Streaming exercise classes into the home shouldn’t be seen as a threat to health clubs and leisure centres, say the experts. In fact, it could be the way to engage more people with exercise. So will it become a widespread trend? Kath Hudson reports
By Kath Hudson | Published in Health Club Management 2015 issue 10
Dean HodgkinConsultant to The énergie Group and Ragdale Hall
Dean Hodgkin
The struggle our industry has gone through to only marginally nudge up the penetration rate suggests there remains a significant population subset who just don’t feel they belong in a health club. If you combine them with the legions of people who, for genuine work and family reasons, find it very difficult to attend our facilities, then there’s a huge group of people to whom online classes might appeal, provided the marketing message is right.
It needs a considered approach. As with activity tracking devices, there’s potential for this technology to provide an exit route from the gym. However, if suitably embraced, it could also be the ideal path to strengthen relationships with members – and could finally help us dent the perennial retention problem by extending member contact beyond the four walls of the club.
If targeted towards non-members, the service has the potential to be a powerful prospecting tool, offering a try-before-you-buy option on the user’s terms. Once familiar with the club’s philosophy, comfortable with their own ability and satisfied they can commit to regular exercise, there should be a resultant steady stream of newbies to our health and fitness facilities.
Online classes could be sold as a pay-as-you-go service, thereby creating a whole new revenue generator for the club. A further benefit to this is that your club can be open for business on a 24-hour basis.
Research has shown that most people prefer to exercise in a group environment rather than alone: the great attraction of exercise classes lies in the primal urges that drive us to seek a sense of belonging, inclusion, community and social status.
If this is communicated to the individual through an online class service, I foresee many fitness journeys that may begin solo but that will then progress to us welcoming a new member through our doors.
Photo: Shutterstock.com
Research has shown that most people prefer not to exercise alone
Malcolm BlackCEO and chairLes Mills Media
Malcolm Black
We believe in making the planet fitter by helping people fall in love with fitness, so they want to work out. Providing an option to work out and join an exercise class at home fits into this; there’s definitely demand for this service.
The Les Mills Global Consumer Fitness Survey (2013), conducted by Nielsen, shows that home exercise complements gym-based workouts, with 82 per cent of gym members or casual gym users also choosing to exercise at home.
Many streaming services are positioned as a club alternative, but Les Mills On Demand – which launched in June – is positioned as a club supplement. It gives our club partners another way to engage with members, and offers exercisers more flexibility and value.
Providing at-home digital exercise can also demonstrate a more complete offering from clubs, to attract new members and to help retain existing ones.
Online classes can act as a lead generator too: our strategy is to introduce more new people to Les Mills workouts, then direct them towards live classes in clubs via our club locator function. Judging by anecdotal evidence taken from social media, this approach seems to be working.
Photo: Shutterstock.com
Online classes could help attract potential new members to your club
Paul BowmanCEOWexer Virtual
Paul Bowman
The modern fitness member expects and demands flexibility, as well as solutions crafted and available at their fingertips anytime and anywhere.
Virtual fitness makes it possible to meet these demands, not only by making group fitness available within the club 24/7, but also by making it possible to reach members outside the gym.
Streaming exercise classes is a great example of this new consumer-centric way of delivery. By adding virtual fitness classes to their own apps, clubs can offer access to group fitness on members’ own consoles (TV, smartphones and tablets). Online streaming is a particularly good way of engaging the millennials, and having a brand presence on phones is particularly key to staying relevant.
High-end clubs generally absorb the cost in order to add value to memberships, whereas budget chains are using it as ancillary revenue. More could be made of this revenue stream if advertising were sold; it offers good potential to boost the bottom line.
Clubs are naïve if they think they’re not being affected by online gym memberships. If you’re not a digital business, you’re a dying business.
Colin GrantCEOThe Pure Group
Colin Grant
As more people are spending more time online and wearables are becoming more popular, health and fitness clubs need to stay relevant.
Mobile technology is going to play an increasingly important part in people’s lives – consumers are now spending more time using mobile than they do desktop – so we’ve created online yoga class portal mypureyoga.
Providing an online streaming service has advantages for both potential and existing members. Existing members can keep up their yoga practice while they travel, which means we retain our relationship with them while they’re away. We also allow non-members to access mypureyoga, as it allows us to engage with consumers who may feel too intimidated to enter a yoga studio’s class environment. Hopefully it will act as a stepping stone towards them coming in to the club.
It also gives us the opportunity to engage with consumers before we enter a new overseas market.
