Fitness Industry Trends Around the Globe Examined
“What’s All the Rage?”
Fitness Industry Trends Around the Globe Examined
Leading Industry Organizations Conduct a Comprehensive Study of Fitness Industry Behavior
Dallas, TX, September 15, 2015. Today, ClubIntel, The American Council on Exercise (ACE), and International Health, Racquet and Sportclub Association (IHRSA) released the inaugural International Fitness Industry Trend Report, “What’s All the Rage?” This study explores the offerings of fitness professionals and gym operators around the world, and quantifies the data to reflect growth in trends over the past two years.
With the collective goal to shed light on what equipment, programs, services and technology the fitness industry is adopting and how these adoption rates are changing over time, ACE, IHRSA and ClubIntel gathered behavioral data from a broad spectrum of industry professionals and business segments across the globe—representing over 11,000 health and fitness businesses. The study explores more than 90 industry trends across three broad categories—programs, services and training protocols; equipment and facilities; and technology—and determines if they are emerging, niche, growing, maturing or declining.
“This is a first-of-its kind report to measure the behavior outcomes across the entire industry, which gives fitness professionals around the world a better understanding of what their peers offer, what’s in demand, and what’s projected for growth,” said ACE President and CEO Scott Goudeseune. “Having access to data of this caliber can help professionals to better understand the opportunities that exist within the industry and assist them in developing a competitive business strategy to grow their businesses.”
“The International Fitness Industry Trend Report provides real-world feedback on what fitness club operators and professionals are actually utilizing in the marketplace,” said IHRSA President and CEO Joe Moore. “The report provides an in-depth analysis of niche, emerging, and mature trends based on comprehensive responses from leading club operators and fitness professionals.”
The key findings from the report include:
- Personal training has the highest adoption rate of any program or service in the fitness industry.
- Traditional functional fitness equipment and accessories (medicine balls, BOSU, stability balls) and flexibility/mobility equipment (foam rollers, stretch trainers and myofascial release devices) proved to be today’s hottest equipment.
- Boot-camp training, small-group training, HIIT group exercise classes and functional resistance training have all achieved a high level of adoption and continue to show above average growth.
- Social media is the only well-adopted technology trend. The industry has yet to fully embrace technology as a means to enhance the member/client experience and improve productivity and efficiency. Technology opportunities such as online pricing transparency, online registration and reservations for programs, selling memberships online, virtual training and club mobile applications all have opportunity to gain significantly greater adoption with the industry.
- Senior fitness programs are among the top ten most frequently adopted industry trends.
- Treadmills and elliptical trainers have experienced resurgence in growth in the past two years.
Notably, a significant majority of the trends across all three categories fell into either the emerging or niche categories. The data in the report is segmented by global region, business model and scope or size of the enterprise.
For a free overview of the study findings, click here to download the executive summary of The 2015 International Fitness Industry Trend Report. The full report will be released at the beginning of October and can be purchased from the ClubIntel store at club-intel.com/store/.
Justin is the Managing Director of Active Management, which he began January 2004. He offers coaching to businesses worldwide in everything from start up and design to marketing and sales systems. Justin also facilitates four Australian and New Zealand ‘fitness industry roundtables’ events, which allows him to see a huge cross section of business models.