Gym Marketing
You know something's off.
Enrollment has flatlined. Your students love the training. The few people who walk through the door tend to stick around. But "a few people" isn't enough.
You've tried the Instagram posts. You've run a Facebook ad or two. Maybe you offered a free trial week. Nothing moved the needle.
Many gym owners have been there.
Here's what most BJJ school owners get wrong: they try to fix everything at once without figuring out what's actually broken.
You don't need more motivation. You don't need another marketing tip. You need a diagnosis.
This diagnostic will help you find exactly what's holding you back in about 10 minutes. It covers the five pillars that determine whether a BJJ academy grows, stalls, or slowly bleeds out. You'll score yourself, find your weakest link, and walk away with a specific plan to fix it.
The pattern is almost always the same—the problem isn't effort. It's focus.
Let's find yours.
The 5 Growth Pillars of a BJJ Academy
Every BJJ school—whether it's 30 students or 300—runs on five systems. Understanding these is the key to BJJ academy growth. When all five are working, growth takes care of itself.
When even one is broken, it doesn't matter how hard you work on the others.
- Lead Generation and Visibility. Can people find you? Do they know you exist? Are you generating a steady stream of new inquiries every month?
- Lead Conversion. When someone contacts you or walks in for a trial, do they become a member? Or do they disappear after one class?
- Retention and Member Experience. Are your students staying? Or are you constantly replacing the ones who quit—running on a treadmill that goes nowhere?
- Revenue Health. Are you making enough money per student to sustain and grow the business? Or are you busy but broke?
- Operations and Systems. Can your academy run without you doing everything? Or does every task, decision, and follow-up depend on you personally?
Most owners instinctively know which pillar feels weakest. But instinct isn't enough—the diagnostic tool gives you an actual number.
Take the BJJ Growth Diagnostic
We built an interactive version of this diagnostic that scores your academy across all five pillars in about 10 minutes. Answer 25 honest questions, get your scores instantly, and see exactly which pillar to fix first.
👉 Take the Free BJJ Growth Diagnostic →
Your weakest pillar is your growth ceiling. The most important number isn't your total score—it's your lowest pillar score. That's where you start.
If you'd rather understand each pillar first before taking the diagnostic, keep reading—the breakdown below explains what each score means and exactly what to do about it.
Diagnosing Your Growth Blocker
Once you've taken the diagnostic, here's what to do about each pillar. Focus on your weakest one first.
If lead generation is your weakest pillar
What a low score means: People in your area don't know you exist. You're relying on word of mouth and hoping someone walks in. Months go by with only a handful of new inquiries.
The 3 most common causes:
- No Google presence. Your Google Business profile is incomplete, has few reviews, or doesn't rank for local searches. When someone types "BJJ near me," they find your competitors.
- No referral system. Your members love your gym, but nobody ever asks them to bring a friend. Most academy owners never directly ask for referrals—they just hope it happens.
- Invisible online. Your website is outdated or nonexistent. Your social media is sporadic technique clips that only existing practitioners care about.
Quick wins (this week):
- Claim and complete your Google Business profile. Add photos of real classes, not stock images.
- Ask your 10 most engaged students to leave a Google review. In person, after class. Today.
- Post one piece of content that shows the experience of training—a new student's first day, a belt promotion, a funny moment.
Long-term fixes (next 90 days):
- Build a simple BJJ marketing strategy that includes local SEO, referral incentives, and community partnerships.
- Create a landing page or website that makes booking a trial class effortless.
- Develop a women's program or kids' program as a new entry point for demographics you're not reaching.
If lead conversion is your weakest pillar
What a low score means: People are finding you, but they're not joining. They visit once and vanish. Your trial program is a revolving door.
The 3 most common causes:
- Slow response time. A lead contacts you and doesn't hear back for days. By then, they've already tried the gym down the street. Speed matters more than you think.
- No structured trial experience. Throwing a new person into a regular class with no preparation, no buddy, and no follow-up is the fastest way to lose them.
- No follow-up system. The trial class goes great, but nobody reaches out afterward. The student waits to be invited back. The gym waits for the student to show up. Nobody wins.
Quick wins (this week):
- Set up a text or email auto-reply so every inquiry gets a response within minutes, not hours.
- Assign a specific upper belt to greet, pair with, and look after every trial student.
