@dawn16 "I mean if you're charging people who work at your gym for a membership, you're essentially working for a membership." - correct, so when you said before you were "working for free," you were wrong. Glad we're finally on the same page here.
"You seem to just be inserting your own opinion" - I know, crazy, right? Inserting my opinion on social media.....what's next? Cats chasing dogs?!?!
The fact that I didn't know the job was advertised on CL is irrelevant. I wasn't claiming knowledge, I was hypothesizing. Fine, they didn't have an in-house member. Whatever. It doesn't change my point. The owner wasn't willing to give you the deal you wanted. If I asked my current employer for a $50,000 raise, and they said know, I'm not going to post online that I "quickly noped outta there" like they were assholes that owed it to me.
I "don't seem to value peoples time" and don't know what's up? What a childish, condescending thing to say. I have been doing CF for upwards of 8 years now, and coached for 5-ish of those. I am aware of different coach-paying structures, but can also simply infer my own opinion of what is reasonable and sensible financially, because I'm an adult who knows the real world. It's not rocket science:
The owner/gym provides a service to people who work out there, and the coach provides a service to the owner/gym. Each of those has value. You want the owner to pay you for the service you give them, but want the owner to give you the service they provide to you for free. Guess what? That owner disagreed. The last place I coached would have disagreed, too.
I paid a membership, and got $20/class. Logistically, my coaching payment for the month was reduced by my membership fees due. At $140/month membership, if I coached at least 7 classes a month, I received money instead of owing it, but that's just accounting. I paid the owner for the service he provided to me, and he paid me for the service I provided him. I deemed it fair, so I did the job.