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FITNESS, HEALTH, WELLNESS

features

Interview: The McFIT Global Group

Kate Cracknell speaks to the management team at the German fitness giant about the rapid growth of its new premium chain, the launch of a corporate fitness offering, and a brand new virtual fitness club

By Kate Cracknell | Published in Health Club Management 2017 issue 4
Marcus Adam, Oliver Schulokat & Pierre Geisensetter
Marcus Adam, Oliver Schulokat & Pierre Geisensetter
If you’re the biggest player in Europe, it’s only natural to think about how you might take your operation overseas – Pierre Geisensetter, spokesman for the McFIT Global Group

Our vision as a Group is to have all the solutions you need for your fitness lifestyle,” says Pierre Geisensetter, spokesperson for the McFIT Global Group. “We’re pretty much there.”

That’s a bold statement, but when you look at the breadth of the offering within the McFIT Global Group – the newly formed umbrella company – you have to acknowledge that the team does seem to have most of the bases covered. Its health club chains span both low-cost and premium offerings, there’s a nutrition brand, and customised at-home fitness is provided via its own apps (see The McFIT Family, p45). It even has its own sports model agency.

The Home of Fitness
So what’s the story behind this fitness mega-brand – how has it reached the position it occupies today?

“McFIT was founded in 1997 by Rainer Schaller, who had an ambition to make fitness training affordable for all,” explains Geisensetter. “The first McFIT club opened in Bavaria, Germany, with the strapline ‘The fitness hall for all’. In the 20 years since then, the chain has grown to 243 clubs in Europe.

“But while the overall philosophy has stayed very much the same – making fitness affordable – the offering has evolved. In 2012, McFIT introduced a new concept: ‘Home of Fitness’. The pricing was still discount, but the offering now looked and felt premium. We added modular training systems in our gyms, and for the first time had group exercise in the shape of cyber training.

“By the end of this year, all our clubs will be at the ‘Home of Fitness’ standard, and that makes them very special.

“And we believe there’s plenty of opportunity for further growth, even in Germany where we have the majority of our clubs: only 12 per cent of the population is exercising at the moment, but the market grew by 4.2 per cent last year. We can do a lot more here.”

But that view is, he agrees, based on the strong position McFIT already has in the market. “If I were looking at the low-cost market now as a potential new entrant, I wouldn’t go there – not with McFIT in the mix. So I’m happy we’re the big player. It means we can concentrate on our own business. It’s good to have competition, but we don’t spend too much time looking at what they’re doing. We channel our energies into taking our own brands where we want them to go.”

He continues: “Looking beyond Germany, we also see a lot of potential across Europe. The market is changing, with growing interest in fitness-orientated lifestyles. We’ve just opened more clubs in Poland and Italy and have three more coming up in Spain.”

And then there’s the matter of the new parent company, which tellingly has been named the McFIT Global Group. Are there corresponding plans to push beyond Europe and into other parts of the world, I ask? Geisensetter smiles, in a way that suggests there are details he’s not willing to share at this stage. “We’re thinking about that for sure. If you’re the biggest player in Europe, it’s only natural to think about how you might take your operation overseas. But right now, we’re just taking a look at the market.”

Portfolio growth
That topic gently sidelined, we move on to discussing the second brand out of the McFIT stable: the small footprint, functional fitness studio brand HIGH5, which launched in Berlin in April 2015.
“The idea behind HIGH5 was to make fitness training even more affordable,” says Geisensetter. “McFIT was already low-cost, but HIGH5 is half the price of McFIT – just €9.90 a month. 

“But again, the studios don’t look discount. They look like sports and athletic training facilities in US colleges – and they attract a clientele to match. People don’t really come for the price. They come because they’re really into their sports. As a result, we haven’t really experienced cannibalisation from our other brands.”

Then, in April 2016 – just one year after the first HIGH5 opened – the McFIT Group unveiled its next big launch: virtual class content under the brand name Cyberobics.

