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features

Gymtopia series: A sense of purpose

UK-based Mosaic Spa & Health Clubs is using charity to re-discover the company’s mission. Ray Algar reports

Published in Health Club Management 2014 issue 10

Recently I was presenting a summary of my Fitness Sector Social Good Report to representatives of the UK fitness industry. During questions, I was asked if there was evidence that being perceived as a compassionate and generous business generated a commercial return to the organisation. Do customers, staff and other stakeholders really care that an organisation is using its resources to solve social inequalities that may seem unconnected to its core business?

I was surprised by the question because the fitness sector is driven by an altruistic purpose – it exists to help others. Meanwhile businesses such as TOMS thrive because compassion and generosity are their ‘weapons of choice’ in the fiercely competitive world of shoes and eyewear, where their ‘buy one, we donate one’ is transforming lives and industries.

So this month, I want to share a story of how UK-based Mosaic Spa & Health Clubs (Mosaic) is using compassion to reinvigorate a 27-year-old business whose sense of purpose and direction had become lost following its sale to a publicly listed company.

Resetting the compass
Founded in 1987, by 2001 Fitness Express was operating 14 hotel-based health clubs across the UK, employing 300 staff. Demand for its friendly and personalised gyms was growing and the business was acquired by Crown Sports.

For three years, Fitness Express founders Dave Courteen and Steve Taylor adjusted to a listed company culture. However, business now felt very different and they yearned for their independence, so in 2004 they bought back the business.

“We had just bought the business back and found our original vision and mission had got a little lost. A friend told me about the charity Compassion, and I arranged to meet with its director to find out more,” says Courteen.

Releasing children from poverty
Compassion is an international Christian child development and child advocacy ministry, which for more than 60 years has been driven by the mission to free children from poverty. Its programmes focus on the spiritual, economic, social and physical needs of children through all stages of development, from age two to 24 years. It focuses its efforts in 26 of the world’s poorest countries.

In a world where more than a billion children live on less than US$2 a day, Compassion believes connecting one child with one sponsor is the most strategic way to end childhood poverty. Its Child Sponsorship Programme aims to provide long-term funding for food, health, hygiene and education.

For Mosaic – the new parent company brand for Fitness Express since 2011 – writing the occasional cheque to the charity was never going to be enough, and so it was the child sponsorship programme it focused on. Staff at Fitness Express and Imagine Spa, the company’s two operating businesses, were invited to suggest a single country on which to concentrate their support. Uganda was eventually chosen from a shortlist of six countries.

A long-term commitment
Child sponsorship is no fleeting ice bucket challenge, as lifting children out of poverty takes patience and long-term funding. Mosaic agreed that, for every club and spa it operates, it would clothe, feed and educate a child in Uganda.

Mosaic’s corporate mission is ‘making a difference to people’s lives’, so this programme is perfectly aligned with the work it undertakes every day in its clubs.

As I write, the lives of 30 Ugandan children are being forever changed thanks to the compassion and generosity of Mosaic’s staff and members. Over the past nine years of the partnership, the company has been quietly supporting 40 children and has invested £100,000.

Staff & member engagement
Each Fitness Express club has a Compassion board on display, to show how their sponsored child is progressing and to encourage members to participate. Staff write to sponsored children, send birthday cards and Christmas gifts, and the children write back depending on their literacy.

The clubs are encouraged to raise funds for the project over and above their sponsorship for individual children; this pays for additional clothes, food and education. Members have also been inspired to directly sponsor other children, thereby creating a wider ripple effect. Meanwhile, in-club fundraising has provided more than £40,000 to help fund improvements in the communities where these children live, including a new playground to promote their physical and emotional development.

As Taylor says: “The Compassion initiative has been successful in providing a focus for Mosaic, its staff and customers to work together to achieve something that’s very worthwhile. The visit of three of our managers to Uganda was also very powerful in the staff engagement process.”

Sign up here to get Fit Tech's weekly ezine and every issue of Fit Tech magazine free on digital.
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features

Gymtopia series: A sense of purpose

UK-based Mosaic Spa & Health Clubs is using charity to re-discover the company’s mission. Ray Algar reports

Published in Health Club Management 2014 issue 10

Recently I was presenting a summary of my Fitness Sector Social Good Report to representatives of the UK fitness industry. During questions, I was asked if there was evidence that being perceived as a compassionate and generous business generated a commercial return to the organisation. Do customers, staff and other stakeholders really care that an organisation is using its resources to solve social inequalities that may seem unconnected to its core business?