It’s very early days to say what the impact will be – I don’t have a crystal ball to predict it – but it’s something we can’t ignore. We’re setting ourselves up so that, if online streaming does take off, we’re there. We believe the growth potential is huge, probably exponential, and we want to make sure we’re positioned and ready to capitalise on the trend.
Grant hopes mypureyoga will encourage new people to attend live classes
Stefan TilkMDFitness First Germany
Stefan Tilk
The online gym market – specifically paid content for TV and video – is growing very fast, at more than 70 per cent a year. It attracts a new and different consumer segment: people who are unable to visit a real gym for some reason, or who simply don’t want to; consumers who live outside of conurbation areas; and those who want to combine online and offline fitness.
This is why Fitness First Germany acquired online gym NewMoove in October 2014. We believe in creating as many opportunities as possible to engage with the consumer. But we realise, these days, this might need to be done digitally: people are searching for information online first. They also expect tailored services based on their personal data. For both, our industry needs answers: perfect information on websites; digital services like apps and trackers; and integrated solutions of machine, group, outdoor and online training so all data is captured.
Companies who meet these demands will grow faster than their competitors, and in the long term we will see market aggregation in the fitness sector. Investment in digital is expensive, so bigger chains will likely dominate, but smaller chains and clubs can gain access to digital through specialised providers.
Coming to a screen near you….
Launched at the end of June 2015 in the US, UK, Finland and Sweden, Les Mills On Demand features 30-minute workouts of some of Les Mills’ most popular exercise classes, including BodyPump, BodyCombat and Sh’Bam. The service integrates with computers, tablets and smartphones, and the retail price direct to consumers is £9.95 a month. Clubs will be able to offer members this service at a reduced price, and will also be able to share in the revenue generated from those members.
Les Mills On Demand
Coming to a screen near you….
Virtual class provider Wexer started life in 2008 as an online gym brand, and this year’s new launch takes the brand back to its roots. The new Wexer Streaming solution offers more than 700 videos covering a wide range of exercise classes. Around 600 videos are in English, with the others in languages including Spanish, Finnish, Danish, Swedish and French. Wexer Streaming integrates into any existing health club application: a Wexer plug-in provides the content while the clubs provide the front-end branding. The service allows clubs to offer online memberships where members can stream classes on their iPhones, Androids and/or smart TVs.
Coming to a screen near you….
Asia’s first multi-lingual online yoga channel, mypureyoga, launches in Q4 2015, offering a wide range of complimentary high-quality yoga videos: classes and tutorials from Pure Yoga’s best and most experienced teachers. Users choose the yoga style, level, duration and language. Users register, for free, on mypureyoga.com; a more extensive offering of premium content based on a monthly subscription and exclusive online workshops will soon be launched. Going forward, the service will evolve with new content and additional languages.
Asia’s first multi-lingual online yoga channel,
Coming to a screen near you….
Launched in 2011, NewMoove is a leading online fitness and healthy living portal in German-speaking countries, and the most downloaded Smart TV sports app in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. It offers more than 400 HD fitness videos in 12 categories – including yoga, pilates and functional training – as well as a huge range of personalised services such as personal coaches, individual training plans and nutrition programmes.
NewMoove is a leading online fitness and healthy living portal in German
Coming to a screen near you….
Crunch Live – crunchlive.com – is the online class offering from US-based Crunch Gyms. Launched in October 2013 for US$9.99 a month, users get access to 75+ online workouts inspired by Crunch’s most popular classes, including yoga, pilates, kick butt cardio, hip-hop, strength training and more. New workouts are added monthly, with 15-minute ‘quickies’ also available if consumers are short of time or have specific areas that need a bit more attention. Videos can be accessed from your phone, iPad, laptop, desktop or smart TV.
Join us at Elevate from 12-13 June in London for a special one-off live recording of The Game
Changers Podcast with Sue Anstiss, CEO of Fearless Women. [more...]
Streaming exercise classes into the home shouldn’t be seen as a threat to health clubs and leisure centres, say the experts. In fact, it could be the way to engage more people with exercise. So will it become a widespread trend? Kath Hudson reports
By Kath Hudson | Published in Health Club Management 2015 issue 10
Dean HodgkinConsultant to The énergie Group and Ragdale Hall
Dean Hodgkin
The struggle our industry has gone through to only marginally nudge up the penetration rate suggests there remains a significant population subset who just don’t feel they belong in a health club. If you combine them with the legions of people who, for genuine work and family reasons, find it very difficult to attend our facilities, then there’s a huge group of people to whom online classes might appeal, provided the marketing message is right.