Managing director Oliver Schulokat takes up the story: “When we launched the ‘Home of Fitness’ concept for McFIT in 2012, we’d already identified the huge potential of virtual training. From the outset, we decided not to work with live trainers, but instead to have group exercise rooms with our own self-produced Cyber Training content.

“Compared with what we have now it was quite basic, with an instructor showing the exercises and giving advice against a white background. But in spite of that, it was very successful: we got many more people into our classes, and particularly women. 

“In 2014, we therefore decided to develop a new virtual product. We wanted to make Cyber Training more of an experience for the user, so we brought in expertise from the attractions sector. That resulted in us going to New York to film two workouts with celebrity personal trainer David Kirsch, on a rooftop with a view down to Manhattan.

“Our group exercise rooms were packed as soon as those classes went live. We felt we’d found a new formula for virtual training: workouts with the best trainers in the US, taking place in the most breathtaking locations in the world. That was the beginning of Cyberobics.” 

In addition to using Cyberobics as a USP in its own portfolio of health clubs, Cyberobics licences are also available to non-competitors, and to all operators in countries where McFIT has no presence. “We’re talking to operators around the world, and especially in the UK,” confirms Schulokat.

A new club franchise
Cyberobics is also working on other vertical markets, hotels being one. “There are two possible models, either a small Cyberobics room – all you’d need is 40sq m – or an in-room Cyberobics TV channel,” says Schulokat.

“We’re in talks with a big German hotel chain that wants to integrate Cyberobics into its in-room entertainment, with 10 short workouts you can do in a small space and with no equipment. Then, if you want to do a longer workout, you can go to the dedicated Cyberobics room. We see it as a huge opportunity because hotel fitness can often be quite boring.”

Corporate wellness is another avenue being pursued: “We launched a new corporate fitness programme on 1 February this year. It has three prongs: special rates for membership at our clubs; at-home training offered through our Cyberobics On Demand app, which will launch by June at the latest; and Cyberobics units in offices.

“It’s only been available for a couple of weeks and the response has been overwhelming: we’re getting requests more or less every hour. The German corporate market has really just been waiting for this to happen – for McFIT to launch something like this.”

The very latest news from Cyberobics is that the company will also be launching its own Cyberobics clubs. The first – a women-only club – will open in Berlin in May or June of this year. Offering three Cyberobics rooms, cardio and circuit training, functional training and personal training – as well as wellness, spa, bistro and kids’ lounge – this inaugural club will measure 1,400sq m. 

“We’re planning to open a few of these Cyberobics-branded clubs as corporately-owned sites,” says Schulokat. “But this concept will also be franchised as a boutique club model without wellness, spa, bistro or kids’ lounge. Requiring only around 350sq m, we believe it has potential both in Germany and internationally.”

Curating memories
As if all that weren’t enough, the newest health club brand in the Group’s portfolio – John Reed Music Fitness Clubs – opened the doors of its first club in mid-2016, in the German city of Bonn.
These clubs are design-led, dominated by flavours and cultures from around the world: Buddha statues are commonplace, and one club even has a traditional wooden Indonesian house built inside the gym, with a CV area on the balcony.

“Our founder and CEO Rainer Schaller loves to travel,” explains John Reed’s head of marketing and music Marcus Adam. “On all his journeys he’s collected impressions, memories, inspiration – and at the beginning of 2016, he came up with a new concept that brings all these memories together and puts them into a club.

“He sent our design teams out to search for things to put in the clubs, and we have a lot of souvenirs from places like India and China – but every single club is different.”

Widely referred to as a club for Millennials, Adam disagrees with this label: “I don’t think it’s a question of age. It’s more a question of how you feel and what you expect from life.

“We have a word in German: ‘Lebensgefühl’. I don’t know how exactly to translate it – it’s sometimes translated as ‘lifestyle’, or an ‘awareness of life’, but that isn’t quite right because it’s also about the special feeling you get when you’re doing something you love.

