Iron WorksDark & Strong
Black, slate, and ember red with program cards and prices, coach portraits, and a book-a-free-session form. Generate from this one if you train people in a room and want the site filling your intro slots.
Tell the AI who you coach, what you charge, and how people book you, and it builds the whole multi-page site — copy and images drafted. Free to build and preview with no card; you pay only when it goes live.
Two ways a coaching site can lean — in the room or online. Pick the one that matches how you coach, hit generate, and the AI builds the real site.
Black, slate, and ember red with program cards and prices, coach portraits, and a book-a-free-session form. Generate from this one if you train people in a room and want the site filling your intro slots.
Light teal and warm gray with plan tiers, a how-it-works section for app-delivered coaching, and an application form instead of a book button. The one to generate from if you coach remotely and your name is the brand.
Reels build interest; a bio link with six buttons scatters it. A real site walks a follower from "I like this coach" to programs, a price, and one next step. That last stretch is where clients are won or lost.
If 1:1 runs $85 a session and small group runs $189 a month, say it in writing. The people who message you already know the number and want in. You spend consults on closers, not tire-kickers.
You can't answer DMs with a client on the bar. A consult form or booking link keeps working through every hour you coach, and each request lands in your email with the person's goal in their own words. Follow up between sessions, not between sets.
Six things people check before they pay for coaching. GetSite builds all of them in.
1:1, small group, online — each needs what it includes, what it costs, and what a week of it looks like. "DM me for rates" pages produce DMs, not deposits. Numbers on the page do the qualifying for you.
List the credentials — CPT, CSCS, nutrition certs — but don't lead with them. Nobody signs up with an acronym; they sign up with the person who explains progressive overload without making them feel stupid. Write it the way you talk on the floor.
No borrowed before-and-afters, no miracle timelines — your real clients, with their permission, and how long it genuinely took. One documented year of steady progress convinces more than any dramatic six-week claim. Honesty here is also what separates you from every scam page on Instagram.
In-person training suits a "book a free consult" button; online coaching often works better with a short application. Ask for little — name, goal, contact — and let the real conversation happen on the call.
Gym coaches: address, floor hours, whether you come to clients. Online coaches: spell out the machinery — which app the plan arrives in, when check-ins happen, how fast you reply. The person reading has usually never bought coaching before.
Your business likely runs on Calendly for calls and Trainerize or TrueCoach for programming. GetSite doesn't replace them and doesn't claim to — it links your buttons to them, or embeds their widgets through the code editor, so new clients land in your existing setup.
A few sentences on who you train, what you sell, and what it costs. No template gallery to wade through first.
Home, programs, about, results, contact — real separate pages with draft copy and images in place. Your first job is editing, not inventing.
Type "add a $160 small-group tier" or "make the hero darker" and the page changes. When it looks right, put it live — hosting and the SSL padlock come with every plan.
“Build a website for Kinetic Strength Coaching, my personal training business in Raleigh. I coach 1:1 at Ironworks Gym and online through Trainerize — 1:1 is $75 a session, online coaching is $150/mo with weekly check-ins. Energetic but clean look, real gym photos over stock smiles. Pages for programs, about me, client results, and contact with a free-consult form, plus a button to my Calendly.”
Building costs nothing and there's no card at the door. Generate the full site, read every page, change your mind twice — none of it bills you.
Publishing starts with Maker at $10/month, which carries a training business fine: custom domain, hosting, SSL, consult request forms, SEO controls, and 100 credits a month — plenty to keep programs, prices, and results pages current as your roster changes. See all plans →
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Not through GetSite itself — we don't run a scheduler, and we'd rather tell you that than pretend. Point your Book a Consult button at the Calendly, Acuity, or Square link you already send people, or paste that tool's embed widget into the page with the code editor. If you don't use a scheduler yet, the consult form covers it: requests arrive by email and you propose times yourself.
Yes — an account costs nothing and needs no card, and the free credits are enough to generate the site and click through every page. Paying starts only at publish time: Maker is $10/month, with a 5-day free trial on every plan.
Yes. Hook up a domain you already own or register a fresh one, from the Maker plan up. SSL certificates are automatic, so the padlock is there from day one without touching a setting.
That's the point. Tell the AI "online coaching is $170 now" or "swap the shred block for a strength block" and the page updates in about a minute — or edit the text directly. Your rates shouldn't wait on anyone's schedule but yours.
For getting hired, yes. A bio link is a menu; it can't explain your method, show a real client's year of progress, or state a price. Your site does all of that and still handles the menu job — programs, YouTube, Calendly — so put its URL in your bio and let it do the closing.
Describe your coaching before your next client arrives — the site will be waiting when the session ends.
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