Latest
issue
GET HCM
magazine
Sign up for the FREE digital edition of HCM magazine and also get the HCM ezine and breaking news email alerts.
Not right now, thanksclose this window I've already subscribed!
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
Follow Health Club Management on Twitter Like Health Club Management on Facebook Join the discussion with Health Club Management on LinkedIn
FITNESS, HEALTH, WELLNESS

features

IHRSA update: Kelly McGonigal

The Stanford University psychologist has transformed ‘willpower’ from a concept into a science, and she explained how to use it at last month’s IHRSA Annual Convention & Trade Show

Published in Health Club Management 2015 issue 4
McGonigal is a lecturer in management at the Stanford Graduate School of Business
McGonigal is a lecturer in management at the Stanford Graduate School of Business

How do you define willpower, and how important is it?
It’s hard to underestimate the importance of willpower. It describes the ability to make choices and take steps that are consistent with your highest goals and values – even when it’s difficult or when some part of you doesn’t want to. For example, it’s declining a tempting dessert to avoid gaining weight, or working out instead of watching TV.

Unfortunately, when most people talk about willpower, they think of it as forcing themselves to do things they don’t want to do, and that’s draining. That’s why people have such a problem with resolutions. When you set up this sort of mental battle – where you feel you’re trying to defeat your behaviour rather than advance your goals – it’s hard to move forward. In the end, force doesn’t work.

How can club operators, instructors and personal trainers better harness willpower?
I’d suggest that, to get started, they first make a point of cultivating “want-power” in their clients – examining and reinforcing their underlying motivation. People need to be clear about their values and goals, and recognise that they’re making a conscious choice rather than forcing themselves to do something. That fosters a willingness to proceed, rather than imposing what seems like a kind of brutal self-discipline.

When initiating personal change, it’s essential that you identify with and endorse the positive goals you’re pursuing. If that isn’t the case – if you simply feel you’re repressing or suppressing your preferences, desires and instincts – that’s actually a harmful exercise in willpower.

If you want to have more willpower, you have to learn to be a friend and mentor to yourself, rather than equating self-control with self-criticism.

How can fitness professionals leverage this understanding of willpower to help members succeed?
First, it’s important to recognise the difference between a desire to change and what actually motivates that desire. People typically sign up for a membership for what they regard as negative reasons – guilt, shame, body hate, fear of health consequences – or because of the false-hope syndrome. “Maybe I weigh 300 pounds today, and I’ve never exercised, but starting tomorrow I’m going to work out two hours a day and lose all this weight. It’s going to change my life!”

This dichotomy – a negative cause and punitive effects versus a positive goal and rewarding outcomes – predicts absolute failure in terms of behaviour change. They’re contradictory stances – we’re working against ourselves.

So what can clubs do? Instil the desire to use the club by ensuring they know there’s someone there who knows their name, cares about them, and is committed to helping them achieve their goals.

It’s also very important to communicate the value of small behaviours. It’s crazy that, in the fitness industry, we promulgate recommended activity levels that 10 per cent or fewer of Americans are meeting.

Meanwhile, research show that just 10 minutes of activity a day reduces the incidence of depression, cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality, while simultaneously increasing daily functionality and life satisfaction. Members need to pay attention to things that are easy to affect and control. It’s important for club staff to encourage small, positive changes first. Such changes matter, and they do add up.

Anything you might warn them not to do when dealing with club members?
Yes. They might, for instance, be looking at someone who’s overweight or very much out of shape and thinking: “This person has a willpower struggle.” But having taught, written and spoken about willpower for more than a decade now, I want to stress that everyone has areas in their lives where they feel a bit out of control – where it’s difficult for them to consistently make the positive choice.

I’d refrain from assuming anything about anyone until they choose to share information with you.

Also, it’s not what other people judge us for that we necessarily need to change. The real questions are: What are the things that matter to each of us individually? What are we not doing to support our own personal goals and values? Exercising your willpower instinct is really about devoting your attention, time and effort to what matters to you most – and helping your members do that same. It involves a very important discovery process.

You believe that willpower in action – whether successful or resulting in failure – is ‘contagious’. Could you elaborate?
When researchers study epidemiological events, and how willpower struggles spread over time, they find – on the negative side – that you’re more likely to become overweight or increase your drinking or become sleep-deprived if people in your social network have made that change already.

However, on the positive side, when someone we care about adopts a positive new goal or a healthier lifestyle behaviour, we tend to begin to incorporate their goals into our own goals, often unconsciously. And the more you like and spend time with someone, the more contagious they are.

The epidemiological data demonstrates that these behaviours tend to spread across networks, and a health club is a network – a very positive network.