“John Reed is all about creating that feeling, creating an atmosphere where you love to go because it’s visually spectacular, the music is good and you meet great people to train with and hang out with afterwards – sitting in the lounge or maybe playing pool. It’s the only one of our club models that really has social space.”

He continues: “Music is key to the concept, and the music we play is contemporary – we don’t play classical or jazz. We have DJs playing twice a week in all our clubs and we invented our own John Reed Radio, which plays only very dynamic, high-energy music: pop, R&B, rap, hip-hop, electro. If you don’t like music, it isn’t the right club for you. But if you are into music, it’s a great place.”

Bringing ideas to life
Adam concludes: “If you look at the John Reed story, you get an understanding of the dynamism of the McFIT Global Group. We came up with the idea for John Reed in January 2016; the kick-off meeting happened in April or May; and three months later we opened the first club.

“This is the most exciting thing about our business: the energy and the power and the speed to start projects – to have ideas and to make those ideas come alive. We’re very flexible and very dynamic in the way we work.

“What that also means is that it’s hard to say where we’ll be in five years’ time. We might have had three new ideas for other club concepts, or we might have opened 300 John Reed clubs all over the world. It’s hard to say! But that’s an exciting position to be in – it’s what makes the job so interesting.”

The McFIT FAMILY

McFIT: The grandfather of budget health club chains, McFIT was founded by Rainer Schaller in 1997, with the first club opening in Bavaria, Germany. His mission to make fitness training affordable for all resonated with the public and the chain grew rapidly. At the time of our interview in February, there were 243 McFIT clubs across Europe – all owned by the company – in Germany, Austria, Italy, Poland and Spain.

HIGH5: Launched in Berlin in 2015, HIGH5 is a small footprint functional studio model. The aim: “To make fitness training even more affordable” – it costs just €9.90 a month, which is half the price of McFIT. There are currently 16 studios across Germany.

JOHN REED FITNESS MUSIC CLUBS: Launched in 2016, this super-cool premium brand is rolling out fast, with plans to reach 30 clubs by the end of 2017. Influenced by different cultures from around the world, it’s highly design-led. It also has a big focus on music, as the name suggests. At the time of our interview in February, there were nine John Reed clubs – in Germany, Austria, Italy and Hungary – with a jam-packed pipeline for the rest of the year, including Switzerland and the Czech Republic, as well as more clubs in Germany.

CYBEROBICS: McFIT has invested millions of Euros in producing what it believes is market-leading virtual class content, launched last year under the Cyberobics brand. It has also built a one-off concept store in Berlin – World of Cyberobics – where the public can drop in and try out a class (see also HCM March 17, p40).

Qi2: The McFIT Global Group’s own nutrition brand offers product ranges – drinks, shakes, bars, powders and tablets – for men and women, as well as a special range for elite athletes.

At-home training: The original McFIT app, LOOX, features videos and expertise from more than 100 experts, with users able to customise their own training plan. A new Cyberobics On Demand app will launch by June 2017; the content is already available at home to Sky customers, through Sky TV.

McFIT Model Agency: The largest sports model agency in Europe is also part of the McFIT Global Group.

The HIGH5 concept resembles the sports training facilities offered in US colleges
The HIGH5 concept resembles the sports training facilities offered in US colleges
McFIT now has almost 250 clubs across Europe
McFIT now has almost 250 clubs across Europe
John Reed has reinvented health club interior design
John Reed has reinvented health club interior design
Cyberobics is McFIT’s innovative virtual class concept
Cyberobics is McFIT’s innovative virtual class concept

Value across the board

HIGH5 offers the lowest monthly membership in the McFIT Global Group’s club portfolio: at just €9.90, it’s half the price of McFIT.

