|
Choosing a personal trainer ● Trainer Jana Beutler
Holland, with SWAT — Strength Wellness Athletic Training — suggests people
ask the following questions when interviewing trainers: ● Do they have certification? ● What is their education and fitness background? ● What is their experience with special-needs clients? ● What is their specialty? ● Why did they become a personal trainer? ● Do they have insurance? ● To which professional organizations do they belong? ● How do they measure progress? ● What industry magazines do they read? ● Rick Friedman of Select Fitness also asks: ● What is their philosophy on health and fitness? ● What is their cancellation policy? ● What are their references? |


Published:
02.09.2006
Flex caution in trainer search
Clients, personal trainers should be realistic about goals
By
Kimberly Matas
It's
nearly four months before the official start of the shorts-and-swimsuits
season.
You have a
little disposable income in your pocket and want to hire a trainer to tone those abs and shape those thighs.
But where to start?
Jana Beutler Holland, with SWAT — Strength Wellness Athletic
Training, with locations on the Northwest and East sides, and Rick Friedman of
Foothills-based Select Fitness, have suggestions for choosing a qualified
personal trainer.
First, say
both, a qualified professional will perform a fitness assessment on a client
and discuss the client's goals.
The
purpose of the initial assessment,
Clients
should know their limitations, Friedman said.
"People
should walk in with realistic expectations and trainers should be realistic in
what they can do," he said.
Cathy
Whalen, a 43-year-old mother, trains twice a week at SWAT. Training sessions at
SWAT run from $10 for small-group sessions to $75 for one-on-one training with
a Master Personal Trainer like Ron Holland. At Select Fitness individual
training sessions are $55.
With
personal trainers, Whalen said, "You get their undivided attention.
They're right there with you … for the whole hour. That way they can
demonstrate how to do each exercise and each technique. You get the feedback
right there and the education you get talking to someone as you go along."
Certification
not everything
Education,
certification and professional affiliations are important to ask trainers about
because the field is not government-regulated. A college degree in a fitness
field is good, said
However,
Friedman said, potential clients should consider more than certification when
interviewing a trainer.
"What
I tell everybody … is, certifications are really worth the paper they are
written on," Friedman said. "Anybody can get certification."
Experience
is as significant as education, both trainers said.
Professional
affiliations are also important,
"When
you meet a personal trainer, I'd want to know, as a client, if they are … part
of an organization that has professional affiliations — a standard they hold
their trainers to that has a good reputation and has resources in terms of
networking. They should be a part of a network of professional physicians,
dietitians, physical therapists and other fitness and medical
professionals," she said.
Measuring
results
How a
trainer measures results is important, too. Some trainers get paid based on how
much weight the client loses, but a client's goal might be different. That is
why communication between a trainer and client is so important,
"It's
not so much what questions people ask me, it's what the trainer asks you,"
Freidman said. "How interested is the trainer in what your goals
are?"
If a
trainer "is doing more talking than listening, then I would really wonder
if that was the right trainer for me,"
With a
personal trainer, Friedman said, clients "get a program designed
specifically for them — the proper amount of weights, the proper amount of
repetitions … they get an ever-changing routine, they get constant
feedback."
Choosing a
personal trainer
● Trainer
Jana Beutler Holland, with SWAT — Strength Wellness
Athletic Training — suggests people ask the following questions when
interviewing trainers:
● Do they
have certification?
● What is their education and fitness background?
● What is their experience with special-needs clients?
● What is their specialty?
● Why did they become a personal trainer?
● Do they
have insurance?
● To which professional organizations do they belong?
● How do they measure progress?
● What industry magazines do they read?
● Rick
Friedman of Select Fitness also asks:
● What is their philosophy on health and fitness?
● What is their cancellation policy?
● What are their references?
● Contact reporter Kimberly Matas at 807-8431 or kmatas@azstarnet.com.
All content copyright © 1999-2006 AzStarNet,
Arizona Daily Star and its wire services and suppliers and may not be
republished without permission. All rights reserved. Any copying,
redistribution, or retransmission of any of the contents of this service
without the expressed written consent of Arizona Daily Star or AzStarNet is prohibited.