 In today's video I'm going to answer a question that I got recently via email and if you have questions for me, just seriously shoot me a text at this phone number right here. That will get us in instant communication and I can answer questions that you have or just use those questions here on YouTube. But the question is, hey Ben, I don't have a set location to train at. How can I get a location that's good for clients where I'm not having to pay a bunch of money and how can I set up an ideal training environment for kids? This is a question I've gotten a lot. Here's what you have to understand. When you train kids in your program, they're not there to come to this amazing facility. If you had a facility and it's really nice, that's awesome. That will make clients attracted to your program, but the real reason why parents send their kids to train with you, it's not going to be the facility, it's going to be the results. If you come and hang out with me for a week and you go out to the park that I train at, the park that I train at, it's not the nicest in the world. The grass really isn't that great. It is lit, so there's lights out there and I can train when it gets dark. It's in a central area of my city, so it's easy to get to, but it's not the best quality park in the world, and I can guarantee you that. If you came down here and met me, you would see what's up. I realized though that when clients train with me, it's not about the location, it's not about the quality of that. It's about the quality of the sessions, and it's about setting up a training environment that is suitable for kids. When you're training kids, they're focused. There's no distractions. It's easy for them to get to. It's easy for the parents to park. These are little details that do go a long way, but ultimately what you want to do, if you're training at a local park or at a high school or you're using a field that is open, that's open space, you want it to be set up to where when kids are there, they feel like when they're training with you, it's just you and them. It's not you and them, and then like 400,000 other kids around them that are like kicking the ball around or creating distraction. You have to make the environment feel like it's exclusive, even if it's in an open park. You just have your own little grid set up where it's away from other people. That's number one. It's a little bit more quiet over there, and it's in an area it's easy to find for parents. You got to remember too, when parents meet you for the first time, if they're familiar with that park, they already know where it's at, so you just got to set your stuff up in an area where it's a little bit more quiet. If you're training kids that are below the age of 10, their attention span is going to be really small, so if there's a lot of kids, if there's a lot of distractions around them, it's going to defeat the purpose of private training or small group training. They're not going to be able to listen and pay attention. That's why you just need to have an area and it doesn't need to be huge. It can be really small, a small area where you can have focus with kids. If you have any questions about that, shoot me a text right here, and I'd love to connect with you there. That's it for the video, I'll see you on the next one.