ANYTIME FITNESS REVIEW
I
just had a terrible customer experience with anytimefitness, and I felt
obligated to make their poor service quality and sneaky sales tactics known.
If
you haven’t heard of anytimefitness, they are a 24-hour gym global franchise
that has sprouted many branches in Singapore. One of the more recent ones was
anytimefitness @ nex, which is conveniently located near my house. I didn’t
consider working out there previously as I had an existing EnergyOne membership which
was considerably cheaper.
With
my recent career move, my new workplace meant my usual EnergyOne gym wasn’t
convenient anymore. Thus, I was looking out for a gym to sign my life away to sign up for a new membership. One of my
friends was free to workout with me, and he recommended that I try out
anytimefitness, where he had a membership. He linked me a URL to sign up for a
free trial (it used to say 3 days) :
Note
the bolded words especially – ‘no obligation’ it says. Try to remember the
phrase ‘No obligation free trial’ as you progress through this post.
I
keyed in my details, and I received an email shortly:
‘Free,
no obligation, 3-day trial’. Sounds good so far. I tried calling the number
provided but no one picked up. I dropped them an email instead, which was
replied rather promptly.
So
far so good. On the day (8th Jun 15), I went to the gym ahead of my
friend, and wasn’t sure where to go when I entered the gym. The staff was
sitting in the glass office but was busy on the phone, so I sat down at the
couches, planning to wait for my friend to arrive to proceed.
I
got a little engaged using my phone and browsing Facebook and stuff, and was
waiting around for about 10 minutes at the couch and my friend wasn’t there yet. At that moment, the Australian staff (let’s call him Mr Bull) came out of the
office, shot me a glare and did the finger hooking gesture you use to beckon a
dog to come to you.
Here doggy! |
I
was slightly taken aback by the rude gesture, but realised I probably should
have gone in after his phone call ended, so maybe he was upset that I just
walked in. Alright, no issues, I walked in and quickly opened with “Hi, I
signed up for a free trial, do I activate it with you?”
Mr
Bull shot me another quick glance and probably realised his earlier assessment
of ‘unwanted intruder’ was inaccurate, and his face changed slightly and he
beckoned me to sit down to ‘discuss’.
I
was a little confused as to what he wanted to discuss. I figured he was going to try to sell me the membership, though advertised as a free trial with ‘no obligations’. That's fine, it's part of his job as sales.
[All quotes here are
reproduced ad verbatim to the best of my memory]
Mr
Bull: “Mate, I just got an email this morning, there is no more 3 day pass, the
trials are all one day now.”
(his
constant usage of ‘mate’ was what led to my deduction that he’s Australian)
“Oh…
ok sure”. That’s a bummer, I had planned to come on Monday and Wed. Why would
they still email me just the previous day that I could go for a 3-day trial? Let's just give him the benefit of a doubt that this is not a bait and switch but company policy literally changed on that morning.
(Edit: their website now puts 1 day, as in my screenshot above, so I guess the policy really just changed)
Ok fine, I can try out the place for a day then.
(Edit: their website now puts 1 day, as in my screenshot above, so I guess the policy really just changed)
Ok fine, I can try out the place for a day then.
Mr
Bull: “So how this works is, you have to put down a deposit of $68… - “
My
ability to pay attention to the remainder of his sentence was impaired by this
sudden requirement. What? I have to pay $68? I recovered quickly to catch
the rest of his explanation, that it was because he would give me one of their
purple tracker devices, so the money was a deposit in case I didn’t return that
device. This new piece of information is annoying and should have been
mentioned upfront in the email, but seems fair. I didn’t have $68 on me, and
had to borrow from my friend. Well, unpleasant already, but not too bad, right?
No.
He carried on by saying that if I did not return the device, they would assume
I want to sign up and I would lapse into a one-month membership immediately,
and I would be charged for that (at something like $148/month I can’t
remember).
[Try
out our gym, and we will automatically sign you up even if you don’t want to!
Yay!]
