Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Weight Loss Challenges

By Jonah Rybinski


Before you begin a weight loss contest, you should get a group of people on board. This is extremely important. When you decide to start a challenge, begin asking friends and family to figure out who has an interest and figure out what everyone is prepared to commit to. Do not forget to stay positive and make them aware it is more of a support group than a major contest. Everyone ends up dropping weight which means that there aren't any losers. Put money on the table. We almost always require an entry fee for our competitions. An entry due means one is committed and gives extra dedication. The fees are then used for cash payouts at the conclusion of the challenge. You can present all the cash to the person who loses the highest percentage of their starting weight or split it up how you'd like. All of the competitions I've completed were together with family or close friends and we all hope that not a single person will taken advantage of. We commonly make restrictions, for example no diet pills, surgeries or other abnormal methods. Penalty fees are often useful to get participants to weighing every week. We have had fines for not weighing in weight gain and sometimes we'll actually charge penalties for not losing.

It's not easy to keep a group of people committed to dropping the pounds for more than a couple weeks. Establish milestones and quick goals and objectives. Especially with lengthy events, it is tough to keep on being committed for several months. Recently, I had success where we set objectives of four and 8 weeks and if you hit the milestones you got refunded a portion from your entry payment. Groupings can allow most people feel a real sense of responsibility. If you have some people who are not as enthusiastic as others or don't believe that they have a chance to win then teams can certainly help to inspire them to keep trying to help their group. I had a few family members who enjoy teams purely because then someone else is dependent on them whereas some people hate it for the exact same reason or because they then have to depend on others. Be sure you talk to everyone prior to starting to find out if teams might help.

Keep it optimistic. It usually is exhilarating to compete nevertheless make certain the trash talk remains playful and well-behaved. It doesn't help people to offend or brag excessively. Trash talking, if done politely, can help propel the more competitive types to keep working harder. Around 2 to 3 months seems to work well. Any longer and you get exhausted and lose participants and too much shorter causes it to be really hard to see the big end results a competition will help you get. Compensate participants for reaching goals. On a few occasions we have agreed to give back penalty fees to anybody who meets their goal. Be sure that everyone has a competitive goal. Roughly 1 % a week or more is a suitable goal.

Plan for a post challenge. Once the competition ends it is common for competitors to let loose following a couple months of going on a diet. To try to avoid this by getting ready to begin the next competition right after the close of your competition. Another option is to have another quick competition to find out who can maintain his or her weight loss. It will allow some alleviation from heavy dieting but helps to keep the participants from gaining all of their weight again rapidly.

Above all, enjoy yourself!! I have discovered weight loss challenges to be incredibly valuable. They fulfill several factors of a successful weight loss plan. They produce motivation and responsibility and it can be very rewarding to win a few hundred dollars in the process. There is not really a disadvantage if you give it your best effort. What do you have to lose other than a few pounds? The cash you may save on going out to restaurants can go towards the entry fee.




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