Latest
issue
GET SPA BUSINESS
magazine
Yes! Send me the FREE digital editions of Spa Business and Spa Business insider magazines and the FREE weekly Spa Business and Spa Business insider ezines and breaking news alerts!
Not right now, thanksclose this window
Uniting the world of spa & wellness
Get Spa Business and Spa Business insider digital magazines FREE
Sign up here ▸
News   Features   Products   Company profilesProfiles   Magazine   Handbook   Advertise    Subscribe  
Sweating the details
Content that kills

The ubiquity of screens offers our sector greater reach than ever before. The challenge is to find creative solutions to transform this perceived threat into an opportunity

By Jak Phillips | Published in Health Club Management 2019 issue 1


Addictive’, ‘deadly’, ‘the scourge of modern living’ – just some of the warning sirens from our growing moral panic around screen time.

Whether it’s new ukactive research that UK adults spend an average of 12 hours a week watching on-demand TV, or those amusing YouTube videos of toddlers furtively trying to swipe and zoom in on newspapers, seemingly everything today signals the impending apocalypse where screens finally take over.

Make no mistake, screens are everywhere. They’re in our living rooms, atop our desks, in our pockets even. The chances are, you’re reading these words on a screen.

But what’s so bad about that? Screens aren’t to blame for our ‘box-set binges’ and love affair with the chair, it’s the content. Screens don’t force people to stare at them for hours at a time, it’s the fact that Netflix does such a bloody good job of producing addictive content.

Content Landmarks
Idle forms of content currently dominate our screen time, but there’s no reason why the health and fitness sector can’t fight back with its own inspiring content to get people moving. It’s not like we haven’t done it before.

Think back to Jack LaLanne in the 1950s, Jane Fonda in the 1980s and Mr Motivator in the 1990s – they all became big ‘on the box’. Far from being the enemy of exercise, many of the landmark moments in our fledgeling fitness movement have stemmed from the screen.

The ubiquity of screens offers our sector greater reach than ever before. The challenge now is to find creative solutions to transform this perceived threat into an unprecedented opportunity.

Many firms have already started, and as digital fitness has exploded in recent years, the mission to establish fitness facilities as consumers’ ‘third space’ has moved into cyberspace.

The fitness content war is coming
And this is where the quality of content is key. Just as the dodgy on-screen instructors and faded projectors initially gave virtual fitness a bad name in health clubs, it’s the high-quality offerings now becoming the norm that are currently fuelling this new wave of virtual and on-demand fitness.

The content war is well underway, and the stakes are quickly rising. US private equity-backed Peloton recently arrived in London with much fanfare and is opening a production studio dedicated to creating ‘UK-centric’ fitness content.

Pitting itself against the traditional gym market, Peloton aims to persuade consumers to part with £2,000 for a bike and £40 a month in subscription fees to work out at home instead, with its array of streamed classes.

Meanwhile, established market players – such as Fitness On Demand, Wexer Virtual and Les Mills On Demand – are working with health and fitness clubs to bridge the gap between members’ homes and the gym, with fitness subscription services that offer an exercise touchpoint in between club visits.

And then there are a growing number of boutique clubs starting to offer live and recorded feeds of their workouts to be broadcast through streaming services such as ClassPass Live.

What does all this mean for health clubs?
There are those who believe that on-demand fitness offerings will negate the need for the health club and ultimately cost them members.

But the initial numbers don’t seem to bear this out. As the digital fitness revolution has gathered pace over the past decade, gym memberships and penetration rates have continued to steadily increase.

The evidence suggests that digital fitness is helping to bring more people into the world of fitness – the inactive, the self-conscious, the time-poor – with many then graduating into the club space, as they did in droves when the Fondas and LaLannes first hit our screens.

You only have to look to the music industry, which has similarly been disrupted by streaming services to see how this can play out. Most people have a Spotify subscription, but live music has never been more popular, with attendances to gigs and festivals at an all-time high. It just shows how live experiences will always be the pinnacle.

It’s the same story with virtual fitness in gyms. Far from cannibalising the group fitness crowd, industry research has shown clubs that install virtual fitness in their studio see an average 12 per cent increase in attendances to live classes.

Quality content gets people moving and crucially, it helps provide sustainable inspiration. We know the main reasons people leave gyms are down to perceived cost, convenience and lack of time – all of which ultimately boil down to a loss of motivation. A loss of motivation to fork out for that membership, to make that trip to the gym, to create the time for that regular workout.

By offering fitness at members’ fingertips, we can support them to stay in the fitness groove and maintain motivation whether they’re stuck at home, or at work or are travelling.

The gyms that win will be those that can form the right partnerships to extend their reach beyond their four walls through top quality content. They’ll keep current members engaged and will open up a route to reach the 85 per cent of adults who aren’t currently members of a gym. They’ll be primed to help these audiences dip their toe into the world of fitness, before graduating from home workouts into the club space.

The competition will be fierce, but the potential spoils are seismic. Forget being our biggest enemy, screens could yet prove to be the gym’s best friend.