You also say willpower isn’t an unlimited resource, but some people – such as Sir Richard Branson, founder of the Virgin Group – seem to have no end of it. How do you explain that?
First of all, I’d challenge the utility of identifying anyone as a willpower role model. Everyone, no matter how successful they may appear, has an area in their life that’s a bit out of control or self-destructive – it’s just that those unique willpower struggles are often invisible to others.

If you’re looking for a willpower role model, you’d do much better to look within your own circle of friends and acquaintances – for someone who’s been successful and whose struggles you’re aware of.

People tend, unconsciously, to choose individuals who don’t appear to be struggling as their power exemplars. But, remember, willpower is the ability to do things that are difficult – and we all have difficulties in our lives.

INTRODUCING KELLY McGONIGAL

Kelly McGonigal, 37, earned degrees in communication and psychology from Boston University in 1999, and a PhD in psychology from Stanford University in 2004.

Before joining the faculty of Stanford in 2006, she taught group fitness classes, was a freelance writer, conducted research in psychology, and edited the International Journal of Yoga Therapy.

As a health psychologist with the Stanford School of Medicine, she developed a course called ‘The Science of Willpower’, which led to her writing of The Willpower Instinct: How Self-Control Works, Why It Matters, and What You Can Do to Get More of It. The book describes the latest scientific insights into what willpower is, why we have it, and how to develop it further.

McGonigal is currently a lecturer in management at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, as well as at the Stanford Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education, which is part of the School of Medicine’s Institute for Translation Neuroscience.

Sign up here to get HCM's weekly ezine and every issue of HCM magazine free on digital.
It’s important for gym staff to encourage small, positive changes among members / PHOTO: WWW.SHUTTERSTOCK.COM/ WAVEBREAKMEDIA
It’s important for gym staff to encourage small, positive changes among members / PHOTO: WWW.SHUTTERSTOCK.COM/ WAVEBREAKMEDIA
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/611574_487365.jpg
In her IHRSA 15 keynote, psychologist Kelly McGonigal spoke about the science of willpower and how the health and fitness industry can seek to harness it
Kelly McGonigal,,Kelly McGonigal, willpower, psychology
HCM magazine
As more people join clubs to support their mental health, fitness professionals need to be empowered to take a holistic approach. Kath Hudson shares useful tools discussed at the ACE summit on mental health
HCM magazine
Now mental health is the number one reason for people to join a health club, do fitness professionals need a grounding in counselling to offer a more holistic service? Kath Hudson asks the experts
HCM magazine
HCM People

