
How To Choose If You Have a Co-Host, Facilitators or an Assistant
Co-Host, Facilitator, or Assistant? How to Choose the Right Support for Your Retreat
One of the most overlooked decisions in retreat planning has nothing to do with location, pricing, or even your offer.
It’s who you bring into the room with you.
As your retreats grow, or even when you’re planning your very first one, you’ll eventually face the question:
Do I do this alone, or do I bring support?
And if you bring support, what kind?
A co-host. A facilitator. An assistant. A retreat planner.
Each of these choices shapes not only the experience you deliver, but also your profit, energy, and long-term sustainability as a retreat leader.
This is not just an operational decision. It is a strategic one.
The Hidden Cost of Support: It Affects Your Profit
Every role you add to your retreat comes with a trade-off.
Sometimes it’s financial. Sometimes it’s energetic. Sometimes it’s control.
And many retreat leaders make these decisions too quickly, based on convenience, fear, or assumptions, without fully understanding the impact.
Before choosing any type of support, you need to ask:
What do I actually need help with?
What am I trying to avoid?
What am I optimizing for: profit, ease, experience, or growth?
Because each option serves a different purpose.
Option 1: The Co-Host, Shared Responsibility, Shared Profit
A co-host is not just someone helping you.
They are building the retreat with you.
This means:
shared decision-making
shared responsibilities
shared visibility
and most importantly, shared profit
When Co-Hosting Works Well
Co-hosting can be powerful when:
you’re just starting out and want to reduce risk
you complement each other’s skills
you both bring aligned audiences or energy
you want emotional and operational support
For example:
One person focuses on sales and marketing
The other focuses on logistics and experience design
When done well, this creates balance.
Where It Goes Wrong
The biggest issue with co-hosting is not the structure, it’s the lack of clarity.
Common problems include:
One person doing most of the work
Misaligned expectations around effort
Disagreements about branding or ownership
Unequal commitment to selling
A large audience does not equal results.
Someone can have thousands of followers, but if they are not actively selling or engaged in the process, it will not move your retreat forward.
What Must Be Defined Upfront
If you choose a co-host, you must clearly define:
Who is responsible for sales
Who handles logistics
How decisions are made
How many hours each person contributes
Under which brand the retreat operates
How profit is split
Without this, co-hosting becomes emotional, not strategic.
Option 2: Facilitators, Elevate the Experience Without Splitting Revenue
Facilitators are specialists you bring in to enhance your retreat.
They are not responsible for selling the retreat.
They are not co-owners of the experience.
They are there to deliver a specific transformation or modality.
Why Facilitators Are Powerful
Bringing facilitators allows you to:
diversify the retreat experience
avoid burnout
create depth without doing everything yourself
elevate perceived value
Instead of being “everything” for your clients, you become the container holder, while others contribute within it.
The Trade-Off
You keep full control and full profit but you pay upfront.
Costs may include:
facilitator fees
travel
accommodation
meals
This must be built into your pricing strategy.
Two Ways to Source Facilitators
Bring your own team
People you already trust
Aligned with your methodology
Hire locally
Often more cost-effective
Supported by retreat centers or local communities
Easier logistics
A strong strategy is to experience their work beforehand whenever possible.
Because nothing disrupts a retreat faster than misalignment in messaging.
If a facilitator contradicts your work or creates confusion, it breaks trust with your clients.
Option 3: Assistant or Retreat Planner, Protect Your Energy
This is the most underestimated form of support.
Because it doesn’t feel “visible” like a co-host or facilitator.
But it can be the difference between:
being present with your clients
or being overwhelmed behind the scenes
What This Role Actually Does
An assistant or planner supports:
logistics
coordination
guest experience
troubleshooting
time management
They help you stay in your role as the leader and facilitator, instead of becoming the person managing everything.
Two Types of Support
1. Experienced Retreat Planner
Higher investment
Deep expertise
Anticipates problems before they happen
2. Assistant or Support Person
More flexible
Can be someone you already trust
Focused on execution and support
Creative Compensation Options
This is where many retreat leaders limit themselves.
Support does not always need to be fully paid in cash.
You can structure:
partial payment
exchange (lodging, meals, retreat access)
hybrid compensation
For example, a student or community member who values your work may exchange support for access to the retreat.
This reduces your cost while still creating value for both sides.
The Role of the Venue: You Might Already Have Support
One of the biggest missed opportunities is not fully leveraging the retreat center or venue.
If you are working with an experienced retreat center, they often already provide:
check-in support
staff coordination
meal timing
activity flow
This can reduce your need for additional help.
But you need to ask.
Who manages arrivals?
Can they handle waivers or forms?
Do they coordinate timing with your itinerary?
The more support the venue provides, the less you need to bring in.
The Real Decision: Where Should Your Energy Go?
At the core of this decision is not just cost.
It is energy allocation.
Where are you most valuable during your retreat?
Teaching?
Holding space?
Selling future offers?
Building relationships?
Or managing logistics, coordinating schedules, and solving operational issues?
Every time you take on a role that is not aligned with your highest value, you dilute your impact.
And often, your profit suffers indirectly because of it.
There Is No “Best” Option, Only the Right One for Your Stage
Many retreat leaders look for the “correct” answer.
Should I co-host?
Should I hire facilitators?
Should I bring an assistant?
The truth is:
It depends on where you are in your journey.
Early stage → co-hosting may reduce risk
Growth stage → facilitators elevate experience
Scaling stage → assistants protect your energy
And sometimes, the best setup is a combination.
Support is not a luxury in retreat leadership.
It is a strategic decision that affects:
your profit
your energy
your client experience
and your ability to grow
The goal is not to do everything yourself.
The goal is to build a retreat experience where you are positioned in your highest value role, supported by the right people, in the right way, at the right time.
Because when your energy is aligned and your structure is intentional, your retreats don’t just run.
They expand.