Companies like Fitness on Demand are harnessing screen power to offer engaging fitness options
Companies like Les Mills are harnessing screen power to offer engaging fitness options
FEATURED SUPPLIERS

Step into a world of wellness with the Himalayan Source Salt Capsule
Himalayan Source has launched the Himalayan Salt Capsule to help spa, wellness and fitness facilities or residences upgrade their offering with halotherapy. [more...]

Crafting luxury: Beltrami Linen's bespoke spa solutions
Beltrami Linen’s approach to the world of spa is underpinned by a strong emphasis on bespoke design, where close collaboration with customers and their designers is always of the utmost importance. [more...]
+ More featured suppliers  
COMPANY PROFILES
SKINHAPTICS

Founded by biochemist Sandrine Dahan in 2010 in Paris, Skinhaptics is an expert French skincare br [more...]
Dröm UK Ltd

Dröm UK specialises in the design and installation of luxury, bespoke spa and thermal wellbeing area [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
 

+ More catalogues  

DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

13-16 May 2024

W3Spa EMEA

Conrad Chia Laguna Sardinia , Italy
18-22 May 2024

Eco Resort Network

The Ravenala Attitude Hotel, Mauritius
+ More diary  
 
ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
 
SPA BUSINESS
SPA OPPORTUNITIES
SPA BUSINESS HANDBOOK
PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS
ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2024
Uniting the world of spa & wellness
Get Spa Business and Spa Business insider digital magazines FREE
Sign up here ▸
News   Products   Magazine   Subscribe
Sweating the details
Content that kills

The ubiquity of screens offers our sector greater reach than ever before. The challenge is to find creative solutions to transform this perceived threat into an opportunity

By Jak Phillips | Published in Health Club Management 2019 issue 1


Addictive’, ‘deadly’, ‘the scourge of modern living’ – just some of the warning sirens from our growing moral panic around screen time.

Whether it’s new ukactive research that UK adults spend an average of 12 hours a week watching on-demand TV, or those amusing YouTube videos of toddlers furtively trying to swipe and zoom in on newspapers, seemingly everything today signals the impending apocalypse where screens finally take over.

Make no mistake, screens are everywhere. They’re in our living rooms, atop our desks, in our pockets even. The chances are, you’re reading these words on a screen.

But what’s so bad about that? Screens aren’t to blame for our ‘box-set binges’ and love affair with the chair, it’s the content. Screens don’t force people to stare at them for hours at a time, it’s the fact that Netflix does such a bloody good job of producing addictive content.

Content Landmarks
Idle forms of content currently dominate our screen time, but there’s no reason why the health and fitness sector can’t fight back with its own inspiring content to get people moving. It’s not like we haven’t done it before.

Think back to Jack LaLanne in the 1950s, Jane Fonda in the 1980s and Mr Motivator in the 1990s – they all became big ‘on the box’. Far from being the enemy of exercise, many of the landmark moments in our fledgeling fitness movement have stemmed from the screen.

The ubiquity of screens offers our sector greater reach than ever before. The challenge now is to find creative solutions to transform this perceived threat into an unprecedented opportunity.

Many firms have already started, and as digital fitness has exploded in recent years, the mission to establish fitness facilities as consumers’ ‘third space’ has moved into cyberspace.

The fitness content war is coming
And this is where the quality of content is key. Just as the dodgy on-screen instructors and faded projectors initially gave virtual fitness a bad name in health clubs, it’s the high-quality offerings now becoming the norm that are currently fuelling this new wave of virtual and on-demand fitness.

The content war is well underway, and the stakes are quickly rising. US private equity-backed Peloton recently arrived in London with much fanfare and is opening a production studio dedicated to creating ‘UK-centric’ fitness content.

Pitting itself against the traditional gym market, Peloton aims to persuade consumers to part with £2,000 for a bike and £40 a month in subscription fees to work out at home instead, with its array of streamed classes.

Meanwhile, established market players – such as Fitness On Demand, Wexer Virtual and Les Mills On Demand – are working with health and fitness clubs to bridge the gap between members’ homes and the gym, with fitness subscription services that offer an exercise touchpoint in between club visits.

And then there are a growing number of boutique clubs starting to offer live and recorded feeds of their workouts to be broadcast through streaming services such as ClassPass Live.

What does all this mean for health clubs?
There are those who believe that on-demand fitness offerings will negate the need for the health club and ultimately cost them members.

But the initial numbers don’t seem to bear this out. As the digital fitness revolution has gathered pace over the past decade, gym memberships and penetration rates have continued to steadily increase.

The evidence suggests that digital fitness is helping to bring more people into the world of fitness – the inactive, the self-conscious, the time-poor – with many then graduating into the club space, as they did in droves when the Fondas and LaLannes first hit our screens.

You only have to look to the music industry, which has similarly been disrupted by streaming services to see how this can play out. Most people have a Spotify subscription, but live music has never been more popular, with attendances to gigs and festivals at an all-time high. It just shows how live experiences will always be the pinnacle.