McFIT comes in at €19.90 a month – but the really surprising price point is found at John Reed. In spite of its premium fit-out, John Reed pricing starts at the same level as McFIT – provided you sign up for a long-term contract: €20 a month on a two-year contract gets you basic membership. This allows you to train only in the John Reed club where you signed up. But there are, as head of marketing and music Marcus Adam explains, various packages available – each with a different membership card.

“Our silver card costs €25 a month on a two-year contract and allows you to train in all John Reed clubs, plus all McFIT clubs, plus all HIGH5 studios,” he says.
“Meanwhile, at €35, our gold card allows you to train in all our studios and bring a friend on every visit. It can be a different friend each day too. These gold members can also book small group training sessions, included in their membership, and get discounts on our Qi2 nutrition products.

“Finally there’s our platinum card. You can’t buy this membership – we have to promote you to it, which we do after you’ve been a gold member for a minimum of two years.

“These members can bring two friends with them, and they get even bigger discounts on Qi2.”

HIGH5 has the lowest monthly cost in the McFIT portfolio, at just under €10 a month
HIGH5 has the lowest monthly cost in the McFIT portfolio, at just under €10 a month
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HIGH5 is a small footprint, functional fitness studio brand offered at an affordable price
HIGH5 is a small footprint, functional fitness studio brand offered at an affordable price
John Reed allows you to train hard, but in a visually striking environment
John Reed allows you to train hard, but in a visually striking environment
World of Cyberobics is a one-off concept store
World of Cyberobics is a one-off concept store
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/463262_912857.jpg
McFIT’s management team talks about its new premium chain, a corporate fitness offering and a new virtual club model
Kate Cracknell, Editor, Health Club Management Oliver Schulokat, managing director at Cyberobics Marcus Adam, Head of marketing and music, John Reed Fitness Music Clubs Pierre Geisensetter, spokesman for the McFIT Global Group ,McFIT, McFIT Global Group, Marcus Adam, Oliver Schulokat, Pierre Geisensetter, Rainer Schaller, HIGH5, Cyber Training, Cyberobics, David Kirsch, John Reed Fitness Music Clubs, World of Cyberobics
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features

Interview: The McFIT Global Group

Kate Cracknell speaks to the management team at the German fitness giant about the rapid growth of its new premium chain, the launch of a corporate fitness offering, and a brand new virtual fitness club

By Kate Cracknell | Published in Health Club Management 2017 issue 4
Marcus Adam, Oliver Schulokat & Pierre Geisensetter
Marcus Adam, Oliver Schulokat & Pierre Geisensetter
If you’re the biggest player in Europe, it’s only natural to think about how you might take your operation overseas – Pierre Geisensetter, spokesman for the McFIT Global Group

Our vision as a Group is to have all the solutions you need for your fitness lifestyle,” says Pierre Geisensetter, spokesperson for the McFIT Global Group. “We’re pretty much there.”

That’s a bold statement, but when you look at the breadth of the offering within the McFIT Global Group – the newly formed umbrella company – you have to acknowledge that the team does seem to have most of the bases covered. Its health club chains span both low-cost and premium offerings, there’s a nutrition brand, and customised at-home fitness is provided via its own apps (see The McFIT Family, p45). It even has its own sports model agency.

The Home of Fitness
So what’s the story behind this fitness mega-brand – how has it reached the position it occupies today?

“McFIT was founded in 1997 by Rainer Schaller, who had an ambition to make fitness training affordable for all,” explains Geisensetter. “The first McFIT club opened in Bavaria, Germany, with the strapline ‘The fitness hall for all’. In the 20 years since then, the chain has grown to 243 clubs in Europe.

“But while the overall philosophy has stayed very much the same – making fitness affordable – the offering has evolved. In 2012, McFIT introduced a new concept: ‘Home of Fitness’. The pricing was still discount, but the offering now looked and felt premium. We added modular training systems in our gyms, and for the first time had group exercise in the shape of cyber training.

“By the end of this year, all our clubs will be at the ‘Home of Fitness’ standard, and that makes them very special.

