What studios should include in fitness job posts
The fitness job post details that help studios attract better instructor applicants and reduce back-and-forth before booking.

Start with the real class need
A fitness job post should make the class need obvious from the first line. Instructors want to know the discipline, level, class size, timing, and whether the role is one-off cover or ongoing work.
Avoid generic titles when possible. "Monday evening reformer pilates cover in Copenhagen" is more useful than "Pilates instructor needed".
Set expectations before the application
The more operational context you include, the less time you spend answering basic questions later.
- Class type, date, start time, and expected duration.
- Location, room setup, and equipment available.
- Required certifications, insurance, or experience.
- Whether programming is provided or the instructor should bring their own plan.
- How quickly you want to confirm the booking.
Use tone to attract the right fit
A luxury pilates studio, a boxing gym, a boutique yoga space, and a large fitness club may all need instructors, but they should not sound identical.
Describe the studio energy honestly. The right instructor will understand whether they are stepping into a technical, community-led, performance-focused, or beginner-friendly environment.
Make the next step simple
When instructors know what happens after they apply, they are more likely to respond quickly and professionally.
Tell them whether you will message on Fitgig, request a trial class, ask for references, or confirm directly from the application.