Cristiano Ronaldo

Footballer and entrepreneur
Taking care of your physical and mental health is essential for a fulfilling life
HCM magazine
Imposter syndrome about a promotion taught the CEO of SATS that behaving authentically is the most important part of leadership. He talks to Kath Hudson
HCM magazine
We’ve had an outstanding year, with record revenues of €77m and €31m in EBITDA in 2023.
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
InBody logged an amazing 100,000 scans in January 2024 alone
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Epassi, a provider of workplace wellness benefits, is creating a fitter and more productive workforce, one membership at a time 
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Nuffield Health has worked with ServiceSport UK for more than ten years, ensuring the equipment in its clubs is commercially optimised
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
The New Keiser M3i Studio Bike brings ride data to life to engage and delight members
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
GymNation is pioneering the future of fitness with software specialist Perfect Gym providing a scalable tech platform to power and sustain its growth
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
University of Sheffield Sport has opened the doors of its flagship Goodwin Sports Centre following a major refurbishment
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
The partnership between PureGym and Belfast-based supplier BLK BOX is transforming the gym floor
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Operators, prepare to revolutionise the way members connect with personal trainers in your club, with the ground-breaking Brawn platform.
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
D2F had updated its brand styling to keep pace with business growth. MD, John Lofting and operations director, Matt Aynsley, explain the rationale
HCM promotional features
Latest News
Active Oxfordshire has received £1.3 million to tackle inactivity and inequality and launch a new ...
Latest News
Barry’s – known for its HIIT workouts combining treadmills and weights – is thought to ...
Latest News
Consultancy and change architects, Miova, have welcomed industry veteran Mark Tweedie on board. Tweedie had ...
Latest News
US private equity fund, Providence Equity Partners, is acquiring a majority stake in VivaGym from ...
Latest News
The Bannatyne Group says it has officially bounced back from the pandemic, with both turnover ...
Latest News
There is speculation that Basic Fit will sell the five Spanish Holmes Place clubs it ...
Latest News
While British adults are the most active they’ve been in a decade, health inequalities remain ...
Latest News
Kerzner International has signed deals to operate two new Siro recovery hotels in Mexico and ...
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: W3Fit EMEA’s innovative programme sets sail for Sardinia, Italy
Following a hugely successful event last year in Split, Croatia, W3Fit EMEA, is heading to the Chia Laguna resort in Sardinia from 8-11 October.
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: Webinar: Building a new energy future for the leisure sector
As one of the most energy-intensive industries in the UK, leisure facilities face a critical challenge in balancing net zero goals, funding and increased costs.
Company profiles
Company profile: ukactive
ukactive is the UK’s leading not-for-profit membership body for the physical activity sector, bringing together ...
Company profiles
Company profile: Art of Cryo
Art of Cryo is a new division of a renowned family business with 30 years’ ...
Supplier Showcase
Supplier showcase - Jon Williams
Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
Featured press releases
Greenwich Leisure Limited press release: Innovative new partnership will see national roll-out of VR Esports Platform across UK leisure centres
Active Reality, a leader in Virtual Reality Freeroam Esports Arenas and GLL, the UK’s largest operator of municipal leisure centres, have today (3rd May 24) announced an innovative new partnership that will see a national roll out of gaming technologies within leisure centres across the country.
Featured press releases
KeepMe press release: Keepme unveils Fitness Marketers' Cheat Sheet containing AI strategies for fitness professionals
Keepme has announced the release of its newest addition to its Best Practice Series: the "Fitness Marketers' Cheat Sheet."
Directory
Spa software
SpaBooker: Spa software
Flooring
Total Vibration Solutions / TVS Sports Surfaces: Flooring
Cryotherapy
Art of Cryo: Cryotherapy
Snowroom
TechnoAlpin SpA: Snowroom
Lockers
Crown Sports Lockers: Lockers
Salt therapy products
Himalayan Source: Salt therapy products
Property & Tenders
Loughton, IG10
Knight Frank
Property & Tenders
Grantham, Leicestershire
Belvoir Castle
Property & Tenders
Diary dates
10-12 May 2024
China Import & Export Fair Complex, Guangzhou, China
Diary dates
23-24 May 2024
Large Hall of the Chamber of Commerce (Erbprinzenpalais), Wiesbaden, Germany
Diary dates
30 May - 02 Jun 2024
Rimini Exhibition Center, Rimini, Italy
Diary dates
08-08 Jun 2024
Worldwide, Various,
Diary dates
11-13 Jun 2024
Raffles City Convention Centre, Singapore, Singapore
Diary dates
12-13 Jun 2024
ExCeL London, London, United Kingdom
Diary dates
03-05 Sep 2024
IMPACT Exhibition Center, Bangkok, Thailand
Diary dates
19-19 Sep 2024
The Salil Hotel Riverside - Bangkok, Bangkok 10120, Thailand
Diary dates
01-04 Oct 2024
REVĪVŌ Wellness Resort Nusa Dua Bali, Kabupaten Badung, Indonesia
Diary dates
22-25 Oct 2024
Messe Stuttgart, Germany
Diary dates
24-24 Oct 2024
QEII Conference Centre, London, United Kingdom
Diary dates
04-07 Nov 2024
In person, St Andrews, United Kingdom
Diary dates

features

IHRSA update: Kelly McGonigal

The Stanford University psychologist has transformed ‘willpower’ from a concept into a science, and she explained how to use it at last month’s IHRSA Annual Convention & Trade Show

Published in Health Club Management 2015 issue 4
McGonigal is a lecturer in management at the Stanford Graduate School of Business
McGonigal is a lecturer in management at the Stanford Graduate School of Business

How do you define willpower, and how important is it?
It’s hard to underestimate the importance of willpower. It describes the ability to make choices and take steps that are consistent with your highest goals and values – even when it’s difficult or when some part of you doesn’t want to. For example, it’s declining a tempting dessert to avoid gaining weight, or working out instead of watching TV.

Unfortunately, when most people talk about willpower, they think of it as forcing themselves to do things they don’t want to do, and that’s draining. That’s why people have such a problem with resolutions. When you set up this sort of mental battle – where you feel you’re trying to defeat your behaviour rather than advance your goals – it’s hard to move forward. In the end, force doesn’t work.

How can club operators, instructors and personal trainers better harness willpower?
I’d suggest that, to get started, they first make a point of cultivating “want-power” in their clients – examining and reinforcing their underlying motivation. People need to be clear about their values and goals, and recognise that they’re making a conscious choice rather than forcing themselves to do something. That fosters a willingness to proceed, rather than imposing what seems like a kind of brutal self-discipline.