“And we believe there’s plenty of opportunity for further growth, even in Germany where we have the majority of our clubs: only 12 per cent of the population is exercising at the moment, but the market grew by 4.2 per cent last year. We can do a lot more here.”

But that view is, he agrees, based on the strong position McFIT already has in the market. “If I were looking at the low-cost market now as a potential new entrant, I wouldn’t go there – not with McFIT in the mix. So I’m happy we’re the big player. It means we can concentrate on our own business. It’s good to have competition, but we don’t spend too much time looking at what they’re doing. We channel our energies into taking our own brands where we want them to go.”

He continues: “Looking beyond Germany, we also see a lot of potential across Europe. The market is changing, with growing interest in fitness-orientated lifestyles. We’ve just opened more clubs in Poland and Italy and have three more coming up in Spain.”

And then there’s the matter of the new parent company, which tellingly has been named the McFIT Global Group. Are there corresponding plans to push beyond Europe and into other parts of the world, I ask? Geisensetter smiles, in a way that suggests there are details he’s not willing to share at this stage. “We’re thinking about that for sure. If you’re the biggest player in Europe, it’s only natural to think about how you might take your operation overseas. But right now, we’re just taking a look at the market.”

Portfolio growth
That topic gently sidelined, we move on to discussing the second brand out of the McFIT stable: the small footprint, functional fitness studio brand HIGH5, which launched in Berlin in April 2015.
“The idea behind HIGH5 was to make fitness training even more affordable,” says Geisensetter. “McFIT was already low-cost, but HIGH5 is half the price of McFIT – just €9.90 a month. 

“But again, the studios don’t look discount. They look like sports and athletic training facilities in US colleges – and they attract a clientele to match. People don’t really come for the price. They come because they’re really into their sports. As a result, we haven’t really experienced cannibalisation from our other brands.”

Then, in April 2016 – just one year after the first HIGH5 opened – the McFIT Group unveiled its next big launch: virtual class content under the brand name Cyberobics.

Managing director Oliver Schulokat takes up the story: “When we launched the ‘Home of Fitness’ concept for McFIT in 2012, we’d already identified the huge potential of virtual training. From the outset, we decided not to work with live trainers, but instead to have group exercise rooms with our own self-produced Cyber Training content.

“Compared with what we have now it was quite basic, with an instructor showing the exercises and giving advice against a white background. But in spite of that, it was very successful: we got many more people into our classes, and particularly women. 

“In 2014, we therefore decided to develop a new virtual product. We wanted to make Cyber Training more of an experience for the user, so we brought in expertise from the attractions sector. That resulted in us going to New York to film two workouts with celebrity personal trainer David Kirsch, on a rooftop with a view down to Manhattan.

“Our group exercise rooms were packed as soon as those classes went live. We felt we’d found a new formula for virtual training: workouts with the best trainers in the US, taking place in the most breathtaking locations in the world. That was the beginning of Cyberobics.” 

In addition to using Cyberobics as a USP in its own portfolio of health clubs, Cyberobics licences are also available to non-competitors, and to all operators in countries where McFIT has no presence. “We’re talking to operators around the world, and especially in the UK,” confirms Schulokat.

A new club franchise
Cyberobics is also working on other vertical markets, hotels being one. “There are two possible models, either a small Cyberobics room – all you’d need is 40sq m – or an in-room Cyberobics TV channel,” says Schulokat.

“We’re in talks with a big German hotel chain that wants to integrate Cyberobics into its in-room entertainment, with 10 short workouts you can do in a small space and with no equipment. Then, if you want to do a longer workout, you can go to the dedicated Cyberobics room. We see it as a huge opportunity because hotel fitness can often be quite boring.”

Corporate wellness is another avenue being pursued: “We launched a new corporate fitness programme on 1 February this year. It has three prongs: special rates for membership at our clubs; at-home training offered through our Cyberobics On Demand app, which will launch by June at the latest; and Cyberobics units in offices.

