
Why Mentors
Matter
Mentors in Personal Training: Why Mentors Matter.
Following 20 years of successfully mentoring hundreds & hundreds of personal trainers, Dan Colman, the owner of BOFFIT reveals why mentors matter when it comes to choosing your qualification and finding success post graduation.
Why Mentors Matter
Becoming a qualified personal trainer is about far more than passing exams and learning anatomy—it’s about developing confidence, practical skill, and a professional identity. That’s where mentors make all the difference. A personal trainer mentor can turn a good learner into a great coach by offering guidance that simply can’t be found in textbooks.
One of the biggest advantages of having a mentor is hands-on learning. While courses teach the theory behind movement and exercise, a mentor helps bring it to life. They can demonstrate proper form, correct mistakes in real time, and explain why certain techniques work better for different clients. This kind of practical feedback accelerates learning and builds competence much faster than studying alone.
Mentors also play a crucial role in building confidence. Starting out as a personal trainer can feel overwhelming—there’s pressure to know everything, deliver results, and manage clients effectively. Having an experienced professional to turn to for reassurance or advice makes that transition much smoother. Whether it’s dealing with a difficult client or designing a programme, a mentor provides a steady voice of experience when it’s needed most. To read more on why new Personal Trainers can feel overwhelmed when facing the modern fitness client click here
Beyond skills and confidence, mentors are invaluable when it comes to career development. The fitness industry is competitive and knowing how to navigate it is just as important as technical ability. A mentor can offer insights into job opportunities, help refine a CV, and even introduce learners to valuable industry contacts. In many cases, they can open doors that would otherwise remain closed.
Equally important is the emotional support a mentor provides. Training to become a personal trainer can be demanding, both physically and mentally. There will be moments of doubt, setbacks, and challenges along the way. A mentor acts as someone to lean on—someone who understands the journey because they’ve been through it themselves. This support can be the difference between giving up and pushing through.
Mentors also help shape professionalism. From how to communicate with clients to maintaining boundaries and building long-term relationships, these are skills that are best learned through observation and guidance. A good mentor models the behaviours and attitudes that define a successful personal trainer.
Ultimately, having a personal trainer mentor bridges the gap between learning and doing. It transforms education into real-world capability, providing not just knowledge, but wisdom. For anyone serious about building a successful career in fitness, a mentor isn’t just helpful—it’s essential.
From 2026 to 2036, personal training in the UK will become more hybrid, specialised, and tech-driven.
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic continues to shape the industry, with online coaching, apps, and platforms like Trainerize now standard alongside in-person sessions.
Trainers will shift toward full lifestyle coaching (fitness, nutrition, habits, mental wellbeing) while using data from wearables and AI tools. At the same time, general PTs will decline as specialists and strong personal brands—often built on Instagram—stand out.
Overall, it moves from “hourly gym sessions” to ongoing, personalised coaching services.
A learner training to become a qualified PT doesn’t just need theory anymore—they need guidance to operate in a fast-changing, competitive industry. That’s where a mentor becomes critical.
First, the industry shaped by the COVID-19 pandemic is now hybrid and unpredictable. A mentor helps learners understand how to actually deliver coaching across in-person, online, and app-based models, not just pass an assessment.
Second, qualifications (even those aligned with CIMSPA standards) give knowledge, but not real-world application. A mentor bridges that gap—teaching how to coach clients, adapt sessions, handle different personalities, and solve problems live on the gym floor.
Third, future success depends heavily on business and branding skills. Platforms like Instagram mean trainers must market themselves, attract clients, and build trust. A mentor provides practical insight into pricing, positioning, and client retention—things courses rarely cover well.
Finally, with the shift toward specialisation and lifestyle coaching, learners need help finding their niche and developing confidence. A mentor accelerates this by offering feedback, accountability, and industry perspective.
In short: qualifications teach you what to do—a mentor shows you how to actually succeed in the real world the industry is moving toward.
To read more on the value of courses providing mentorship click here