When initiating personal change, it’s essential that you identify with and endorse the positive goals you’re pursuing. If that isn’t the case – if you simply feel you’re repressing or suppressing your preferences, desires and instincts – that’s actually a harmful exercise in willpower.

If you want to have more willpower, you have to learn to be a friend and mentor to yourself, rather than equating self-control with self-criticism.

How can fitness professionals leverage this understanding of willpower to help members succeed?
First, it’s important to recognise the difference between a desire to change and what actually motivates that desire. People typically sign up for a membership for what they regard as negative reasons – guilt, shame, body hate, fear of health consequences – or because of the false-hope syndrome. “Maybe I weigh 300 pounds today, and I’ve never exercised, but starting tomorrow I’m going to work out two hours a day and lose all this weight. It’s going to change my life!”

This dichotomy – a negative cause and punitive effects versus a positive goal and rewarding outcomes – predicts absolute failure in terms of behaviour change. They’re contradictory stances – we’re working against ourselves.

So what can clubs do? Instil the desire to use the club by ensuring they know there’s someone there who knows their name, cares about them, and is committed to helping them achieve their goals.

It’s also very important to communicate the value of small behaviours. It’s crazy that, in the fitness industry, we promulgate recommended activity levels that 10 per cent or fewer of Americans are meeting.

Meanwhile, research show that just 10 minutes of activity a day reduces the incidence of depression, cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality, while simultaneously increasing daily functionality and life satisfaction. Members need to pay attention to things that are easy to affect and control. It’s important for club staff to encourage small, positive changes first. Such changes matter, and they do add up.

Anything you might warn them not to do when dealing with club members?
Yes. They might, for instance, be looking at someone who’s overweight or very much out of shape and thinking: “This person has a willpower struggle.” But having taught, written and spoken about willpower for more than a decade now, I want to stress that everyone has areas in their lives where they feel a bit out of control – where it’s difficult for them to consistently make the positive choice.

I’d refrain from assuming anything about anyone until they choose to share information with you.

Also, it’s not what other people judge us for that we necessarily need to change. The real questions are: What are the things that matter to each of us individually? What are we not doing to support our own personal goals and values? Exercising your willpower instinct is really about devoting your attention, time and effort to what matters to you most – and helping your members do that same. It involves a very important discovery process.

You believe that willpower in action – whether successful or resulting in failure – is ‘contagious’. Could you elaborate?
When researchers study epidemiological events, and how willpower struggles spread over time, they find – on the negative side – that you’re more likely to become overweight or increase your drinking or become sleep-deprived if people in your social network have made that change already.

However, on the positive side, when someone we care about adopts a positive new goal or a healthier lifestyle behaviour, we tend to begin to incorporate their goals into our own goals, often unconsciously. And the more you like and spend time with someone, the more contagious they are.

The epidemiological data demonstrates that these behaviours tend to spread across networks, and a health club is a network – a very positive network.

You also say willpower isn’t an unlimited resource, but some people – such as Sir Richard Branson, founder of the Virgin Group – seem to have no end of it. How do you explain that?
First of all, I’d challenge the utility of identifying anyone as a willpower role model. Everyone, no matter how successful they may appear, has an area in their life that’s a bit out of control or self-destructive – it’s just that those unique willpower struggles are often invisible to others.

If you’re looking for a willpower role model, you’d do much better to look within your own circle of friends and acquaintances – for someone who’s been successful and whose struggles you’re aware of.

People tend, unconsciously, to choose individuals who don’t appear to be struggling as their power exemplars. But, remember, willpower is the ability to do things that are difficult – and we all have difficulties in our lives.

INTRODUCING KELLY McGONIGAL

Kelly McGonigal, 37, earned degrees in communication and psychology from Boston University in 1999, and a PhD in psychology from Stanford University in 2004.

Before joining the faculty of Stanford in 2006, she taught group fitness classes, was a freelance writer, conducted research in psychology, and edited the International Journal of Yoga Therapy.

As a health psychologist with the Stanford School of Medicine, she developed a course called ‘The Science of Willpower’, which led to her writing of The Willpower Instinct: How Self-Control Works, Why It Matters, and What You Can Do to Get More of It. The book describes the latest scientific insights into what willpower is, why we have it, and how to develop it further.

McGonigal is currently a lecturer in management at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, as well as at the Stanford Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education, which is part of the School of Medicine’s Institute for Translation Neuroscience.

