ChatGPT Prompts for Personal Trainers: Program Design, Client Communication, and Business Growth
The gap between a good trainer and a booked-out trainer isn't usually fitness knowledge — it's communication and systematization. Here's how to close that gap without hiring an admin.
Client program design
Starting from scratch every time is leaving money on the table:
"I'm designing a training program for a client with this profile: [age, fitness history, current activity level, specific goals, injuries or limitations, equipment access, days per week available]. Generate a 4-week progressive training program framework with: weekly structure, primary and accessory movements per day, loading parameters (sets/reps/intensity), and one adjustment variable per week to drive progression. Format as a weekly table."
The framework takes 5 minutes to adjust for each client. Building it from scratch takes 45.
Initial assessment questions
What you ask before training determines what you can program:
"Generate a pre-training assessment questionnaire for a new personal training client. Include questions that surface: injury history, movement limitations, training history and what worked vs didn't, lifestyle factors affecting recovery (sleep, stress, nutrition basics), and psychological relationship with exercise. Prioritize questions that will affect my programming decisions. Under 20 questions."
Most clients undersell injuries and oversell their current fitness level. Good questions surface both.
Progress check-in template
Weekly check-ins that actually give you useful data:
"Write a weekly check-in template for personal training clients that captures: adherence to the program, subjective energy and recovery, any pain or discomfort, and one thing they found hard and one thing felt good. Keep it under 5 questions. I want them to actually answer it."
The shorter the check-in, the more data you get back. Five questions gets 80% response rates. Ten gets 30%.
Explaining exercise rationale
Clients who understand the why are more consistent:
"I need to explain to a client why I'm programming [exercise or training principle: deadlifts / high rep ranges / rest days / etc.]. They're skeptical because [their concern or objection]. Write a 3-paragraph explanation that's honest about the evidence, addresses their concern directly, and connects this to their stated goal of [their goal]. No jargon."
Clients who understand the programming stick to it. The explanation IS part of the service.
Nutrition guidance script
You're not a dietitian, but you get asked nutrition questions constantly:
"A client asked me about [nutrition topic: protein intake / intermittent fasting / carbs around workouts / supplements / etc.]. They're a [age/gender/goal] with no specific dietary restrictions. Write a response appropriate for a personal trainer — useful, evidence-based, and clear about where my scope ends and a dietitian's begins. Under 200 words."
This keeps you helpful without overstepping — and builds trust because you're honest about the limits.
Testimonial request email
After a milestone:
"Write a short email to a personal training client asking for a testimonial. They just achieved [specific milestone: first pull-up / lost 20lbs / ran their first 5K / etc.]. I want to capture: what they were struggling with before, what changed, and what they'd tell someone in a similar situation. Make it feel personal, not like a form email. Under 150 words."
The best testimonials tell a story. This prompts for one.
Pricing and packages
When you know you should charge more but don't know how to frame it:
"I'm a personal trainer with [X years] experience specializing in [niche]. I want to raise my rates from [$X] to [$Y]. Help me write a justification framework I can use when explaining my rates to prospective clients — not defensive, just clear. Frame it around outcomes and expertise, not hours. Also write a 2-sentence rate-raise notice for existing clients."
Raising rates is a communication challenge more than a permission question.
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500+ prompts for fitness, health, and wellness professionals: https://toshleonard.gumroad.com/l/rzenot
Better programs. Fewer no-shows. More referrals.
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