Woah
woah woah hold it. I am just here to try out the facilities, to see if it’s a
nice place to workout, to see if it’s convenient to come here everyday after
work or before work. I don’t want to sign into a pseudo membership immediately
with a stupid bait and switch sales tactic! What happened to the ‘no
obligations’?!
I
tried to clarify the details – so I would pay the deposit, and if I returned
the device after my workout, I would get my deposit back? He responded by
giving me an accusing, long hard stare, for a good 10 seconds. I’m not sure
what he was trying to do here, intimidate me or size me up or something, but I
just kept his gaze, and gave a questioning shrug. What? After 10 awkward seconds,
he finally spoke.
Mr
Bull: “These trial passes, they are limited mate. I can’t just be giving them
up to everyone. If I give you one, I am depriving someone else of their slot
you know that mate? Are you serious about signing up or not? If you sign up
now, we are having a sales promotion, we can waive the administration fee.”
This
made me pissed because firstly, why do I need to be ‘serious about signing up’
when I am just TRYING out the damn place? Secondly, why are the trial passes
even limited? That made no sense to me. If there was a capacity issue, I’d
understand, but the place was pretty empty – I think there were less than 10
people in the whole gym at that point of time. Thirdly, this whole bait and
switch tactic just felt quite unethical so I was annoyed.
I
tried to respond calmly and sensibly, explaining that yes, I was interested in
eventually signing up, but I couldn’t decide then, as my work had not started.
I also wanted to try out FitnessFirst (I didn’t tell him this) and compare the two,
as there is a FF very near my workplace.
This
was followed by another intense 10 second staring contest. I shifted
uncomfortably in my seat as Mr FingerBeckoner continued his creepy silent gaze.
Why is he so weird? He finally spoke after he won the staring contest (I
glanced out to see if there was anyone paying attention to this strange
interaction and also to see where my friend was).
Mr
Bull: “Look mate, if you aren’t going to sign up, I’m not going to give you the
trial pass mate. You can train with your mate, but I will charge you the
walk-in rate of $34. Oh wait, since you are here with him, I’ll give you 50%
off the walk-in rate.”
???
So
now I was being rejected for a “NO OBLIGATIONS FREE TRIAL” because I apparently
need to be very obligated to get the trial. And I’m not familiar with
commercial rates, but only knowing Energyone’s walk-in rate of $5.30/$10.70,
$34 sounded exorbitant.
I
tried to persuade him to just let me have the trial, but this was met with
further accusing dirty looks, and he seemed to have made the assessment that I
wasn’t a worthy ‘trial-er’, and continued:
Mr Bull: “No
mate, you just want to work out for free. These passes are for those who are serious mate. There is a limited
number. I’m not going to give you one. You can pay the walk-in rate, at 50%. If
you do sign up in the next 2 weeks, I can factor in the $17.”
I
was getting very annoyed with his condescending tone and the false promise of a
‘no obligations free trial’. If I wasn’t working out with my friend, I would
have just walked out then I think. But because I didn’t want to abandon my
friend, I decided to succumb to Mr Bull’s pushy and annoying demands, and just
pay the $17.
Is
this standard industry practice for gyms – to offer a ‘free’ trial to get
people to come down, then make them sign up for stuff and refuse them a trial
when they have already came down if they are assessed as ‘not serious’? Just
wanted to know if I was treated unfairly or if this was standard practice.
Whatever it is, Mr Bull just came across as obnoxious and condescending the
whole time. It was a terrible customer experience.
Did you have a bad customer service experience at anytimefitness nex too? Leave your reviews of anytimefitness in the comments below!
UPDATE (10 Jun) : I posted on the anytimefitness nex Facebook page, but it just got deleted within 24h and I am blocked. Guess they want to silence this...
UPDATE (12 Jun) : I wrote a part 2, which can be found here.
Did you have a bad customer service experience at anytimefitness nex too? Leave your reviews of anytimefitness in the comments below!
UPDATE (10 Jun) : I posted on the anytimefitness nex Facebook page, but it just got deleted within 24h and I am blocked. Guess they want to silence this...
UPDATE (12 Jun) : I wrote a part 2, which can be found here.