Every no-show costs you twice: the lost revenue from that session, plus the opportunity cost of the slot you could have filled. For most coaches, reducing no-shows by even 50% would add thousands to their annual revenue.
Why Clients No-Show
Understanding the reasons helps you prevent them:
- They forgot - Life gets busy, especially for overwhelmed clients
- Scheduling conflict - Something came up they prioritized over coaching
- Avoidance - The work feels hard and skipping feels easier
- Low commitment - They're not fully invested in the process
- Technical issues - They couldn't figure out the video link
The Multi-Touch Reminder System
One reminder isn't enough. Implement a sequence:
- Booking confirmation - Immediate email with calendar invite
- 48-hour reminder - Email with session prep suggestions
- 24-hour reminder - SMS text message
- 2-hour reminder - SMS with video link
Stronghold sends these automatically based on your preferences.
Clear Policies That Work
Have a cancellation policy and communicate it clearly:
- 24-48 hour cancellation notice required
- Late cancellations may be charged in full
- No-shows are charged in full
- Offer rescheduling as the preferred alternative
Enforce your policy consistently. Exceptions train clients that the policy is optional.
Increase Commitment
Committed clients show up. Build commitment through:
- Package pricing - Prepaid packages have lower no-show rates
- Session prep - Assign homework that they'll want to discuss
- Goal tracking - Review progress each session
- Relationship building - Clients don't ghost coaches they genuinely like
Make Showing Up Easy
- Send the video link in every reminder
- Test technology in the first session
- Offer flexible rescheduling when needed
- Keep session times consistent when possible
Handle No-Shows Gracefully
When it happens:
- Wait 10 minutes, then send a check-in text
- If no response, send follow-up email same day
- Reference your policy but focus on rescheduling
- Address any patterns in your next session
One no-show is a mistake. Two is a pattern worth discussing.