It’s the same story with virtual fitness in gyms. Far from cannibalising the group fitness crowd, industry research has shown clubs that install virtual fitness in their studio see an average 12 per cent increase in attendances to live classes.

Quality content gets people moving and crucially, it helps provide sustainable inspiration. We know the main reasons people leave gyms are down to perceived cost, convenience and lack of time – all of which ultimately boil down to a loss of motivation. A loss of motivation to fork out for that membership, to make that trip to the gym, to create the time for that regular workout.

By offering fitness at members’ fingertips, we can support them to stay in the fitness groove and maintain motivation whether they’re stuck at home, or at work or are travelling.

The gyms that win will be those that can form the right partnerships to extend their reach beyond their four walls through top quality content. They’ll keep current members engaged and will open up a route to reach the 85 per cent of adults who aren’t currently members of a gym. They’ll be primed to help these audiences dip their toe into the world of fitness, before graduating from home workouts into the club space.

The competition will be fierce, but the potential spoils are seismic. Forget being our biggest enemy, screens could yet prove to be the gym’s best friend.

Companies like Fitness on Demand are harnessing screen power to offer engaging fitness options
Companies like Les Mills are harnessing screen power to offer engaging fitness options
LATEST NEWS
Ritz-Carlton Reynolds, Lake Oconee, unveils new-look lakeside destination spa
The Ritz-Carlton Reynolds, Lake Oconee in the southeastern US state of Georgia is celebrating a new milestone after unveiling its newly renovated 27,000sq ft destination spa.
Art-inspired urban spa to launch at stylish new London hotel, Art’otel London Hoxton
Art’otel, Radisson’s contemporary art-inspired lifestyle hotel brand, has strengthened its presence in London with a new hotel in Hoxton fusing art, design and hospitality.
Saga Holographic hits Kickstarter target to roll out holographic indoor bike
HoloBike, a holographic training bike that simulates trail rides in lifelike 3D, is aiming to push indoor cycling technology up a gear.
Exclusive: Yuki Kiyono goes behind the scenes of Aman’s social wellness brand Janu
Luxury hotel brand Aman, widely known for its strong spa focus, has just launched its much- talked-about sister brand Janu in Tokyo – complete with a 4,000sq m urban wellness retreat.
Equinox teams up with Dr Mark Hyman's Function Health to offer $40k annual healthspan programme
Equinox, has teamed up with health platform, Function Health, to offer 100 comprehensive laboratory tests, giving members vital insights into their internal health.
SHA Wellness shares vision for “world’s first healthy living island” in UAE
Spanish wellness brand SHA Wellness Clinic is busy preparing to bolster its wellness portfolio in 2026 with a hyper-exclusive island wellness enclave in AlJurf, UAE.
Breakers Hotel in Long Beach to relaunch as Fairmont property with tech-forward spa in 2024
The historic Breakers Hotel in Long Beach, California, is set to reopen in mid-2024 as a Fairmont Hotels & Resorts property after a significant restoration and redevelopment project.
Kempinski to make Vietnamese debut with riverside resort and spa designed by Kengo Kuma
High-end five-star hotel company Kempinski Hotels is making its mark in Vietnam with a luxury waterfront property overlooking the Saigon River.
Marriott to realise Ritz-Carlton Reserve at Trojena, the Mountains of Neom
Marriott International has signed a new deal with Neom to open a Ritz-Carlton Reserve property as part of Trojena, a brand new year-round mountain adventure destination in Saudi Arabia.
Bannatyne has bounced back from the pandemic
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.
Sport England’s Active Lives insight finds record activity levels, but enduring health inequalities
While British adults are the most active they’ve been in a decade, health inequalities remain with the same groups missing out, according to Sport England’s latest Active Lives Adults Report.
Kerzner to expand Siro portfolio with recovery-focused hotels in Los Cabos and Riyadh
Kerzner International has signed deals to operate two new Siro recovery hotels in Mexico and Saudi Arabia, following the launch of the inaugural Siro property in Dubai this February.
+ More news   
 
FEATURED SUPPLIERS

Step into a world of wellness with the Himalayan Source Salt Capsule
Himalayan Source has launched the Himalayan Salt Capsule to help spa, wellness and fitness facilities or residences upgrade their offering with halotherapy. [more...]

Crafting luxury: Beltrami Linen's bespoke spa solutions
Beltrami Linen’s approach to the world of spa is underpinned by a strong emphasis on bespoke design, where close collaboration with customers and their designers is always of the utmost importance. [more...]
+ More featured suppliers  
COMPANY PROFILES
SKINHAPTICS

Founded by biochemist Sandrine Dahan in 2010 in Paris, Skinhaptics is an expert French skincare br [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
+ More catalogues  

DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

13-16 May 2024

W3Spa EMEA

Conrad Chia Laguna Sardinia , Italy
18-22 May 2024

Eco Resort Network

The Ravenala Attitude Hotel, Mauritius
+ More diary  
 


ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2024

ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS