- Report: #583647
Complaint Review: NHE Certification
| NHE Certification
Internet United States of America |
|
NHE Certification National Health Educators Personal Trainer Certification Not Recognized at 24 hour fitness , Internet
*Consumer Comment: You cannot grow working for a fitness center
*Consumer Comment: i was a manager
*Author of original report: Last Posting on the Subject of NHE
*Consumer Comment: Not everyone gets the job they want.
*Author of original report: Regarding NHE certification and my first posting
*Consumer Comment: nhe trainers work at 24 hour fitness
*Consumer Comment: 24 hour fitness scams trainers
*Consumer Comment: maybe it's you?
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This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 03/21/2010 02:13 PM and is a permanent record located here: http://www.ripoffreport.com/r/NHE-Certification/internet/NHE-Certification-National-Health-Educators-Personal-Trainer-Certification-Not-Recognized-583647. The posting time indicated is Arizona local time. Arizona does not observe daylight savings so the post time may be Mountain or Pacific depending on the time of year.
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Search Tips#1 Consumer Comment
You cannot grow working for a fitness center
AUTHOR: Jason - (USA)
SUBMITTED: Sunday, March 28, 2010
Your NHE certification is some sort of phenomenon that everyone on the Internet is talking about. Their certification programs are new and it may take a while before gyms add them to their lists. You may be frustrated with the industry but at least you are not embarrassed! Personal trainers know the NHE programs are brutal to pass and it's hard not to admire a trainer who actually has one.
I hope this makes you feel better Christine.
#2 Consumer Comment
i was a manager
AUTHOR: Ashley S - (United States of America)
SUBMITTED: Friday, March 26, 2010
I doubt anyone was attacking you. I just think people are trying to explain that 24 hour fitness is a joke for trainers and trying to land a job there is a waste of time. I can't speak for the others, but I worked there, at Bally's and at Gold's Gym.
You said it yourself, the NHE program is tough and expensive. Those are the two attributes that separate NHE from 90 percent of the other online/proctored programs so any gym that would not accept that certification has priority problems. As a manager, just because you don't recognize a certification ,doesn't mean much because you can just get the information you need. It doesn't take a whole lot of effort if you really want to bring a new trainer on board.
I can testify as to what managers/GM's do at these clubs. In 2004, I was a manager at a Bally's and for a period of three years, I would hire trainers who had recognized certifications, I hired trainers with certs I never saw before and even hired trainers with no certification at all. Possessing a certification is not required by law and so as a manager, we were not required to hire trainers who possessed a certification. We had the authorization to hire anyone we thought would increase sales. It's not required by law that you be certified, and so there is no recourse for hiring uncertified trainers. You'd be surprised how many trainers are not certified, or possess only the house certification. As long as you have professional insurance, nothing else really matters and anyone can get insurance with the most basic of certifications. You can acquire professional insurance with an Expert Rating certification and that certification cost $45.
The managers basically look at you and make a decision... are you going to make them money or are you going to cost them money. I don't think it is because you look like a bodybuilder or that you may not be young, because there are clients for everybody.
Remember, you don't need a certification to work at 24 hour fitness, they could provide you with a house certification for free if they chose to. It is never the certification that gets you the job, it's the individual.
#3 Author of original report
Last Posting on the Subject of NHE
AUTHOR: Christine mcdonough - (U.S.A.)
SUBMITTED: Friday, March 26, 2010
#4 Consumer Comment
Not everyone gets the job they want.
AUTHOR: Pat Kum - (United States of America)
SUBMITTED: Thursday, March 25, 2010
Unless they told you, either by phone or by letter, that you were going to get the job, you were not misled. Theres a difference between being hopeful (which tends to take over reality) and being told you have a job. People like to think they are something they are not.
If you have been in fitness your whole life, been body building your whole life, yet you are just now trying to get into personal training by starting at the very bottom that says wonders and fitness HR personally tend to wonder why? Im sure you have admirable excuses, but the fact is that at your age, you should be on your way out of personal training, not trying to get back in.
As far as 24 hour fitness is concerned, they are all beautiful. I dont think thats the point everyone is making. The point is, they are a pt trainer mill. They take anyone off the street, have them take a house certification program (if you have one of the certifications on their list, you get paid a higher percentage) and basically make them go out and sell products and over priced services. Being an ex body builder is irrelevant., as is, having a degree in business. The only thing most chains care about is how much they can exploit their employees. 24 hour fitness doesnt want body builders (especially female) in there scary away their members because 99 percent of their members do not want to look like a bodybuilder, which sounds to me like why maybe they turned you away.
#5 Author of original report
Regarding NHE certification and my first posting
AUTHOR: Christine mcdonough - (U.S.A.)
SUBMITTED: Thursday, March 25, 2010
#6 Consumer Comment
nhe trainers work at 24 hour fitness
AUTHOR: Scott - (United States of America)
SUBMITTED: Thursday, March 25, 2010
I was searching nhe on google and this post was listed in the search. I've signed up to take the nhe fitness nutrition exam in April and I'm looking forward to getting certified. A guy who used to train me was certified by them and that's how I got their information. I work out at 24 hour fitness and that's where he trains people too. I think it's true that it may depend on who you are because the acceptance clause at the gym doesn't seem to be set it stone. I've checked and nhe isn't on that list at my gym either but there are two nhe trainers working there and only one also has a nasm certification. The other one doesn't have any other certifications.
It doesn't matter to me, I'm getting the nhe certification anyway because I want to do different things besides be a slave to 24 hour fitness or Bally's or any other chain gang.
#7 Consumer Comment
24 hour fitness scams trainers
AUTHOR: finessefitness - (USA)
SUBMITTED: Monday, March 22, 2010
#8 Consumer Comment
maybe it's you?
AUTHOR: Victor - (United States of America)
SUBMITTED: Sunday, March 21, 2010
24 hour fitness? Are you kidding? They won't accept NHE because NHE denied them rights to proctor their exams in Dallas. Cooper did the same and you won't see them in some 24 hours either. Besides, I don't think NHE wants their trainers anywhere near 24 hour fitness because that place is a pit. It is the bottom of the totem pole when it comes to personal training. Only the worst of the worst work there. Rumor has it, 24 hour fitness, as retaliation, left NHE off their list of 'accepted certifications'. Funny how they left NESTA and other crappy programs on though? Anyway, I saw this posting online and thought it was interesting:
" Academically, National Health Educators is more advanced than more recognizable programs. They have three different levels so that trainers who already know exercise fundamentals don't have to go through that crap again. Kinda like once you have your drivers license, you don't need to take the road test to renew it. Very smart. As far as being widely accepted, my suggestion is to not fall into that trap because AFAA is widely accepted and their program is a joke. Most gym owners know if their going to hire you within five minutes of talking to you. If a gym owner tells you he/she wont hire you because they don't "accept" your certification, they are basically saying, "You are not a good fit for my club". Because they can accept any certification they want. It's never the certification, that's just a perfect way to avoid EEO violations if they don't want to hire you because your too soft, ugly, short or whatever."