- Create a simple follow-up sequence: text within 24 hours, call within 48, invitation to second class within the week.
Long-term fixes (next 90 days):
- Build a structured trial process: pre-class communication, simplified first class, post-class conversation, scheduled follow-ups.
- Track your trial-to-member conversion rate monthly. If you don't measure it, you can't improve it.
- Make signing up easy enough to do on a phone in under 3 minutes.
If retention is your weakest pillar
What a low score means: You're bringing in new students, but they don't stay. You're running hard just to stay in the same place. Every month you add five and lose four.
This is the most common growth blocker in BJJ—and the most expensive one. Research from Bain & Company suggests acquiring a new customer costs five to seven times more than keeping one you already have.
If you're losing students every month, you're burning money on marketing just to tread water.
The 3 most common causes:
- No onboarding system. New students get thrown into regular classes with no structure, no support, and no milestones. Most estimates suggest 70–90% of white belts never make it to blue belt.
Most leave in the first six months—not because BJJ wasn't for them, but because nobody showed them the path forward.
- Nobody notices when students disappear. A student drops from three classes a week to one. Then to zero. A week goes by. Two weeks. By the time anyone notices, they've already mentally quit.
- No community beyond the mat. Students don't have friends at the gym—they have training partners, and that's not the same thing. When training gets hard (and it always does), the people who stay are the ones with real relationships pulling them back.
Quick wins (this week):
- Find every student who hasn't trained in the last two weeks. Text each one personally. Not a mass message—a personal text.
- Start a buddy system for new students this week. Assign someone friendly to every beginner.
- Create a simple 30/60/90-day check-in schedule for new members.
Long-term fixes (next 90 days):
- Build a structured fundamentals program that takes white belts from "I have no idea what's happening" to "I can defend myself and I'm improving."
- Implement a stripe system that gives students visible progress markers between belts.
- Create community beyond training: open mats, social events, in-house tournaments. The gyms with the best retention build friendships, not just skills.
- Set up attendance tracking that flags when someone's training frequency drops. Gymdesk flags the drop automatically—before they've mentally quit, not after.
For a deeper dive, check out retention strategies that work.
If revenue health is your weakest pillar
What a low score means: You have students. They show up. But you're barely breaking even—or losing money. You feel busy but broke.
The 3 most common causes:
- Underpricing. You set your prices based on what the gym down the street charges, not on the value you deliver. Racing to the bottom attracts price-sensitive students who leave the moment something cheaper appears.
- Single revenue stream. All your income comes from one place—monthly memberships at one price point. No privates, no seminars, no kids' program, no merchandise, no events. When memberships slow down, everything slows down.
- No financial tracking. You don't know your profit margin. You don't know your average revenue per member. You can't tell what's actually making money and what's costing you.
Quick wins (this week):
- Calculate your average revenue per member right now. Total monthly revenue divided by total active members. Write it down.
- Calculate your profit margin. Revenue minus all expenses, divided by revenue. If you don't know this number, that's the problem.
- If you're averaging less than $125 per student per month, you're either charging too little or relying on too few income sources.
Long-term fixes (next 90 days):
- Review your pricing. If you're charging $99 when competitors charge $150–200, you're undervaluing yourself. That gap limits what you can invest back into the experience. This academy startup guide walks through how to think about pricing.
- Add at least one revenue stream: private lessons, a kids' program, merchandise, or paid seminars.
- Automate billing so you stop chasing payments and losing revenue to failed cards. Most martial arts schools have billing on autopilot. If you're still doing it by hand, you're chasing payments instead of coaching.
If operations is your weakest pillar
What a low score means: The gym can't function without you. Every class, every enrollment, every billing question, every follow-up—it all runs through you. You're not an owner. You're an employee who also does the accounting.
The 3 most common causes:
- Owner dependency. Simple test: if you took a month off, would your school grow, maintain, or collapse? If the answer is anything other than "it would be fine," operations is your bottleneck.
- Everything lives in your head. No documented processes. Nobody else knows how enrollment works, how billing is handled, or what to do when a student hasn't shown up in two weeks.
- Manual everything. You're texting students from your personal phone. You're tracking attendance on paper or in a spreadsheet. You're creating invoices by hand. Every hour you spend on admin is an hour you're not coaching, recruiting, or resting.
