I didn’t expect a book about running a gym to hit me in the face like a property audit gone wrong. But that’s exactly what happened when I read Gym Launch Secrets by Alex Hormozi.

If you don’t know Alex, you should. The guy’s a process animal. He’s built a reputation for engineering marketing and operational systems that print results. The kind of stuff you wish every leasing agent, maintenance lead, and community manager just “got.”

What surprised me—his retention framework for gyms maps perfectly to apartments.

Let me explain.

The Pain We Know Too Well

If you’ve operated apartments long enough, you know the quiet killers:

  • Lease renewals that disappear with no warning.
  • Lease renewals that disappear with no warning.

  • Residents ghosting your community events.
  • Residents ghosting your community events.

  • Five-star move-ins turning into one-star exits.
  • Five-star move-ins turning into one-star exits.

  • Maintenance misfires you never hear about—until they’re posted online.
  • Maintenance misfires you never hear about—until they’re posted online.

    And let’s not even start on the cost of a turn: lost rent, marketing, touch-ups, leasing staff time, and the dreaded make-ready spiral.

    You can’t fix churn without systems.

    That’s where Alex’s “Five Horsemen of Retention” come in—and they hit differently when you read them through the eyes of a Real Estate Operator.

    🧠 The Five Horsemen (Apartment Edition)

    1. Touch Points: People Stay When You Show You Care

    Hormozi recommends personal outreach every 14 days. Not automated. Not generic. Real messages. Praise. Check-ins. Pulse checks.

    In apartments? This means:

  • Monthly check-ins from the office (even via text).
  • Monthly check-ins from the office (even via text).

  • Remembering names and dogs.
  • Remembering names and dogs.

  • Following up after maintenance requests.
  • Following up after maintenance requests.

    Residents don’t often leave places where they feel seen and heard.

    2. Attendance Tracking: Who’s Quiet Is a Red Flag

    In gyms, it’s missing workouts. In apartments, it’s missing everything—no events, no service requests, no office visits.

    Track it.

    If someone goes dark, don’t assume all is well. That’s your early warning system screaming, “Check on me!”

    3. Handwritten Cards: Because Nobody Does It

    Alex sends welcome cards and referral nudges by hand.

    In our world? A personal note at move-in, renewal, or even just “thanks for referring your friend” goes further than a rent concession ever could.

    Low cost. High impact. Nobody does it—so it stands out.

    4. Member Events: Community Is the Glue

    Hold relaxed social events every 21 days. Hormozi does BBQs, trivia nights, paint & wine. Great apartment-specific ideas include:

  • Taco night with a local food truck
  • Taco night with a local food truck

  • Movie night on the lawn (with popcorn machines)
  • Movie night on the lawn (with popcorn machines)

  • Coffee & Donut mornings in the clubhouse
  • Coffee & Donut mornings in the clubhouse

  • Fitness classes or yoga on the green
  • Fitness classes or yoga on the green

  • DIY Pet Wash Day (great for pet-friendly communities)
  • DIY Pet Wash Day (great for pet-friendly communities)

  • Plant swap or mini garden workshop
  • Plant swap or mini garden workshop

  • Wine & cheese socials
  • Wine & cheese socials

  • Cooking demo with a local chef
  • Cooking demo with a local chef

  • Board game night or bingo with prizes
  • Board game night or bingo with prizes

  • Resident talent show or open mic
  • Resident talent show or open mic

    Think simple, social, and repeatable. These create stickiness.

    But here's the trick: Track who shows up. Those who never do? Follow up. They’re disengaged. They're at risk.

    Proximity creates loyalty. You’re not just running buildings. You’re running mini-cities. Build bonds.

    5. Exit Interviews: Turn Goodbyes Into Gold

    This one’s pure gold.

    Hormozi requires exit interviews by contract . And his team re-sells the member during the interview—reducing churn by 25-50%.

    Now imagine this in multifamily: Every non-renewal gets a face-to-face or call. Ask:

  • What made you start thinking about moving?
  • What made you start thinking about moving?

  • What changed?
  • What changed?

  • Was it something we could’ve fixed?
  • Was it something we could’ve fixed?

    Even if they leave, you leave smarter.

    🏠 How to Apply This to Apartments

    Here’s the blueprint:

  • Start with the move-in. Make it flawless. No leaks. No smells. No callbacks.
  • Start with the move-in. Make it flawless. No leaks. No smells. No callbacks.

  • Build your checklist. Walk every unit like it’s a top-tier product—because every unit should feel like one.
  • Build your checklist. Walk every unit like it’s a top-tier product—because every unit should feel like one.

  • Track your events. No-shows are churn signals.
  • Track your events. No-shows are churn signals.

  • Have a retention calendar. Written touchpoints. Monthly cards. Tri-weekly events.
  • Have a retention calendar. Written touchpoints. Monthly cards. Tri-weekly events.

  • Exit like a pro. Never let someone leave without learning something.
  • Exit like a pro. Never let someone leave without learning something.

    📣 Big Shoutout to Alex Hormozi

    His book Gym Launch Secrets is a clinic in operations, retention, and systemizing human behavior. It may be written for gym owners—but it belongs on every apartment owner’s shelf.

    If you’re an operator, you owe it to yourself to read it—and ask:

    “Where else am I leaking value because I’m not following up?”

    “Where else am I leaking value because I’m not following up?”

    Turnover alone doesn’t kill portfolios. Silent churn is a leaking hole you can fix.

    Stop assuming someone’s happy just because they haven’t complained.

    Talk to them. Track them. Thank them. Keep them.