G-spotter Posted April 11, 2006 Posted April 11, 2006 the bellingham scene, on tha otha hand, r0xx0r Quote
curtveld Posted April 11, 2006 Posted April 11, 2006 A nice gym would be a real asset that could bring in many of us locals that aren't thrilled about the Y or Leading Edge. I agree that Carlos put his heart and sole into the Magic Mountain project, but didn’t always make the best business decisions. For one, he picked a highly visible, but high-rent downtown location. For another, almost every time I was there, some dude would stroll in and announce “just bouldering” as a (successful) justification for not paying. Carlos wanted to be friends with everyone and the gym had a great feel, but he had barely enough $ to get the gym built, so he was on financial thin ice from the git go. I think somebody could make it work now if they had a little stronger financial plan. Quote
whirlwind Posted April 12, 2006 Posted April 12, 2006 a simple way to get help is to alow free membership to a few people and have em work a few hrs a week, like 10-15 per week for a Quote
mythosgrl Posted April 13, 2006 Posted April 13, 2006 Bellevue climbers need stiff gear loops on their harnesses.. where else can you stash your Grande Caramel Latte when bouldering? I don't drink those, dear. Quote
Off_White Posted April 13, 2006 Posted April 13, 2006 a simple way to get help is to alow free membership to a few people and have em work a few hrs a week, like 10-15 per week for a That's actually a terrible business plan. If you can't make enough to pay employees, along with their overhead expenses, taxes, and workers comp, you can't really make it as a business or justify the substantial investment a viable gym requires. It's great to start a cool business, but being in business really is about making a profit, not providing a social service. Quote
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