Mentoring for bike fitters.
If you want to get past rule-based fitting.
At some point, most fitters hit the same wall. You can get good results, but you're relying on rules, patterns, or what's worked before. When something doesn't fit those patterns, you're less certain what to do. That's where mentoring comes in.
Ongoing one-to-one support to help you improve how you approach fitting over time.
You work through real cases, questions and patterns from your own practice, building your understanding so you're not relying on rules or templates.
Each month includes:
- one 60-minute one-to-one call
- direct access between calls for questions and cases
- ongoing discussion around the riders you're working with
- prompts and ideas to sharpen how you think between sessions
It's not a course, and it's not a set of instructions. The aim is to help you become more confident in your own decisions.
This works best if:
- you're already fitting regularly
- you've got good experience but want to go deeper
- you're seeing cases that don't quite resolve
- you want to rely less on rules and more on understanding
It's probably not the right fit if:
- you're not currently working with riders
- you're looking for a fixed protocol or step-by-step system
- you want quick answers without doing the thinking
It starts with a free call. You talk through your background, how you currently work, and where you feel stuck. That's as much about deciding whether mentoring is useful for you as it is about deciding whether Andy is the right person to help.
If it makes sense, you move into monthly mentoring. Each month, you work through your cases, questions and patterns as they come up, with the aim of improving how you approach the next one.
You can cancel at any time. No minimum term, no notice period, no cancellation form.
What to expect
Most fitters stay for a number of months, sometimes longer, depending on what they want to work on. The focus is always the same:
- understanding what's actually happening in the rider
- making better decisions
- building consistency over time
If you're thinking about mentoring, the best place to start is a conversation. 60 minutes, no payment, no pressure. If mentoring is the right fit, you can move into the monthly subscription after. If not, you'll leave the call with a clearer sense of where to go instead.
If you're dealing with a single difficult case, a case consultation is usually a better starting point.