Greenwashing, exaggerated claims and an explosion of wellness products are converging with unprecedented consumer demand for health and longevity. The result is a crowded, complex marketplace where trust – not marketing – is becoming the decisive factor.
Against this backdrop, WELLZoomers, adults aged 25 to 44, have emerged as a defining consumer segment in WELLSurvey 2.0, a new report based on data from the US, the UK and Germany (see p68). This cohort represents a US$606 billion (€516.6 billion, £447.1 billion) global wellness revenue opportunity.
Yet despite this demand, the industry faces a striking challenge: differentiation. When WELLSurvey 2.0 respondents were shown 36 leading wellness resort brands and asked which they would choose for a future trip, 53 per cent selected “none of the above”. No operator stood out. Consumers are highly engaged in their health, but many still struggle to distinguish between brands
Out of 36 leading wellness resort brands, not one operator stood out
That matters because they’re no longer seeking isolated treatments or occasional escapes. Instead, they’re building personal wellbeing ecosystems – combining therapies, diagnostics, fitness, nutrition and recovery practices into longer-term health strategies. This creates scope for operators to engage across the full journey: pre-arrival, in-stay and post-visit. Yet aftercare remains one of the most underdeveloped parts of the experience.
But the most important finding is trust. Eighty-three per cent of respondents use social media for health information, yet fewer than half trust what they find. The language that carries most credibility is “clinically proven” (71 per cent), “recommended by a scientist or medical professional” (67 per cent) and “evidence-based” (66 per cent).
In a marketplace saturated with claims, trust is becoming the ultimate filter. Spas and wellness operators have a clear advantage: trained practitioners, deep expertise in human health and a service ethos rooted in care. The task now is to move beyond being one of many choices and instead become a trusted authority that consumers actively rely on.
credit: Jack Emmerson
Katie Barnes is editor of Spa Business magazine
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