It needs a considered approach. As with activity tracking devices, there’s potential for this technology to provide an exit route from the gym. However, if suitably embraced, it could also be the ideal path to strengthen relationships with members – and could finally help us dent the perennial retention problem by extending member contact beyond the four walls of the club.
If targeted towards non-members, the service has the potential to be a powerful prospecting tool, offering a try-before-you-buy option on the user’s terms. Once familiar with the club’s philosophy, comfortable with their own ability and satisfied they can commit to regular exercise, there should be a resultant steady stream of newbies to our health and fitness facilities.
Online classes could be sold as a pay-as-you-go service, thereby creating a whole new revenue generator for the club. A further benefit to this is that your club can be open for business on a 24-hour basis.
Research has shown that most people prefer to exercise in a group environment rather than alone: the great attraction of exercise classes lies in the primal urges that drive us to seek a sense of belonging, inclusion, community and social status.
If this is communicated to the individual through an online class service, I foresee many fitness journeys that may begin solo but that will then progress to us welcoming a new member through our doors.
Photo: Shutterstock.com
Research has shown that most people prefer not to exercise alone
Malcolm BlackCEO and chairLes Mills Media
Malcolm Black
We believe in making the planet fitter by helping people fall in love with fitness, so they want to work out. Providing an option to work out and join an exercise class at home fits into this; there’s definitely demand for this service.
The Les Mills Global Consumer Fitness Survey (2013), conducted by Nielsen, shows that home exercise complements gym-based workouts, with 82 per cent of gym members or casual gym users also choosing to exercise at home.
Many streaming services are positioned as a club alternative, but Les Mills On Demand – which launched in June – is positioned as a club supplement. It gives our club partners another way to engage with members, and offers exercisers more flexibility and value.
Providing at-home digital exercise can also demonstrate a more complete offering from clubs, to attract new members and to help retain existing ones.
Online classes can act as a lead generator too: our strategy is to introduce more new people to Les Mills workouts, then direct them towards live classes in clubs via our club locator function. Judging by anecdotal evidence taken from social media, this approach seems to be working.
Photo: Shutterstock.com
Online classes could help attract potential new members to your club
Paul BowmanCEOWexer Virtual
Paul Bowman
The modern fitness member expects and demands flexibility, as well as solutions crafted and available at their fingertips anytime and anywhere.
Virtual fitness makes it possible to meet these demands, not only by making group fitness available within the club 24/7, but also by making it possible to reach members outside the gym.
Streaming exercise classes is a great example of this new consumer-centric way of delivery. By adding virtual fitness classes to their own apps, clubs can offer access to group fitness on members’ own consoles (TV, smartphones and tablets). Online streaming is a particularly good way of engaging the millennials, and having a brand presence on phones is particularly key to staying relevant.
High-end clubs generally absorb the cost in order to add value to memberships, whereas budget chains are using it as ancillary revenue. More could be made of this revenue stream if advertising were sold; it offers good potential to boost the bottom line.
Clubs are naïve if they think they’re not being affected by online gym memberships. If you’re not a digital business, you’re a dying business.
Colin GrantCEOThe Pure Group
Colin Grant
As more people are spending more time online and wearables are becoming more popular, health and fitness clubs need to stay relevant.
Mobile technology is going to play an increasingly important part in people’s lives – consumers are now spending more time using mobile than they do desktop – so we’ve created online yoga class portal mypureyoga.
Providing an online streaming service has advantages for both potential and existing members. Existing members can keep up their yoga practice while they travel, which means we retain our relationship with them while they’re away. We also allow non-members to access mypureyoga, as it allows us to engage with consumers who may feel too intimidated to enter a yoga studio’s class environment. Hopefully it will act as a stepping stone towards them coming in to the club.
It also gives us the opportunity to engage with consumers before we enter a new overseas market.
It’s very early days to say what the impact will be – I don’t have a crystal ball to predict it – but it’s something we can’t ignore. We’re setting ourselves up so that, if online streaming does take off, we’re there. We believe the growth potential is huge, probably exponential, and we want to make sure we’re positioned and ready to capitalise on the trend.
Grant hopes mypureyoga will encourage new people to attend live classes
Stefan TilkMDFitness First Germany
Stefan Tilk
The online gym market – specifically paid content for TV and video – is growing very fast, at more than 70 per cent a year. It attracts a new and different consumer segment: people who are unable to visit a real gym for some reason, or who simply don’t want to; consumers who live outside of conurbation areas; and those who want to combine online and offline fitness.