Quick wins (this week):
- Write down the three tasks that eat the most of your time every week. Those are your first automation targets.
- If you're still doing billing manually, that's the biggest time drain you can eliminate. Gymdesk automates recurring billing, failed payment follow-ups, and membership management—the fastest way to get 5+ hours back every week.
- Delegate one class per week to another instructor. Even if you have to train them up, start now.
Long-term fixes (next 90 days):
- Document your core processes: enrollment, billing, attendance tracking, new student onboarding, follow-ups for at-risk students.
- Develop at least one instructor who can run a class independently. Your growth ceiling is directly tied to how many things require your personal involvement.
- Move to gym management software that handles billing, scheduling, and attendance tracking in one place. This isn't optional—it's what lets you get past 75–100 students without burning out.
- Use the slow season to build these systems when enrollment pressure is lower.
The Priority Framework: What to Fix First
You've found your weakest pillar. But if multiple pillars scored low—and they usually do—where do you actually start?
Here's the order that matters:
- Fix retention before lead generation. There's no point driving more people through your door if they leave after two months. You're spending money to fill a leaky bucket. Plug the holes first.
- Fix conversion before lead generation. Same logic. If only 10% of trial students become members, getting more leads just means more people you fail to convert. Improve the trial experience, then turn up the volume.
- Fix lead generation before working on revenue. You can't improve what each student pays you if there aren't enough students. Get new people coming in steadily first.
- Fix revenue before operations. Money problems limit what you can invest in help and tools. Get the finances sorted first, then build the systems around it.
- The exception: if operations scored critical (5–9), fix that first. If you're drowning in admin and nobody else can do anything, nothing else matters. You'll burn out before any other fix has time to work. Get your time back first, then work on the rest.
Think of it this way: retention is the foundation. Everything else is built on top of it.
Your 90-Day Growth Action Plan
You've taken the diagnostic. You know your weakest pillar. Here's how to use that information.
Month 1: Plug your biggest leak
Focus exclusively on your lowest-scoring pillar. Don't try to fix everything. Implement the quick wins listed above and start building the long-term systems.
If retention is your weakest area, spend month one building your onboarding process, your attendance tracking, and your personal outreach to at-risk students.
If it's lead generation, spend month one fixing your Google presence, launching a referral program, and creating content that shows what your gym is really like.
Pick three actions. Execute them. Measure the result.
Month 2: Strengthen the next weakest area
Once your biggest leak is addressed, move to pillar number two. The quick wins should already be in place from month one, so now you can build the longer-term systems.
Keep measuring your month-one metrics. Don't let progress slip.
Month 3: Systematize and measure
By now you should have improvements in your two weakest areas. Month three is about turning those improvements into repeatable systems.
- Document what's working so it doesn't depend on you remembering.
- Set up tracking so you see these numbers every month without effort.
- Start delegating the maintenance of these systems to staff or software.
Day 91: Retake the diagnostic
Come back and retake the diagnostic. Compare your scores.
If you've been focused, your weakest pillar should have moved up at least 5–7 points. Your overall score should be noticeably higher. And more importantly—you should feel the difference in your day-to-day.
The Bottom Line
Most BJJ academies that aren't growing don't have a motivation problem. They have a diagnosis problem. They're applying random fixes to the wrong issues.
Here's what to take with you:
- Your weakest pillar is your growth ceiling. Being great at one thing doesn't cover for a broken system somewhere else. Fix the weak link first.
- Retention comes before acquisition. Always. Plug the leaks before you pour in more water.
- Track the numbers. If you don't know your dropout rate, your conversion rate, and your average revenue per member, you're guessing. Stop guessing.
- Systems beat effort. Working harder won't fix a broken process. Documented systems and the right tools will.
- Reassess every 90 days. Growth isn't a one-time fix. It's an ongoing cycle of diagnosing, fixing, measuring, and adjusting.
You opened your academy to teach jiu-jitsu and build something meaningful—not to spend Sunday nights chasing unpaid invoices and wondering why enrollment is flat.
The right systems give you that time back. Gymdesk automates billing, tracks attendance, flags students who've gone quiet, and handles the follow-ups that keep people coming back. So you can focus on what actually grows your gym: being on the mat.
Start a free trial and see what your numbers look like when you can actually track them.



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