would like help creating and implementing this system, or any piece of the system, for your fitness, health, or wellness business, I would love to talk to you!

I help health and wellness businesses consistently bring in new clients every month with strategic content marketing that includes blog posts that turn prospects into customers and data-driven Facebook post boosts that help you reach more of your dream customers.

Let’s schedule a call to talk about your business.

Schedule a Free Discovery Session With Me

Ask the Experts: How These 7 Wellness Business Owners Consistently Bring In New Clients

If you’re the owner of a yoga or fitness studio, a chiropractor’s office, holistic healing practice, or another wellness business, you’re probably well aware of the constant struggle to find and bring in new clients.

New clients are the life-force behind your business.

But, finding those new clients can be difficult.

I asked seven top yoga and wellness business owners what they do to consistently bring in new clients.

Here’s what they had to say.

Christine Burke, Liberation Yoga

Christine Burke (Source: www.liberationyoga.com)
(Source: www.liberationyoga.com)

Christine Burke is the co-owner/director of Liberation Yoga in Los Angeles, which was named one of the top 25 yoga studios in Travel + Leisure.

“Our greatest experiment in finding just the right students, who will really benefit from what we have to offer, has always been good old fashioned word of mouth,” Christine said.

She continued, “We have thrived for 14 years by offering an authentic and joyful yoga experience and encouraging our community to share the powerful healing benefits of yoga and the sacred oasis of Liberation, with those they care about.”

Finding your dream customers, providing amazing service to them, and then having those customers share your business with people they know — people who are probably very similar to them — is how many businesses in the yoga and wellness space get new clients.

Providing outstanding service to your existing clients is the first way to encourage that word-of-mouth marketing.

If your clients love you and the service you provide to them, they won’t be able to help but tell their friends about you, and word will spread.

You can also encourage customers to review your business on your website, Facebook, Google, Yelp, and other platforms.

Many people rely on reviews to choose the businesses that they frequent, and if someone sees that a friend of theirs likes your business Facebook page, or has left a positive review for you, that will encourage them to check out your business.

Another way to use the power of word-of-mouth marketing, without relying on your customers actually sharing your business with their friends is to use Facebook post boosting to the people who like your page, plus their friends.

Seema Sondhi, The Yoga Studio

Seema Sondhi (Source: www.theyogastudio.info)
(Source: www.theyogastudio.info)

Seema Sondhi’s The Yoga Studio in New Delhi, India, was also named one of the top 25 yoga studios around the world by Travel + Leisure — the only studio on the list from India, the birthplace of yoga.

“I have always let my students talk about my classes. The students that I get are usually by word of mouth. And also through my website,” said Seema.

A business’s website is an important piece of the puzzle. If your dream clients can’t find you online, they may not find you at all.

When is the last time your wellness business website has been updated?

Do you post new content there regularly to show your potential clients who you are and what you do?

One way to consistently provide new content to your audience is through a blog on your website.

Seema also said, “I have been teaching for almost 20 years and I can say that be true to the subject and knowledge of yoga [is what brings new clients in consistently].”

Being true to yoga.

Being true to the service you provide. Helping first. Provide value. Be service-oriented.

Having a passion for the service, the offering, that you are providing to your clients is an important piece of the puzzle.

It shows. People can tell if you love what you’re doing.

Seema continued, “I have always tried to make the classes interesting and challenging for the students, yet keeping the essence of yoga. I try and not make the practise monotonous, incorporating and always trying to build their interest in the practise to the point that I make them independent so that they can have their own self practise.”

Think about what your clients need, what they are looking for, and provide that to them.

Seema believes that when a student signs up for her classes, she has a few months to teach that student the basics of yoga so they can continue their own self-practice without her.

She’s trying to give her students the foundations they’ll need to continue on even without her.

She’s learned what her students are looking for, so that’s what she provides.

Tim Feldman, Miami Life Center

Tim Feldman (Source: miamilifecenter.com/)
(Source: miamilifecenter.com/)

Miami Life Center was another yoga studio listed on the Travel + Leisure top 25 in the world.

Tim Feldman and Kino MacGregor founded the center in 2006.

When asked what they do bring new clients in, Tim said, “[Provide] quality of service.”

He continued:

“In this case, having yoga knowledgeable and educated teachers who are thoroughly steeped in the tradition of both yoga asana and the underlying philosophy. Our teachers walk the walk. In this way any new student is met with kindness and taught with a solid understanding and wholesome approach to physical, mental and emotional well-being.”

Miami Life Center is committed to its practice, its philosophy, and tradition of yoga.

But, they also make sure that new students are met with kindness and knowledge from the very beginning, starting at the front desk.

“We see it as cardinal that the yoga journey starts at first contact when a new student walks in,” Tim said.

“That means that our front desk staff practice yoga daily too, that they themselves are students who have found benefit and trust in the yoga method and therefore are able to enthusiastically and accurately describe and guide any person into a class right for her/him, offer advice, and help with whatever questions might be present for the new practitioner.”

A wholehearted commitment to the experience that your students or your clients get from you from beginning to end is critical to bringing in, and keeping, customers.

Kia Miller, Radiant Body Yoga

Kia Miller (Source: www.kiamiller.com/)
(Source: www.kiamiller.com/)

Named one of the 10 inspiring yoga teachers you should know on DoYouYoga, Kia Miller, said:

“Everywhere I go I share my deep love of yoga.”