“It’s only been available for a couple of weeks and the response has been overwhelming: we’re getting requests more or less every hour. The German corporate market has really just been waiting for this to happen – for McFIT to launch something like this.”

The very latest news from Cyberobics is that the company will also be launching its own Cyberobics clubs. The first – a women-only club – will open in Berlin in May or June of this year. Offering three Cyberobics rooms, cardio and circuit training, functional training and personal training – as well as wellness, spa, bistro and kids’ lounge – this inaugural club will measure 1,400sq m. 

“We’re planning to open a few of these Cyberobics-branded clubs as corporately-owned sites,” says Schulokat. “But this concept will also be franchised as a boutique club model without wellness, spa, bistro or kids’ lounge. Requiring only around 350sq m, we believe it has potential both in Germany and internationally.”

Curating memories
As if all that weren’t enough, the newest health club brand in the Group’s portfolio – John Reed Music Fitness Clubs – opened the doors of its first club in mid-2016, in the German city of Bonn.
These clubs are design-led, dominated by flavours and cultures from around the world: Buddha statues are commonplace, and one club even has a traditional wooden Indonesian house built inside the gym, with a CV area on the balcony.

“Our founder and CEO Rainer Schaller loves to travel,” explains John Reed’s head of marketing and music Marcus Adam. “On all his journeys he’s collected impressions, memories, inspiration – and at the beginning of 2016, he came up with a new concept that brings all these memories together and puts them into a club.

“He sent our design teams out to search for things to put in the clubs, and we have a lot of souvenirs from places like India and China – but every single club is different.”

Widely referred to as a club for Millennials, Adam disagrees with this label: “I don’t think it’s a question of age. It’s more a question of how you feel and what you expect from life.

“We have a word in German: ‘Lebensgefühl’. I don’t know how exactly to translate it – it’s sometimes translated as ‘lifestyle’, or an ‘awareness of life’, but that isn’t quite right because it’s also about the special feeling you get when you’re doing something you love.

“John Reed is all about creating that feeling, creating an atmosphere where you love to go because it’s visually spectacular, the music is good and you meet great people to train with and hang out with afterwards – sitting in the lounge or maybe playing pool. It’s the only one of our club models that really has social space.”

He continues: “Music is key to the concept, and the music we play is contemporary – we don’t play classical or jazz. We have DJs playing twice a week in all our clubs and we invented our own John Reed Radio, which plays only very dynamic, high-energy music: pop, R&B, rap, hip-hop, electro. If you don’t like music, it isn’t the right club for you. But if you are into music, it’s a great place.”

Bringing ideas to life
Adam concludes: “If you look at the John Reed story, you get an understanding of the dynamism of the McFIT Global Group. We came up with the idea for John Reed in January 2016; the kick-off meeting happened in April or May; and three months later we opened the first club.

“This is the most exciting thing about our business: the energy and the power and the speed to start projects – to have ideas and to make those ideas come alive. We’re very flexible and very dynamic in the way we work.

“What that also means is that it’s hard to say where we’ll be in five years’ time. We might have had three new ideas for other club concepts, or we might have opened 300 John Reed clubs all over the world. It’s hard to say! But that’s an exciting position to be in – it’s what makes the job so interesting.”

The McFIT FAMILY

McFIT: The grandfather of budget health club chains, McFIT was founded by Rainer Schaller in 1997, with the first club opening in Bavaria, Germany. His mission to make fitness training affordable for all resonated with the public and the chain grew rapidly. At the time of our interview in February, there were 243 McFIT clubs across Europe – all owned by the company – in Germany, Austria, Italy, Poland and Spain.

HIGH5: Launched in Berlin in 2015, HIGH5 is a small footprint functional studio model. The aim: “To make fitness training even more affordable” – it costs just €9.90 a month, which is half the price of McFIT. There are currently 16 studios across Germany.

