Will you work for it? Part One

by Jason on November 1, 2009

This post is something that I have been contemplating posting for a long time. Thanks to my buddy Al Caslow for kind of giving me the motivation to talk about it. He actually made a great post about one aspect of this in this Training Log atEliteFTS . It is kind of nice because as a personal trainer, I see this issue from both sides of the fence if you will. I’m actually going to break this into two parts, as i feel it is a really good topic. The first part will cover my sponsorship with EFS. The second part will talk about my personal training clients, guys I talk to about training, and people in general.

For those of you who don’t know, or don’t follow powerlifting, Dave Tate has put up several announcements on his Facebook page as of late about looking for new athletes that he might consider as taking on as a sponsor. Guys come out of the woodwork when they read this, as an being an EFS athlete is a big deal. Here is why: EFS is the only company that sponsors athletes and really gives them a forum to showcase not only themselves, but the knowledge that they have in the field. It is way more than just their picture or name on the website stuck somewhere between the contact page and the legal disclaimer. Without making this a complete pitch for EFS, Dave is THE ONLY guy who does a ton for his guys. I could literally pump out 2 or 3 different blog posts about it.

Knowing this, what Dave does for his guys, and the money that is involved, the question turns to you. Will you work for the sponsorship? Al talks about competing your ass off. He uses that as his example. He mentions Jeremy Frey, a guy who has put over 300lbs on his total since he got sponsored by EFS. I will say that i agree with Al. What good is getting sponsored if you only do a meet every year or two? Some of you will fire back at me, and say “Well Pegg, you have been on since January, and you have only done one meet.” You know what, you’re right. I wont say that this isn’t a call to action for me, because it is. I will say this though in my defense, not as an excuse, as I don’t have one, but only because it ties into my next point. I also think that it is something that a lot of guys overlook as an aspect to give back. Do you talk about it? I try to talk about EFS as much as I can when it comes down to it. I don’t throw it into random conversation, but you can bet that if it involves training, I’m talking about it. I’ve got 1000 friends on Facebook. I’ve got almost 2000 followers on Twitter. I have this blog that gets about 300 or so views a day. That means that if I only mention EFS once per day outside of the actual site, I reach over 3000 people. How many people do you network with? I’m not trying to say that I am a big deal, as I’m not, but are you pushing to grow your network and make yourself worth the investment? These are the things some of you guys have to think about. Especially if you are in the same boat that I am. I’m not the strongest guy out there. Never will be. With this injury, I’m never going to post a huge total. But I try to do other things, like the stuff that I talked about earlier, to give back. Are you thinking that far ahead? Will you work for it?

Something else that I try to do is make myself as accessible as possible, both on the site, and outside of it. A lot of this is done through the stuff that I mentioned earlier. I get, as I’m sure a lot of the guys on the site do, a ton of training questions on both Facebook and Twitter. Rather than just blow guys off, and tell them to ask me on EFS, I do my best to try to answer them. I know that Jo Jordan, our resident Gear Whore at EFS takes time to call guys who are having issues either with sizing gear properly, or getting it to work properly. I know that this speaks a lot of his character, but it also says a lot for the guys Dave brings on, and for the environment that being on the team has. Would you call a guy you have never met, and don’t know from anyone to discuss something that has absolutely no bearing on you? EFS doesn’t pay me to answer questions on Facebook. Jo doesn’t make money from Metal for talking on the phone. It s just one way that we work for it. I want to say too that I’m not trying to sound uppity, and the only reason that we do the things we do is because Dave tells us to. He doesn’t. I’m not saying that these are things that you should necessarily do, or feel obligated to do either. I’m just trying to give you some examples of things that i know guys on the Team do. That way, perhaps, when Dave is looking for guys to sponsor, and you feel like you would be a good fit, you can work for it. Getting sponsored isn’t a gift. You earn it.

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{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Adam November 9, 2009 at 8:09 am

Again a brilliant blog post Jason, And it’s true i’ve seen so many people wanting to have everything handed to them on a platter. I had a brilliant one the other day at work (i work in a shitty leisure centre but it’s got better since me and a couple of other PL’ers came along), So the guy comes in and he comes up to the desk and he says to me, “how can i spot reduce my stomach” and this guy was HYOOOGE i’m talking 400lbs + at about 40% BF i explained to him that you can’t spot reduce and the only way to see your abs is to lose about 150lbs, He looked at me and said “So, you won’t help me then?” and i said i was ready and willing if he had the right attitude. So he said fine went over to one of the idiot trainers and gave the exact same speech. The fucking PT gave him 3 sets of 100 crunches, 2x 20 sit ups and no cardio to be seen for a mile. I hate my job.

Jason November 9, 2009 at 9:56 am

Adam, thanks for the reply. fat dudes are awesome! hahahaha

Jason

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