Get your career in shape for 2020 by training to be a gym instructor or personal trainer
GET your career in shape for 2020 with a job in the fitness industry.
More than 250,000 people are now employed in gyms and health clubs and as gym instructors and personal trainers.
With this week being the busiest of the year for new gym memberships, there are currently 28,000 jobs on offer across the country.
As well as roles for instructors and personal trainers, gym managers, cleaners, receptionists, therapists, catering staff and even gym equipment engineers are all needed. Female coaches are wanted for women-only gyms, and many big gyms are offering personal training apprenticeships.
Gym managers earn on average £29,000 and instructors are paid around £21,000. Most staff employed by big gym chains enjoy perks including gym membership, beauty discounts, pensions and healthcare.
Interest in fitness is key but top trainers also need empathy for their clients and ability to inspire them stick to their goals.
Rick Crawford, at healthcare charity Nuffield Health, explains: “The ideal person to be a wellbeing personal trainer will be confident and approachable, a good communicator and be able to motivate and inspire.”
Nuffield Fitness currently has 52 vacancies.
Find out more at or email careers@nuffieldhealth.com.
You can also search for roles at .
'LIVING MY DREAM'
RESTAURANT manager Tomas Dravecky quit to study fitness and is now a wellbeing personal trainer at gym chain Nuffield Health.
He said: “I used to play football semi-professionally and it was always my dream to work in the fitness industry. After seven years at the restaurant, I decided to follow my passion and completed a five-week intensive personal trainer course.”
Tomas, 36, from Harrogate, North Yorks, added: “Being a personal trainer is a great and fulfilling job. It’s not nine-to-five, so research the qualific-ations you need before making the move.
“To be a personal trainer at Nuffield Health, you need to have a level 3 personal training qualification and be registered with The Chartered Institute for the Management of Sport and Physical Activity.
“If you have other areas of interest, you can train as you work. I’ve qualified as a sport masseur while working here.
“You have to practice what you preach. If you live a healthy lifestyle clients are more likely to believe in you. It takes time to build a reputa-tion, but it will stand you in good stead in the long term.”
Grad job finder
LANDING a graduate job can be tough if you lack work experience. But new app can help.
Dubbed Uber for grads, it matches uni students and grads to firms needing freelancers.
Firms get to outsource tasks to a well-qualified workforce while students get work experience and a new income stream.
Grads are rated on their work performance, allowing employers to personally select the most suitable candidates.
Founder Greg Newman said: “All too often, graduate recruitment focuses heavily on which university graduates attend.
We hope that the launch of Toptask will disrupt this and shift the focus towards sourcing proven talent.”
Let's do lunch
SAY cheers to lunchbreaks once again.
Research reveals 77 per cent of office workers admit to spending their entire break at their desk, but 57 per cent would welcome a return to the lunch-time pint as a means of switching off.
To help, brewer BrewDog is encouraging Brits to disconnect from work over lunchtime and enjoy an alcohol-free beer for themselves and a colleague. BrewDog co-founder James Watt said: “Most people shovel down a sandwich at their desk. That’s not a break, and it’s not good for productivity or our mental and physical health.
“This initiative isn’t about encouraging people to be unprofessional, it’s about reclaiming lunchtime.”
Jobspot
- STONEGATE pubs has more than 400 jobs up for grabs in January including kitchen staff, bar workers and managers. See
- BUPA CARE has hundreds of roles for careworkers, laundry assistants and nurses. Find your fresh start at
YOUR 100 DAYS TO AMAZE
IF YOU’RE starting a new job in the New Year, how you perform in the first 100 days is crucial.
To help you do your best, we’ve teamed up with careers expert John Lees, author of Get Ahead In Your New Job, for his top five tips . . .
- Ask great questions: At interview you discussed your strengths. Now focus on problems you’ll need to solve. Research projects and ideas that matter most to the firm.
- Know which toes you’re treading on: Was an internal candidate turned down for the job you got? Are you taking on tasks that someone else used to do? Work out who sees your arrival as a threat.
- Overcome doubts: If you are an outsider, your reputation arrives before you do. Did you come across as pushy or difficult when you were interviewed? Do you sound like someone who can walk the talk? If you come from another industry, colleagues may assume it will take you a long time to get up to speed.
- Land softly: Don’t sound like a know-all who will transform the organisation overnight. Ask about the track record of the team you’re joining. Show interest in recent successes, and respect the way things are done.
- Achieve quick wins: You can’t excel at everything in your first three months, but make a visible impact in at least one area. Look for a high-profile project where you can get fast results. Make sure they’re noticed by senior staff who hold the key to your future.