Starting gym account

Hey there, I’ve been thinking about this for a few months and do appreciate some reddit community feedback.

My partner and I travel full time and have been the past couple of years, we always do seasonal jobs and do about 50% of the year work, 50% travelling, aside this we train everyday whether it be inside a gym, hiking mountains, surfing, diving, climbing, snowboarding we kinda do everything and have traveled to some crazy places.

We both havent had social media in quite a few years and are genuinely happy without it. But I know how reels work because every now and then I watch YouTube shorts and it’s mostly related to gym + travel.

Almost everybody we meet are suprised we don’t post any content and it’s something I’ve never thought about doing really until recently.

I have the time for a side hustle, have ideas for videos and my partner is now studying online to be a PT so I feel like there is potential. I wouldn’t want to post about our travels but more about how we exercise, budget, how we eat etc

I’m not sure if it’s peoples thoughts convincing us to live a life style we are very happy without or it could be a great opportunity in the next few years to build an extra income and potentially for my partner to grow a client base.

Would be interested in some thoughts and opinions as most people on here are on social media and knows what it’s all about.

Comments

kittykthomasabout 2 months ago2

The gym niche is extremely over saturated so you would need an even more specific niche to cut through.

Your nomadic lifestyle is actually perfect for this because you can really push the ‘work out with no equipment’/‘nature is my gym’ niche. It will give you varied content and a constant source of new inspo and will help you to stop getting burnt out or stuck in creative ruts.

Hooks can be ‘today’s gym is such and such trail’, ‘here’s my weekly workout split as a nomad who doesn’t always have access to a gym’, ‘top places to workout in this city’ ‘best trails in this country’, ‘how to get a full body workout from a hotel room’ etc.

In order to stay safe you should batch make content and post it once you’ve moved on, which will rely on a fair amount of planning.

Remember to be brand friendly so always show lots of products and name drop everything to begin with eg any gels, protein powders, gyms, hotels, studios, resorts, supplements and tag the brands. Views alone aren’t a reliable source of income, you want the collabs, so showing a brand how their product would neatly fit into your content is the best way to secure those, even as a smaller creator.

Also create courses to sell around your niche, things like ‘full body hotel room workout’, ‘outdoor calisthenics for beginners’. Diversifying your income will help a lot.

Hope this helps

ABDULKALAM_497about 2 months ago1

Honestly your lifestyle already sounds more interesting and authentic than most forced fitness creator content online.

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dhanushgantaabout 2 months ago1

Runable is that audiences tend to connect most strongly with people who already genuinely live the lifestyle

PeachEffective4131about 2 months ago1

I think the interesting part here is that you already have the thing most fitness creators try to fake, an actual lifestyle people are curious about. The combination of training, travel, budgeting, and sustainability feels much more authentic than generic “gym influencer” content.

The key is protecting the life you already enjoy instead of letting content creation slowly consume it. If you approach it as documenting rather than performing, it could become a really strong long term asset for your partner’s PT career and future opportunities. The niche of “fit people traveling full time realistically” is also way less saturated than standard fitness content. We’ve seen creators use Runable to quickly build coaching pages, guides, and lead funnels around their content without turning social media into a full time obsession.

Vidhmoabout 2 months ago1

the lifestyle you have is genuinely the content. most gym accounts are just people filming in the same 3 angles in the same commercial gym. training on a mountain or surfing between sets is already different.

start small, one platform, see if you actually enjoy making content before treating it like a business.

COREcollababout 2 months ago1

Honestly, I think you two are actually in a really unique position for social media. The combination of full-time travel, fitness, outdoor activities, budgeting, and a real lifestyle people are curious about is the kind of content that naturally performs well because it doesn’t feel forced.

What stands out most is that you’re not starting social media just to “be influencers.” You already live an interesting lifestyle and would simply be documenting parts of it. That usually comes across way more authentic than people trying to manufacture a personality online.

I also think focusing more on fitness, routines, budgeting, meal habits, and the lifestyle behind the travel instead of just travel clips is the smarter move long term. There’s a much stronger community aspect there, especially if your partner is becoming a PT.

And honestly, even if you don’t want to become full-time creators, building an audience around that niche could open up a lot of opportunities later — fitness brands, wellness partnerships, activewear, outdoor brands, coaching, apps, etc.

That’s actually part of why I built COREcollab:
https://corecollab.org

It’s a platform where creators and brands connect directly for partnerships and campaigns, and fitness/lifestyle/outdoor content is one of the biggest spaces for collaborations right now.

Also, the fact that people are already surprised you don’t post content is probably a sign there’s something there worth exploring.

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