Jimmy
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Coaching y retención20 jun 20265 min de lectura

How to Build an Online Club Around Your Coaching (Not Just a Client List)

There’s a big difference between “having online clients” and “running an online club”. A client list is transactional; a club has identity, rituals, and a place people want to keep coming back to. For modern functional, CrossFit, and Hyrox coaches, building a club around your coaching is one of the best ways to improve retention, referrals, and your own enjoyment of the work.

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1. Client list vs. club: what’s the difference?

Client list:

  • People pay you, get a plan, and maybe send you a few check‑ins.
  • They rarely interact with each other.
  • When life gets busy, they quietly cancel and disappear.

Club:

  • People feel they belong to something with a name, a vibe, and a purpose.
  • They see other members, not just you.
  • They share wins, struggles, and inside jokes.
  • When life gets busy, the club pulls them back in.

In a client list, the relationship is mostly:

“You send me a plan, I try to follow it.”

In a club, it’s:

“I’m part of this group; the training is how we move forward together.”

That shift changes everything for retention and for how it feels to run your business.

2. The 3 pillars of an online club

You don’t need a thousand members to call it a club. You need three things:

  1. A clear identity
    Who is this for and what are you all about?
    Examples:
    • “Busy professionals who want to be strong and athletic year‑round.”
    • “HYROX and hybrid athletes who like to compete and have fun.”
    • “Functional training for parents who want performance and longevity.”
  2. A shared space
    A place where members can see each other:
    • Community feed or chat.
    • Group calls or live sessions.
    • Occasional in‑person meet‑ups if possible.
  3. Rituals
    Predictable, recurring moments that give rhythm and keep people plugged in:
    • Weekly “wins” threads.
    • Monthly challenges.
    • Testing weeks with shared leaderboards (friendly, not toxic).

Without these, it’s just “you + clients”. With them, it starts to feel like a club.

3. Designing simple rituals that actually stick

You don’t need to invent complicated gamification. Start with one or two rituals and do them consistently.

Some examples:

  • Weekly Wins (Friday)
    Prompt: “Share one win from this week — big or small.”
    Why it works: keeps focus on progress, not just problems; builds positive momentum.
  • Question Monday
    Prompt: “Drop your biggest training question for the week, I’ll answer in a video tomorrow.”
    Why it works: trains people to ask questions and come back for answers.
  • Monthly Challenge
    Example: “Every day this month, 8–10 minutes of easy movement / mobility. Check in with a ✅.”
    Why it works: builds shared experience without wrecking people.
  • Testing Week / Benchmark Week
    Everyone runs the same tests (lifts, metcons, HYROX mini, etc.) in the same week.
    Why it works: creates a sense of event and lets people see progress over months.

These rituals give your club a heartbeat. Members start to know what’s happening even before they open the app.

4. Choosing the right “home” for your club

The platform matters less than the principles, but some tools make it easier.

You want a place that:

  • Shows training and community in the same environment (not “your training is here, your people are over there”).
  • Makes posting and commenting as simple as checking socials.
  • Lets you share content (videos, posts, mini‑lessons) without going full course platform.

Many coaches currently cobble this together with:

  • Programming app + WhatsApp + Facebook group + Stripe + random Loom links.

It works, but:

  • Onboarding is messy (“join here, here, and here”).
  • Context is split across apps.
  • New members feel like they’re entering a maze, not a club.

Un des objectifs de Jimmy est justement de servir de “Skool of Fitness” :

  • Program builder.
  • Community feed.
  • Course / content space.
    Dans un seul environnement, pour que ton club ait une vraie maison digitale plutôt qu’un patchwork.

5. How to launch your first “club”, even with a small audience

You n’as pas besoin d’attendre d’avoir 100 clients pour lancer un club. Tu peux commencer avec 10–20.

Process simple:

  1. Name it and define who it’s for
    Ex: “Engine & Strength Club”, “Hybrid Performance Club”, “HYROX Club”.
  2. Pick one main program
    Un programme global / quelques tracks, plutôt qu’un chaos de plans isolés.
  3. Create one shared space
    Un feed ou un groupe unique où tous les membres se retrouvent.
  4. Add 1–2 rituals
    Par exemple Weekly Wins + Question Monday.
  5. Invite your best current clients first
    Ceux qui sont déjà engagés; fais‑en tes “founding members”.

Tu peux garder tes 1:1 à côté. Le club devient:

  • la colonne vertébrale de ton modèle,
  • l’espace où tu peux ensuite lancer des blocks, des challenges, des formations.

6. How this ties back to your systems

Pour que ton club soit vivable pour toi, il te faut des systèmes qui :

  • Simplifient la programmation
    Un weekly builder avec blocs et templates pour que gérer un groupe ne te prenne pas trois fois plus de temps.
  • Centralisent les interactions
    Même app pour programme + community + contenu, pas 4 channels différents.
  • Facilitent la rétention
    Tu dois voir qui est engagé, qui poste, qui disparaît, pour pouvoir réagir.

C’est exactement la logique de Jimmy :
un endroit où tes membres ne sont pas juste “clients dans un CRM”, mais des personnes qui vivent dans ton univers — avec des programmes, une communauté et du contenu pensés pour eux.

Sigue leyendo

Deja de reemplazar a los atletas que ya ganaste.

Seguimiento del progreso, comunicación con clientes y un feed de comunidad en un solo lugar — gratis hasta 3 clientes.