Sign up here to get HCM's weekly ezine and every issue of HCM magazine free on digital.
It’s important for gym staff to encourage small, positive changes among members / PHOTO: WWW.SHUTTERSTOCK.COM/ WAVEBREAKMEDIA
It’s important for gym staff to encourage small, positive changes among members / PHOTO: WWW.SHUTTERSTOCK.COM/ WAVEBREAKMEDIA
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/611574_487365.jpg
In her IHRSA 15 keynote, psychologist Kelly McGonigal spoke about the science of willpower and how the health and fitness industry can seek to harness it
Kelly McGonigal,,Kelly McGonigal, willpower, psychology
Latest News
Active Oxfordshire has received £1.3 million to tackle inactivity and inequality and launch a new ...
Latest News
Barry’s – known for its HIIT workouts combining treadmills and weights – is thought to ...
Latest News
Consultancy and change architects, Miova, have welcomed industry veteran Mark Tweedie on board. Tweedie had ...
Latest News
US private equity fund, Providence Equity Partners, is acquiring a majority stake in VivaGym from ...
Latest News
The Bannatyne Group says it has officially bounced back from the pandemic, with both turnover ...
Latest News
There is speculation that Basic Fit will sell the five Spanish Holmes Place clubs it ...
Latest News
While British adults are the most active they’ve been in a decade, health inequalities remain ...
Latest News
Kerzner International has signed deals to operate two new Siro recovery hotels in Mexico and ...
Latest News
Nuffield Health’s fourth annual survey, the Healthier Nation Index, has found people moved slightly more ...
Latest News
Short-term incentives to exercise, such as using daily reminders, rewards or games, can lead to ...
Latest News
With the launch of its 49th John Reed, RSG Group is looking for more opportunities ...
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: W3Fit EMEA’s innovative programme sets sail for Sardinia, Italy
Following a hugely successful event last year in Split, Croatia, W3Fit EMEA, is heading to the Chia Laguna resort in Sardinia from 8-11 October.
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: Webinar: Building a new energy future for the leisure sector
As one of the most energy-intensive industries in the UK, leisure facilities face a critical challenge in balancing net zero goals, funding and increased costs.
Company profiles
Company profile: ukactive
ukactive is the UK’s leading not-for-profit membership body for the physical activity sector, bringing together ...
Company profiles
Company profile: Art of Cryo
Art of Cryo is a new division of a renowned family business with 30 years’ ...
Supplier Showcase
Supplier showcase - Jon Williams
Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
Featured press releases
Greenwich Leisure Limited press release: Innovative new partnership will see national roll-out of VR Esports Platform across UK leisure centres
Active Reality, a leader in Virtual Reality Freeroam Esports Arenas and GLL, the UK’s largest operator of municipal leisure centres, have today (3rd May 24) announced an innovative new partnership that will see a national roll out of gaming technologies within leisure centres across the country.
Featured press releases
KeepMe press release: Keepme unveils Fitness Marketers' Cheat Sheet containing AI strategies for fitness professionals
Keepme has announced the release of its newest addition to its Best Practice Series: the "Fitness Marketers' Cheat Sheet."
Directory
Spa software
SpaBooker: Spa software
Flooring
Total Vibration Solutions / TVS Sports Surfaces: Flooring
Cryotherapy
Art of Cryo: Cryotherapy
Snowroom
TechnoAlpin SpA: Snowroom
Lockers
Crown Sports Lockers: Lockers
Salt therapy products
Himalayan Source: Salt therapy products
Property & Tenders
Loughton, IG10
Knight Frank
Property & Tenders
Grantham, Leicestershire
Belvoir Castle
Property & Tenders
Diary dates
10-12 May 2024
China Import & Export Fair Complex, Guangzhou, China
Diary dates
23-24 May 2024
Large Hall of the Chamber of Commerce (Erbprinzenpalais), Wiesbaden, Germany
Diary dates
30 May - 02 Jun 2024
Rimini Exhibition Center, Rimini, Italy
Diary dates
08-08 Jun 2024
Worldwide, Various,
Diary dates
11-13 Jun 2024
Raffles City Convention Centre, Singapore, Singapore
Diary dates
12-13 Jun 2024
ExCeL London, London, United Kingdom
Diary dates
03-05 Sep 2024
IMPACT Exhibition Center, Bangkok, Thailand
Diary dates
19-19 Sep 2024
The Salil Hotel Riverside - Bangkok, Bangkok 10120, Thailand
Diary dates
01-04 Oct 2024
REVĪVŌ Wellness Resort Nusa Dua Bali, Kabupaten Badung, Indonesia
Diary dates
22-25 Oct 2024
Messe Stuttgart, Germany
Diary dates
24-24 Oct 2024
QEII Conference Centre, London, United Kingdom
Diary dates
04-07 Nov 2024
In person, St Andrews, United Kingdom
Diary dates
Search news, features & products:
Find a supplier:
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
Partner sites