Equinox reviews

3.3

52% would recommend to a friend

(3,578 total reviews)
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Harvey Spevak

49% approve of CEO

40% positive business outlook

Equinox has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 3,578 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Equinox employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Serviços pessoais do consumidor industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

4K reviews
2.0
Dec 29, 2010
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

* Free membership (with restrictions) to nicest "big box" gym in the area. * Contact with many affluent, successful members who can help your own growth. * Many great co-workers. Fun people to work with. * The (unreasonably) high expectations lead to a very fast learning curve. * Required in-house trainer education is better than any other large chain commercial gym. * Many opportunities for free continuing education, or at a discounted rate (this only applies to training staff, not other departments), often with knowledgeable industry leaders.

Cons

* Terrible pay - $8/hour for floor shifts, and you have to do 20 hours/week, so it's very difficult to get a second job to supplement your whopping $160/week base (pre-tax). Worse, most members assume "blue shirts" don't know very much and look at you more as their towel-boy/girl or personal free stretch provider, than as a serious source of fitness information. - Equinox takes about 65% of the session profit. This is industry standard, but you'd expect better from a company that claims to be an industry leader and to have the BEST trainers. How many of the best trainers stick around to make $35 of out a $100 session, for more than two years? It's much more likely that your $100 hour session is being performed by someone who was stocking shelves at Best Buy 2 months ago than by someone who is a professional trainer who does this as a career. - A Tier 3 trainer who was promoted to Tier 3 yesterday, gets the same pay as someone who has been a Tier 3 trainer for many years. There's no incentive to stay and keep your clients at Equinox. - Same goes for education: Having a degree, Master's degree, or higher level certifications yields no increase at all in pay. * PT Clients also not treated well - there is no break for the membership fee, even though clients spend 5-15k/year on PT. There are no renewal incentives or loyalty rewards. Clients feel like the company doesn't appreciate their business, even after years of pouring thousands into the business. * Easy to lose health benefits - no matter how long you've been with the company, how much money you've made them over the years, if you miss your hourly quota for a single quarter, you will lose your health benefits. Especially given that many people who can afford training, can do so because they have jobs that require extensive travel, and who also take long vacations, it's very easy to miss your quarterly hour quota due to clients being away. * It's obvious that the company considers you expendable. They can get another Best Buy shelf stocker easily, with the promise of $44/hour, and turn them into a personal trainer - complete with a shiny "Train" shirt - in two weeks. It doesn't matter that you have put 100's of hours and $1000's into bettering yourself as a trainer. They don't care about quality, at all; only quantity. They want to get everything out of you that they can, till you leave, which they count on. They assume you can easily be replaced by anyone off the street, and don't care. The people in charge of the EFTI in house education seem to be genuinely interested in increasing the quality of the trainers, but it's very obvious that those above them in the hierarchy value quantity WAY over quality. * Gimmicky approach - you must promote and sell whatever gimmick the corporate executives dreamed up in the name of fitess that year. Doesn't matter if it's demonstrably less effective than other methods, or questionable in terms of a trainer's scope of practice. * Because of the business model, not only are many trainers very recently coming from another unrelated profession, but they treat their sessions like babysitting sessions - "you're paying me $100/hour, so I'll do everything for you, I"ll invent 83 ways to do a lunge so you think I'm valuable, I'll find some excuse to touch the bar during your set so it seems like I'm doing something active, even though this is counter-productive and unneccessary..." There's pressure to make yourself feel needed RIGHT NOW so your client renews their package, even though by doing so, you are not acting in the best interests of your clients' fitness goals. * Equipment is purchased and placed in a user-unfriendly way for training. Space is taken up mostly by machines, which good trainers don't use; which, in fact, we are TAUGHT not to use by OUR OWN in-house education at EFTI. Not enough places to lift actual weights or do drills with clients - again, putting aesthetics over results, form before function. In some cases, Equinox still carries machines that are proven to be damaging. Rather than educate, they let the consumer dictate. * Managers are pressued to meet their membership quotas, so they'll do anything to keep even obnoxious members from quitting. Managers are afraid to confront members, and i don't blame them. If my success was judged by an executive who has no idea what is going on in the club, how the employees feel about me, my leadership qualities, etc... and that exec is ONLY looking at raw membership numbers or revenue etc... I'd also not want to risk losing a member. But this sets the bad example that members feel free to not put weights away, etc... because no one wants to risk them taking their business elsewhere. The $8/hour floor trainer will clean up after you anyway. He just came from stocking shelves at Best Buy, this job is way better. When he figures out it sucks, we'll get a new Best Buy shelf stocker to take his place.

