Site icon MuscleInsiders

WODs and Wisdom Part 3: 10-Year Affiliate Owners Talk Lessons in Longevity 

Editor’s Note: This is the third part in a multi-part series highlighting longtime CrossFit gym owners, their experiences over the past decade, and some advice they wish they had at the start. Click here for part one and here for part two.

It is one thing to open a gym. Most people can find a space, buy some barbells and weights, and hire a few coaches. But to stay open? To thrive and grow? That is an entirely different story. 

It is a battle to keep any business going for 10 years or more, and even more difficult when that business is a gym. 

[Related: Best Barbells for CrossFit]

A Valuable Product

Acting accordingly takes many different forms, but they center around one thing — the quality of the product. In a CrossFit gym, that product is coaching.

While their training in the methodology is important, that’s just the start. Vaughan and his team found as much value in investing in their coaches’ quality of life as in their coaching education and development.

Vaughan goes even further, ensuring his coaches know how integral they are in running their business.

[Related: Best Power Racks for Strength Training]

CrossFit Oakland co-owner Robyn Alazraqui echoed Vaughan’s statement when it came to the importance of the staff.

Alazraqui is also adamant about maintaining professionalism within the affiliate and concentrating on running it like a corporate business. 

With professionalism and the ability to view a gym as a corporate business comes money. No business can survive without making it.

Vaughan went into detail on the importance of knowing your numbers.

Spreadsheets and numbers can be intimidating, but understanding them means distinguishing between a successful gym and one that closes quickly. 

A Strong Culture

Once long-time owners figured out the business portion of running a gym, the most successful took the time to truly grow the culture. 

CrossFit is about community, and that starts from the top.

By setting the culture, owners create a gym community that fills their bucket and brings them joy. Culture breeds consistency, which is an essential aspect for any CrossFit athlete. 

We all know that showing up daily and giving your best effort every time you enter an affiliate is the cornerstone of CrossFit. 

It Takes a Village

No one can get through the ups and downs of gym ownership without having someone to talk to.

Vaughan invested in business mentorship early, which has been instrumental in the growth and success of their affiliate in Australia. But it wasn’t just getting feedback from someone on how to run the business; Vaughan’s partnership with his wife, former Games athlete Lindsay Vaughan, needed consistent care when they launched their affiliate.

[Related: Best Adjustable Dumbbells]

Justin VanBeek, owner of CrossFit Hydro in Omaha, NE, preaches the importance of having someone to bounce ideas off of if you hope to succeed.

When it comes down to it, the gyms that have survived this long, a decade or more, have something special. 

Nicole Hughes, owner of CrossFit Central in Austin, TX, says it simply:

More CrossFit Stories

Featured image: @welcome_to_the_mill / Instagram

The post WODs and Wisdom Part 3: 10-Year Affiliate Owners Talk Lessons in Longevity  appeared first on BarBend.

Exit mobile version