The massage therapist started by using the Hyperice Hypervolt on my muscles while I laid face-down on the table. For this session I did a full-body stretch on a massage table. Although I didn't get to visit the actual studio, Restore had a station set up at the event. My second stretch session was with Restore Hyper Wellness + Cryotherapy at Movement with Michelob Ultra, a fitness festival in Austin, Texas. My favorite part of the session is that the specialist showed me how to stretch my neck and traps properly, so I can do the stretches on my own at home. The stretch felt amazing (and sometimes hurt a bit!) but I felt like a different person even after just 10-15 minutes of the specialist helping pull and stretch my arms and upper body in ways I could never do on my own. The stretch session was all upper body focused, which was perfect since that's where I carry a lot of tension and sometimes don't know how to stretch super tight areas like my neck or traps very well. I was at an event where we did a workout class with a "mini stretch" session afterwards. ![]() There is a reason that in a store of maybe 5 employees they've gone through 80-100 employees in a year.My first stretch experience was with LYMBR, a NYC-based brand. So yes, you will be working for free.Īfter the beginning shenanigans with pay and hours, it's a really chill place to work, if you don't mind not really getting paid, and it really is a half stretch, half call center type of job. The owner plays silly games with your pay, like not giving you a w2 in the beginning or not giving you a login for the beginning, because, again he has to be sure you are up to his standards. Reality - These training sessions are unpaid, and there is another 5 days of training at the individual stores. Reality - All other time you are expected to make cold calls and be front desk attendant because they've fired the staff.Įxpectation - Must attend 2, 8 hour training sessions to start working there. Maybe stretch 4-5 stretches in a 6 hour time frame on a good day. Reality - $9 per hour, with $4 per stretch. GM or AM or any other job is a maybe if you "prove yourself" down the road, maybe 1 to 2 years.Įxpectation - Ad says Stretch Practitioner makes $20 - $25 per hour. Reality - Owner during interview states that he doesn't hire for anything except Stretch Practitioner. Also the flexibility of the job is great because you can essentially choose when you want to be available or booked as a practitioner but any breaks or time you take off will affect your salary because if you are not fully booked you will be making $10 an hour.īut to be doing a very similar job as a physical therapist and making a fraction of the salary i wouldn't recommend - more.Įxpectation - Apply to General Manager or Area Manager. The work environment is very nice and you genuinely get to help people everyday because the product does work. The first stretch is a free demo and is only supposed to be done by Managers but managers will end making practitioners do their jobs by making practitioners do demos and sales with no sales training and no commission for compensation.Īlthough the pay is extremely low for the job the only thing i found great about stretch-zone was the culture of the job and the flexibility you have to work. ![]() Clients are spending anywhere between $35-$70 dollars a stretch with practitioner compensation only being $10 is ridiculous. The company will advertise $20 an hour but the pay is structured with amount of stretches each stretch with a $10 compensation meaning that you would only be able to make $20 an hour with no breaks which is near impossible with how physical the job is.ĭuring the intense and short 1 week training you are taught all the stretches with how to perform them with the least amount of abuse on your body but when stretching bigger people >200lbs the load on your body is intense even when performing protocol properly making it a very hard job. Stretchzone is a very physical job with very minimum pay.
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