Using Social Media to Grow Your Fitness Business

I had the chance to present to fitness industry professionals at Dallas Mania this weekend. It was great and my thanks go out to Sara Kooperman and her group for hosting the event and allowing me to present. The use of Social Media in all businesses is a hot topic. I have included my presentation here for your review. Please reach out if I can be of any assistance in helping your fitness or wellness business utilize social media to grow revenues ! See the testimonial below !

 

How to Lead Growth During Turbulent Times in the Fitness Business

Rita McGrath shares brilliant insights into how leaders should handle turbulent times in this interview. All industries are being touched by tremendous change and the fitness industry is NO exception. As Rita notes the difficulties of leading through tremendous change are generally broken down into i) being open to the facts and not falling victim to past success; ii) the ability to diversify, iii) having discipline with new endeavors and iv) exiting less appealing and older investments. Watch this interview as Rita shares her views on how change can be best navigated. More than anything you MUST accept that reinvention is now a necessity and unless businesses in the fitness and wellness space get on board there will be very rough seas ahead.

A Sustainable Wellness Model - Medicare & Prevention

Outcomes outcomes outcomes. Why has wellness been slow to take root ? Outcomes....

Getting on a treadmill does not an outcome make and therefore the theory of how fitness makes people healthier has to date undermined the huge opportunity. Realize that for-profit fitness is $20 Billion a year compared to over $2 Billion a year for traditional medicine, with over 75% of that cost being related to lifestyle oriented diseases. Our health care system cannot afford it and costs must be driven out. Watch the video about how unsustainable our sick care system is.

When the extant fitness industry realizes the motherload of all business opportunities is emerging, value added proven prevention, the shift from membership models will be approaching - but we need the funds shifted from sick care to prevention. . A recent announcement that Medicare will reimburse for the Ornish and Pritikin programs is a step in the right direction. As a recent Blog post by Health Quack of the Healthcare Industry and Policy Community Reported:

Medicare will pay for intensive diet and exercise programs developed under the Ornish and Pritikin brands for reducing cardiovascular event risk, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services announced.

The agency's review of published data on the Ornish and Pritikin intensive cardiac rehabilitation programs found that they effectively slowed or reversed progression of coronary heart disease and reduce the need for coronary artery bypass grafts (CABG) and percutaneous interventions.

Consequently, they are approved for coverage under Part B of Medicare, CMS said. Legislation that went into effect this year established a new benefit for intensive cardiac rehabilitation programs.

Because Medicare will make these programs available to all beneficiaries regardless of income, it expects the decision will "reduce the disparate impact of heart disease in minority populations."

CMS staff reviewed six studies of the Pritikin program and nine on the Ornish version appearing in peer-reviewed publications. Most of these were conducted or sponsored by the Ornish and Pritikin companies -- eight of the nine Ornish studies, for example, had company founder Dean Ornish, MD, as lead or senior author.

Nevertheless, CMS accepted the reported data as valid and adequate to demonstrate the effectiveness of the programs under the agency's statutory and regulatory requirements.

Curves Franchise System Downsizes

Richard Gibson of Dow Jones recently shared an article in the WSJ titled, Curves Loses Stamina Closes Fitness Clubs . The franchise system Curves International Inc., whose 30-minute workout for women once made it among the world's fastest-growing franchises, is running out of steam.

During the past 3 years Curves U.S. franchisees have been closing outlets at a rapid rate, shrinking the chain by a third: to 5,208 U.S. locations at the end of last year from 7,748 at the beginning of 2007, according to a recent franchise disclosure document the company filed with state regulators. More than 1,000 Curves vanished across the country in 2009, while just 35 new locations opened.

Franchisees and industry experts point to a failure to keep up with changing trends—including more flexible hours for busy working women—cheaper competition and the tough economy as major reasons for Curves' decline. It also reflects the oversaturation of small format facilities in the fitness industry in general and increasing pricing pressures.

Curves management thinks that much of the club closings were intended as part of a plan to "prune the system," according to Curves President Mike Raymond. Some owners had bought into Curves for the wrong reasons, he says, "they were motivated primarily as investors rather than owners."

Curves was one of the world's most popular franchised fitness centers as of the end of 2008, boasting nearly four million members world-wide, compared with 3.5 million for runner-up Gold's Gym International Inc., according to the International Health, Racquet and Sportsclub Association, an industry trade group. Figures for 2009 aren't yet available, the group says.

Financial statements filed by the closely held company show it to be profitable. For the year ended Dec. 31, Curves earned $16.4 million on revenue of $84.1 million, compared with earnings of $17.2 million on revenue of $128.7 million the prior year. The revenue falloff reflects lower franchising royalties and equipment sales. Franchisees pay the company 5% of their monthly gross plus another 3% for advertising.