This is why Fitness First Germany acquired online gym NewMoove in October 2014. We believe in creating as many opportunities as possible to engage with the consumer. But we realise, these days, this might need to be done digitally: people are searching for information online first. They also expect tailored services based on their personal data. For both, our industry needs answers: perfect information on websites; digital services like apps and trackers; and integrated solutions of machine, group, outdoor and online training so all data is captured.
Companies who meet these demands will grow faster than their competitors, and in the long term we will see market aggregation in the fitness sector. Investment in digital is expensive, so bigger chains will likely dominate, but smaller chains and clubs can gain access to digital through specialised providers.
Coming to a screen near you….
Launched at the end of June 2015 in the US, UK, Finland and Sweden, Les Mills On Demand features 30-minute workouts of some of Les Mills’ most popular exercise classes, including BodyPump, BodyCombat and Sh’Bam. The service integrates with computers, tablets and smartphones, and the retail price direct to consumers is £9.95 a month. Clubs will be able to offer members this service at a reduced price, and will also be able to share in the revenue generated from those members.
Les Mills On Demand
Coming to a screen near you….
Virtual class provider Wexer started life in 2008 as an online gym brand, and this year’s new launch takes the brand back to its roots. The new Wexer Streaming solution offers more than 700 videos covering a wide range of exercise classes. Around 600 videos are in English, with the others in languages including Spanish, Finnish, Danish, Swedish and French. Wexer Streaming integrates into any existing health club application: a Wexer plug-in provides the content while the clubs provide the front-end branding. The service allows clubs to offer online memberships where members can stream classes on their iPhones, Androids and/or smart TVs.
Coming to a screen near you….
Asia’s first multi-lingual online yoga channel, mypureyoga, launches in Q4 2015, offering a wide range of complimentary high-quality yoga videos: classes and tutorials from Pure Yoga’s best and most experienced teachers. Users choose the yoga style, level, duration and language. Users register, for free, on mypureyoga.com; a more extensive offering of premium content based on a monthly subscription and exclusive online workshops will soon be launched. Going forward, the service will evolve with new content and additional languages.
Asia’s first multi-lingual online yoga channel,
Coming to a screen near you….
Launched in 2011, NewMoove is a leading online fitness and healthy living portal in German-speaking countries, and the most downloaded Smart TV sports app in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. It offers more than 400 HD fitness videos in 12 categories – including yoga, pilates and functional training – as well as a huge range of personalised services such as personal coaches, individual training plans and nutrition programmes.
NewMoove is a leading online fitness and healthy living portal in German
Coming to a screen near you….
Crunch Live – crunchlive.com – is the online class offering from US-based Crunch Gyms. Launched in October 2013 for US$9.99 a month, users get access to 75+ online workouts inspired by Crunch’s most popular classes, including yoga, pilates, kick butt cardio, hip-hop, strength training and more. New workouts are added monthly, with 15-minute ‘quickies’ also available if consumers are short of time or have specific areas that need a bit more attention. Videos can be accessed from your phone, iPad, laptop, desktop or smart TV.
Planet Fitness has announced the repurchase of 314,000 shares at a rate of US$20
million. The
Class A common stocks were repurchased and retired, using cash.
Xponential Fitness today indefinitely suspended founder and CEO, Anthony Geisler, saying it
had been notified on 7 May that the company is facing a legal challenge by the United States
Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California.
Fast Fitness Japan, master franchisee of Anytime Fitness in Japan, has acquired Eighty-8
Health
& Fitness, giving the company master franchisee rights to Anytime Fitness in Germany.
Peloton Interactive Inc is believed to be working to get its costs under control in a bid to align
with the expectations of private equity investors as it considers de-listing.
Having good levels of cardiorespiratory fitness cuts disease and premature death by 11 to 17
per cent according to new research from the University of South Australia.
Barry’s – known for its HIIT workouts combining treadmills and weights – is
thought to be looking at strategic options, including taking on a new backer.
US private equity fund, Providence Equity Partners, is acquiring a majority stake in VivaGym
from Bridges Fund Management, which will exit as a shareholder. Financial terms have not been
disclosed.
The Bannatyne Group says it has officially bounced back from the pandemic, with both turnover
and profits restored to pre-2020 levels in 2023, according to its year-end results.
Join us at Elevate from 12-13 June in London for a special one-off live recording of The Game
Changers Podcast with Sue Anstiss, CEO of Fearless Women. [more...]