Kia taught yoga at a studio, Yogaworks in LA, for 15 years, but now offers immersive trainings and retreats through her business Radiant Body Yoga.

She said she continues to get clients for her business by:

“Being authentic in all my communications. Creating personal connections with people.”

These are both critical pieces to reaching new clients. Be authentic. Be real. Provide real value.

And create personal connections — both in person, but you can also do this online.

Kia added, “I enjoy creating promotional materials both visually and content wise that reflect what I teach. I love reaching out to inspire people on social media.

Create amazing content that helps people.

Continue your messages that you teach in class or use to help people with your business in your communications online — on your website and your social media sites.

Help people in an authentic and personal way, in whatever method you are using to communicate.

Melissa Kleehammer, Beyond Center for Yoga

Melissa Kleehammer (Source: www.beyond2yoga.com)
(Source: www.beyond2yoga.com)

“Word-of-mouth hands down,” said Melissa Kleehammer, studio owner and certified instructor at Beyond Center for Yoga in New York.

She continued:

“When I put effort into my training and bringing more into my classes, my students notice and tell their friends.”

When you provide a valuable service that helps people, your clients will notice.

When they see the amazing things you’re doing for them, they can’t help but share your service with others — they want other people to experience the same things that they are and to get the benefits.

Melissa also said, “My close second is sending personal newsletters with a nice message, instead of just promoting events and classes.”

This is a great point as well — Serve First, Sell Later.

Sending email newsletters is the same — make sure that they are not just selling, or promoting your services.

If you are using an email newsletter to communicate with your customers, it should include valuable information that they can learn from and get something out of, not just a promotion.

Meagan Mae, Wellness Entrepreneurs United

Meagan Mae (Source: Meagan Mae)
(Source: Meagan Mae)

“Build community,” is how Meagan Mae, founder of Wellness Entrepreneurs United responded to the question of how she gets new clients.

She said, “As a career and small business coach for inspiring leaders, I build digital communities to bring people together around common interests.”

To build community for her business, Meagan uses Facebook Groups.

“Facebook Groups are a powerful tool to manage a community approach,” she said.

Meagan’s group, the Wellness Entrepreneurs United Facebook Group, has more than 1,000 wellness professionals collaborating to share wellness with the world together.

She said:

“The idea is to connect professionals together to help one another and give them the tools and resources they need to succeed through quality content, connection, and collaboration.”

Depending on the type of business you are running, a Facebook group may also be a good way for you to create community with your audience.

Bre Nourse, Yoga Teacher, Writer, Photographer

Bre Nourse (Source: www.brenourse.com)
(Source: www.brenourse.com)

“I have found the best way to bring clients in to my business is through responsiveness,” said Bre Nourse, who is a yoga teacher, writer, and photographer.

She said:

“For every email, DM, comment, subscriber, etc., I reach out immediately to personally communicate my gratitude for their message/comment. This practice has led me to a major growth in not only clients but in authentic community engagement.”

This is an amazing practice to get into and continue, even when your wellness business might grow beyond just you.

You or a team member in your business needs to respond to every message you get from a customer or potential customer.

People buy from people.

Your customers or clients want to see that you are a person, someone who can help them, someone who cares about them.

So, respond to their messages, see how you can help them, thank them for joining your email list or Facebook page.

Authentic community engagement can go a long way to grow any business, but especially a business that is trying to help people be well.

Key Takeaways

Bringing new clients in to your wellness business does not need to be difficult or take a lot of extra effort, as these seven wellness business owners showed in their responses.

Here are the six client-getting recommendations these experts recommended:

  • Word of Mouth: Be good to your existing clients. Give them an amazing, valuable service, and they won’t be able to help but talk to people about you.

    Of course, you can always encourage your customers to share, or even use my Omnipresence Content Marketing technique to help spread the word to the friends of your audience without them having to actually tell their friends.
  • Be Authentic and True: Especially in the wellness business world. Be authentic with your customers. Provide a great service that you believe in and that will shine through everything that you do.
  • Quality Content: A website (even better with regular blog posts), a social media presence, an email newsletter. Several owners mentioned their content as a way to bring in new clients, but providing quality, helpful, valuable content on these platforms is important. Serve first, sell later.
  • Share Your Knowledge & Passion: These business owners know the value of the service they provide is in their knowledge and passion they have for the service they’re providing. They make sure that their staff — even front desk staff — are educated and knowledgeable, so they can give their clients the very best service.

They are also passionate about what they do, and they share that passion and love wherever they go. That shines through their businesses and attracts clients.

  • Create Personal Connections & Be Responsive: I loved Bre’s response about being responsive to the people that get in touch with her about her business. Respond to questions and comments promptly. Engage in conversations. Make personal connections with your customers. This is good customer service, but also shows people that you are interested in working with them and can help them.
  • Build Community: In the yoga and wellness world, community is important. Build community through your social media sites, maybe with a Facebook group, or just on your business page. You can also do this in person with trainings and workshops, and then continue the conversation online with your community after the events. When you have a community, they can help each other, but you also have a built-in audience for your services.

What strategies do you use to bring new clients consistently into your wellness business?

Do you need help finding and attracting more of your dream customers to your wellness business?

I help health and wellness businesses consistently bring in new clients every month using Omnipresence Content Marketing, and I’d love to talk to you about how I can help you reach those dream customers.

Let’s schedule a call to talk about your business.

Schedule a Free Discovery Session With Me

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