JOHN REED FITNESS MUSIC CLUBS: Launched in 2016, this super-cool premium brand is rolling out fast, with plans to reach 30 clubs by the end of 2017. Influenced by different cultures from around the world, it’s highly design-led. It also has a big focus on music, as the name suggests. At the time of our interview in February, there were nine John Reed clubs – in Germany, Austria, Italy and Hungary – with a jam-packed pipeline for the rest of the year, including Switzerland and the Czech Republic, as well as more clubs in Germany.

CYBEROBICS: McFIT has invested millions of Euros in producing what it believes is market-leading virtual class content, launched last year under the Cyberobics brand. It has also built a one-off concept store in Berlin – World of Cyberobics – where the public can drop in and try out a class (see also HCM March 17, p40).

Qi2: The McFIT Global Group’s own nutrition brand offers product ranges – drinks, shakes, bars, powders and tablets – for men and women, as well as a special range for elite athletes.

At-home training: The original McFIT app, LOOX, features videos and expertise from more than 100 experts, with users able to customise their own training plan. A new Cyberobics On Demand app will launch by June 2017; the content is already available at home to Sky customers, through Sky TV.

McFIT Model Agency: The largest sports model agency in Europe is also part of the McFIT Global Group.

The HIGH5 concept resembles the sports training facilities offered in US colleges
The HIGH5 concept resembles the sports training facilities offered in US colleges
McFIT now has almost 250 clubs across Europe
McFIT now has almost 250 clubs across Europe
John Reed has reinvented health club interior design
John Reed has reinvented health club interior design
Cyberobics is McFIT’s innovative virtual class concept
Cyberobics is McFIT’s innovative virtual class concept

Value across the board

HIGH5 offers the lowest monthly membership in the McFIT Global Group’s club portfolio: at just €9.90, it’s half the price of McFIT.

McFIT comes in at €19.90 a month – but the really surprising price point is found at John Reed. In spite of its premium fit-out, John Reed pricing starts at the same level as McFIT – provided you sign up for a long-term contract: €20 a month on a two-year contract gets you basic membership. This allows you to train only in the John Reed club where you signed up. But there are, as head of marketing and music Marcus Adam explains, various packages available – each with a different membership card.

“Our silver card costs €25 a month on a two-year contract and allows you to train in all John Reed clubs, plus all McFIT clubs, plus all HIGH5 studios,” he says.
“Meanwhile, at €35, our gold card allows you to train in all our studios and bring a friend on every visit. It can be a different friend each day too. These gold members can also book small group training sessions, included in their membership, and get discounts on our Qi2 nutrition products.

“Finally there’s our platinum card. You can’t buy this membership – we have to promote you to it, which we do after you’ve been a gold member for a minimum of two years.

“These members can bring two friends with them, and they get even bigger discounts on Qi2.”

HIGH5 has the lowest monthly cost in the McFIT portfolio, at just under €10 a month
HIGH5 has the lowest monthly cost in the McFIT portfolio, at just under €10 a month
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HIGH5 is a small footprint, functional fitness studio brand offered at an affordable price
HIGH5 is a small footprint, functional fitness studio brand offered at an affordable price
John Reed allows you to train hard, but in a visually striking environment
John Reed allows you to train hard, but in a visually striking environment
World of Cyberobics is a one-off concept store
World of Cyberobics is a one-off concept store
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/463262_912857.jpg
McFIT’s management team talks about its new premium chain, a corporate fitness offering and a new virtual club model
Kate Cracknell, Editor, Health Club Management Oliver Schulokat, managing director at Cyberobics Marcus Adam, Head of marketing and music, John Reed Fitness Music Clubs Pierre Geisensetter, spokesman for the McFIT Global Group ,McFIT, McFIT Global Group, Marcus Adam, Oliver Schulokat, Pierre Geisensetter, Rainer Schaller, HIGH5, Cyber Training, Cyberobics, David Kirsch, John Reed Fitness Music Clubs, World of Cyberobics
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