
Starting a Gym: Do You Need a Partner?
Chris Cooper explains why you might not want (or need) a partner—and how to find a good partner if you do. He also provides the tools you need to make the partnership work.

Chris Cooper explains why you might not want (or need) a partner—and how to find a good partner if you do. He also provides the tools you need to make the partnership work.

In a coaching business, you’re never trying to attract 150 members at a time. You’re trying to coach 150 individual people. Here’s how to grow the right way.

Chris Cooper started two gyms between 2005 and 2008. One—a personal training studio—went pretty well. The other—a CrossFit box—did not. Here’s what he learned about location, space and equipment.

Sean: 00:04 – Hi everybody and welcome to another edition of Two-Brain Radio with Sean Woodland. Today I talk with four-time CrossFit Games athlete, Carleen

Mateo: 00:02 – Hey, it’s Mateo of Two-Brain Marketing. On this edition of the Two-Brain Marketing podcast, I’m talking with my business partner Ashkan Amirsoleymani

Building a platform of wealth doesn’t make you a bad person. Being a bad person makes you a bad person. Becoming a wealthy good person makes you able to help more people more. Do that.

“What if it all just went away … and it wasn’t my fault?” Many entrepreneurs secretly harbor a “failure fantasy.” After making the leap from

Greg: 00:00 – It’s Greg Strauch of Two-Brain Media and on this week’s episode we’re hearing from Jeff Jucha. Now, this was originally recorded in

Mateo: 00:01 – Hey, it’s Mateo of Two-Brain Marketing. On this edition of the Two-Brain Marketing podcast, I’m talking with senior Two-Brain mentor Jeff Burlingame,