I am getting a person trainer as a Christmas gift from my DH

. It will be an at home trainer as I have a weight system, a treadmill, a Bosu, and balance ball at home. Does anyone have any advice how to look for a home trainer? What questions do I ask?
Kristine
Ask your trainer about their certification and what specialties they have certifications for. It should be from a national organization such as NASM, ACE, NSCM, etc.... Not from 24 hour fitness or Joes Gym
Experience - You want someone who regularly works with folks with your same set of goals. General experience areas would include working with someone new (we all do that), older folks, extremely deconditioned folks, runners or sports oriented folks. Ask for references
Meet your proposed trainer. A good trainer will be glad to meet with you and give you a free 20-40 minute workout. A secret here is that that workout is really an assessment of you. We are looking at key focus points to develop a training program from.
Do not hire a trainer by looks alone. Obviously you want a trainer who takes care of themselves, but some of us come from differing backgrounds. I was once morbidly obese and I will never look like Arnold S....but then I don;t want to either.
Talk over your goals with your trainer. Again a good trainer will ask about your goals and keep asking questions to dtermine a set of measureable goals to set in place for your sessions.
Do not feel obligated to meet daily or weekly, but do meet regularly. I have a few folks that I only see once every other month. But I correspond with them regularly.
More questions, ask away.
[edited and added]
Also, a good trainer will work the fitness triangle with you. The three pieces, cadio, strength and nutrition. Obviously, most trains are not RD but they can and should offer a few thoughts on proper diet.