2.0
Dec 11, 2010
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Great access to interesting ideas, sources, vendors, programming Exposure to working in multiple formats of interiors: Health & Fitness, Spa, Boutique/Luxury Hospitality, Restaurant, Kids Environments Very short learning curve: you will learn a lot quickly due to timelines for progress

Cons

Dealing with Construction Team at all avenues of decision making No positive working relationship has been fostered with Retail/Operations/Marketing Many issues regarding internal communications and responsibility matrix Politics- mostly bad- are rampant in the department

2.0
Nov 2, 2010
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

The facilities ARE really nice, so the free membership is a bonus (granted, you can only use the gym/facilities during "off-peak" hours--so no mornings or evenings--but it's still a plus). Most of the staff at my club were great to work with. Unfortunately, most of them didn't stick around for long . . . but I enjoyed working with them while they lasted! In house education is very good compared to other gyms. And you DO get paid ($8/hr) to attend in house classes . . . that seemed to me to be a pretty nice deal. You can swap services with other employees (massage, spa, personal training, etc.). If you are going to work as a personal trainer in a fitness center or gym, I suppose Equinox is probably the way to go. There are a lot of gyms out there that are MUCH scummier than Equinox.

Cons

-Expect to live at Equinox. The pay is awful. When you take into account the fact that Equinox requires you to spend countless hours each day working unpaid to "build your business", review class material with managers, attend "mandatory" meetings, take tests, etc., you are getting paid FAR below minimum wage. Floor shifts pay a measly $8 an hour. You can make some okay money once you pick up some clients (and drop the floor shifts), but PT is so expensive at Equinox that it is extremely difficult to get clients to commit long-term. The hours can be horrible and obnoxiously irregular. I've known individuals who have been assigned a floor shift until close (11 p.m.) one day . . . only to have to turn around and open the gym the next morning at 5:15. It seems the managers do not take these things into account and/or care when scheduling the floor shifts. If you happen to find a client who wants to train at a time that coincides with your floor shift, and you can't find anyone to cover for you (the managers will not help you find someone, by the way. It's completely up to you), you are basically S.O.L. The floor shift ALWAYS takes priority. Really?! Because it seems to me that this practice is actually LOSING money for Equinox. But I guess nobody asked me. Both of my managers left something to be desired, but one of my managers was particularly disorganized and completely unreliable. She screwed me over on countless occasions by messing up scheduling, "forgetting" to tell me things necessary to do my job and/or be promoted, failing to turn in my time-sheets in order for me to get paid, dragging her feet to take care of things, scheduling (unpaid, of course) "mandatory" meetings and then telling me she needed to reschedule after I'd already shown up to the gym, etc. She left Equinox, so maybe whoever replaced her is better . . . but management at my club was a disaster from day one. Trainers are treated pretty poorly. We make ridiculous amounts of money for Equinox, but they don't do anything to ensure our well-being and/or job satisfaction. When I first started, I had an AMAZINGLY brilliant and uber-experienced Tier-III trainer call me up, begging me to let her cover my floor shift. It turned out that a couple of her clients were on vacation that week, and she was posed to fall below the number of hours necessary to be considered "full-time" by ONE HOUR. If she didn't make that hour up somehow (i.e. a floor shift), she would lose her health insurance benefits. I felt so badly for her . . . she was desperate, to say the least. I realized right then and there that if they would throw away this girl's health insurance after ONE WEEK of dropping ONE HOUR below full-time (after she had put in years of hard work and earned them oodles of money), it wasn't a place I wanted to be for long. That being said, the attrition rate of employees is VERY high. People are constantly coming and going. This makes it very tough to ever really get to a place where work feels "comfortable", if that makes sense. **If you are thinking about working as a personal trainer for Equinox, I will give you the same advice I was given by a Tier-III trainer on my first day of work: "Use Equinox as a stepping stone. Learn all you can from everyone around you . . . and then move on to bigger and better things. Do not allow yourself to get stuck at Equinox."

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