Hi, I’m Jess Beasley
I’m a 34-year-old mum to a very energetic five-year-old, so I truly understand what it means to juggle life, work, and family—while still wanting to feel strong, healthy, and confident in your own body.
I’ve learned first-hand that lasting change doesn’t come from shortcuts, fad diets, or intense six-week challenges. Real results are built over time. I believe in the long game—consistent effort, realistic expectations, and small daily habits that add up to meaningful, lasting change. When your actions are consistent, your results will always reflect that.
Strong, sustainable fitness that works around your life — not against it.
Whether your goal is to feel stronger, improve body composition, increase fitness, lose weight, or hit a personal best, I’ll help you set realistic targets and create a plan that fits your lifestyle—not one that takes over it.
My approach is simple and sustainable. We focus on building strong foundations: developing a healthy relationship with food, gaining confidence in your body, understanding how to train effectively, and creating habits you can maintain long term—even with a busy schedule.
This isn’t about quick fixes. It’s about helping you feel capable, confident, and strong—so you can walk into any room knowing you look after yourself, for yourself.
If this sounds like the kind of support you’ve been looking for, I’d love to hear from you.
Get in touch and let’s start the conversation.
My Story
I wasn’t the sporty kid at school.
You were far more likely to find me around horses than on a netball court. Sport wasn’t “my thing” growing up — and for a long time, I believed that was just who I was.
In my early 20s, I dipped in and out of gym classes, training without structure and getting inconsistent results. I’d have bursts of motivation, then lose direction. I enjoyed exercising, but I didn’t yet understand how to train with purpose.
Everything changed in 2018.
I signed up to cycle from London to Paris in 24 hours — despite not owning a bike and not having ridden since I was a child. At the same time, I committed to a charity 100km ultramarathon over two days. That year sparked something in me: a love for challenge, for pushing limits, and for discovering what I was truly capable of.
In 2019, I raised the bar again and signed up for Ironman Copenhagen — even though I couldn’t swim front crawl and hadn’t properly swum since childhood holidays. It was a steep learning curve filled with bike crashes, early mornings, late-night swim lessons, and relentless determination. That same year, I also completed the Chicago Marathon, represent Great Britain in the Grand Fondo Cycling World Championships in Poland and completed Red Bull Time Laps - a 25 hour relay cycle race.
Then 2020 brought Covid, the deferral of my London Marathon charity place — and pregnancy. Instead of racing, I completed a 26-hour turbo trainer cycle for charity while pregnant. It wasn’t the year I planned, but it reinforced something powerful: resilience isn’t about perfect conditions.
In 2021, my little boy arrived. Returning to fitness postpartum gave me a whole new appreciation for strength — rebuilding gradually, running again, and learning to train in a way that supported motherhood rather than competed with it.
In 2022, I secured another London Marathon place, only to break my coccyx three weeks before race day. Another deferral. Another test of patience.
Finally, in 2024, I stood on the start line and completed the London Marathon. It was everything I’d hoped for — a true bucket-list moment and a reminder of how powerful persistence can be.
In 2025, my focus shifted to HYROX, where I competed in:
Glasgow Open Solo (1:19)
London Pro Solo (1:15)
Cardiff Open Solo (1:12)
Birmingham Open Solo (1:11)
Birmingham Mixed Doubles (1:14)
London Pro Solo (1:17)
Each race deepened my love for structured training, performance, and measurable progress.
Now, in 2026, the focus turns back to ultra running — with The Lap (a 47-mile ultramarathon around Lake Windermere) and my first-ever Backyard Ultra on the horizon.
Why This Matters for You
I didn’t grow up athletic. I didn’t have natural talent.
What I built came from structure, consistency, resilience, and learning the right way to train.
That’s why I coach the way I do.
Whether you’re returning after time away, rebuilding postpartum, chasing a PB, stepping up to a start line that scares you, or simply wanting to feel stronger and more confident in your body — I understand the journey.
Because I’ve lived it.