The Curves formula is fairly simple: Each club features a circuit of strengthening and cardiovascular exercise equipment. Accompanied by upbeat music, members move from machine to machine, prompted by an audio tape. Monthly dues vary by market, but can range from about $29 to $49.

Some say the women-only concept helps combat the "intimidation factor" that may discourage trips to a local gym where one might encounter buffed bodies in Spandex—and men. Also, from the start Curves has encouraged women to operate the facilities, and the chain soon became a magnet for would-be female entrepreneurs.

The company's most recent disclosure document, dated March 25, says the total investment to open a Curves in the U.S. is between $31,825 and $39,100, excluding real-estate costs. But many Curves on the market are being sold for much less than that, brokers say.

Founded in 1992 by Gary Heavin, now its chief executive, Curves initially focused on small towns that couldn't support a full-sized gym. The business model allowed a franchisee to make a profit with as few as 100 members, Mr. Heavin once said. At its zenith Curves was opening one club every three hours.

But as Curves moved into urban markets some competitors exploited its vulnerabilities. Many Curves aren't open over the lunch hour, so working women began looking elsewhere for a quick workout. Soon round-the-clock rivals opened, such as Snap Fitness Inc. and Anytime Fitness, as did those with a larger array of workout equipment and exercise routines, including yoga and aerobic dance. Showers and dressing rooms were among their amenities, challenging Curves' bare-bones facility.

Curves franchisees say they began asking headquarters to modify its format so they could retain members, but were largely ignored—a contention the company denies. Mr. Raymond says Curves wants to be flexible and responsive to the needs of women, and that franchisees can seek permission to make adjustments in their offerings.

But Curves gained a reputation in the fitness industry for inflexibility.

Diana Tavary of Helena, Mont., says she walked away from her clubs after 10 years because the company's exercise format didn't keep up with the times. "They didn't allow you to offer anything different than just the" 30-minute circuit, she says.

"They're so constrained in their present model they don't appear to be open to enough feedback from their franchisees," says Tom Garmon, a broker with Fitness Industry Business Brokers, a Hattiesburg, Miss., firm that buys and sells health clubs, including Curves facilities.

Curves' Mr. Raymond says "the notion that we have not innovated is absurd." He points to a new generation of exercise equipment that gives immediate feedback and adjusts the intensity of a workout accordingly. As for extended hours, Mr. Raymond says the company has "safety issues" with the idea of keeping its clubs open around the clock.

The recession also has taken its toll on membership. Katherine Randall, who closed her lone Curves in Truckee, Calif., last month, says that when she bought the club in 2007 its membership was about 300; this year it was down to 70, which she says partly reflects a tough job market and other pressures on discretionary income.

Some franchisees think much of Curves' woes stem from marketing miscues. "There is also a perception that the Curves workout is a 'sissy workout,' which is a complete misunderstanding," says Jim Gasson, a multi-unit franchisee in northern Virginia.

Major Ad Firms Will Struggle In Social Media

A recent WSJ article titled Social Media Draws a Crowd addressed the surge in social media advertising dollars and how traditional ad agencies are racing to get a piece of the action.

The push to form a more formidable presence in social-media advertising is being fueled by the increasing number of marketers who are eager to figure out how they can use sites such as Facebook Inc., which has almost 500 million users, and Twitter, with more than 120 million registered users, as a marketing weapon.

"Social media is now part of all our clients' plans; we can't not be in this space," says Matt Seiler, chief executive of Universal McCann.

Ad spending on social networks world-wide is expected to rise 14% this year to $2.5 billion, according to research firm eMarketer. Although social media represents only a fraction of the $55 billion online-ad market, it is one of the fastest-growing segments.

Some corporations have taken a hands-on role in crafting their efforts: PepsiCo Inc.'s Gatorade, for example, recently created its "Mission Control Center," which is set up like a broadcast-television control room and is charged with monitoring the sports drink around the clock across social-media networks.

Marketing is changing quickly but large firms will unlikely be very proficient at addressing the opportunity of new media. Its too decentralized and fluid. As I pointed out in a previous post titled, "The Days of Mass Everything Are Over":

In his book, "The Chaos Scenario", Bob Garfield, writer for Advertising Age magazine and co-host of NPR’s On the Media program, forecasts the disintegration of mass media and advertising structures that have dominated commerce for hundreds of years. Garfield astutely warns that all formerly top-down institutions cannot dictate to consumers with advertising through mass media as before, but must retool, restructure and reengineer their business models enbracing new digital tools and forging better relationships with customers—no longer seeing people as eyeballs or votes, but as REAL stakeholders in their enterprise.

Watch the video. Its really good.

The Chaos Scenario from Greg Stielstra on Vimeo.