I was surprised by the question because the fitness sector is driven by an altruistic purpose – it exists to help others. Meanwhile businesses such as TOMS thrive because compassion and generosity are their ‘weapons of choice’ in the fiercely competitive world of shoes and eyewear, where their ‘buy one, we donate one’ is transforming lives and industries.

So this month, I want to share a story of how UK-based Mosaic Spa & Health Clubs (Mosaic) is using compassion to reinvigorate a 27-year-old business whose sense of purpose and direction had become lost following its sale to a publicly listed company.

Resetting the compass
Founded in 1987, by 2001 Fitness Express was operating 14 hotel-based health clubs across the UK, employing 300 staff. Demand for its friendly and personalised gyms was growing and the business was acquired by Crown Sports.

For three years, Fitness Express founders Dave Courteen and Steve Taylor adjusted to a listed company culture. However, business now felt very different and they yearned for their independence, so in 2004 they bought back the business.

“We had just bought the business back and found our original vision and mission had got a little lost. A friend told me about the charity Compassion, and I arranged to meet with its director to find out more,” says Courteen.

Releasing children from poverty
Compassion is an international Christian child development and child advocacy ministry, which for more than 60 years has been driven by the mission to free children from poverty. Its programmes focus on the spiritual, economic, social and physical needs of children through all stages of development, from age two to 24 years. It focuses its efforts in 26 of the world’s poorest countries.

In a world where more than a billion children live on less than US$2 a day, Compassion believes connecting one child with one sponsor is the most strategic way to end childhood poverty. Its Child Sponsorship Programme aims to provide long-term funding for food, health, hygiene and education.

For Mosaic – the new parent company brand for Fitness Express since 2011 – writing the occasional cheque to the charity was never going to be enough, and so it was the child sponsorship programme it focused on. Staff at Fitness Express and Imagine Spa, the company’s two operating businesses, were invited to suggest a single country on which to concentrate their support. Uganda was eventually chosen from a shortlist of six countries.

A long-term commitment
Child sponsorship is no fleeting ice bucket challenge, as lifting children out of poverty takes patience and long-term funding. Mosaic agreed that, for every club and spa it operates, it would clothe, feed and educate a child in Uganda.

Mosaic’s corporate mission is ‘making a difference to people’s lives’, so this programme is perfectly aligned with the work it undertakes every day in its clubs.

As I write, the lives of 30 Ugandan children are being forever changed thanks to the compassion and generosity of Mosaic’s staff and members. Over the past nine years of the partnership, the company has been quietly supporting 40 children and has invested £100,000.

Staff & member engagement
Each Fitness Express club has a Compassion board on display, to show how their sponsored child is progressing and to encourage members to participate. Staff write to sponsored children, send birthday cards and Christmas gifts, and the children write back depending on their literacy.

The clubs are encouraged to raise funds for the project over and above their sponsorship for individual children; this pays for additional clothes, food and education. Members have also been inspired to directly sponsor other children, thereby creating a wider ripple effect. Meanwhile, in-club fundraising has provided more than £40,000 to help fund improvements in the communities where these children live, including a new playground to promote their physical and emotional development.

As Taylor says: “The Compassion initiative has been successful in providing a focus for Mosaic, its staff and customers to work together to achieve something that’s very worthwhile. The visit of three of our managers to Uganda was also very powerful in the staff engagement process.”

Sign up here to get Fit Tech's weekly ezine and every issue of Fit Tech magazine free on digital.
Gallery
More features
Editor's letter

Into the fitaverse

Fitness is already among the top three markets in the metaverse, with new technology and partnerships driving real growth and consumer engagement that looks likely to spill over into health clubs, gyms and studios
Fit Tech people

Ali Jawad

Paralympic powerlifter and founder, Accessercise
Users can easily identify which facilities in the UK are accessible to the disabled community
Fit Tech people

Hannes Sjöblad

MD, DSruptive
We want to give our users an implantable tool that allows them to collect their health data at any time and in any setting
Fit Tech people

Jamie Buck

Co-founder, Active in Time
We created a solution called AiT Voice, which turns digital data into a spoken audio timetable that connects to phone systems
Profile

Fahad Alhagbani: reinventing fitness

The team is young and ambitious, and the awareness of technology is very high. We share trends and out-of-the-box ideas almost every day
Opinion

Building on the blockchain

For small sports teams looking to compete with giants, blockchain can be a secret weapon explains Lars Rensing, CEO of Protokol
Innovation

Bold move

We ended up raising US$7m in venture capital from incredible investors, including Andreessen Horowitz, Khosla Ventures, Primetime Partners, and GingerBread Capital
App analysis

Check your form

Sency’s motion analysis technology is allowing users to check their technique as they exercise. Co-founder and CEO Gal Rotman explains how
Profile

New reality

Sam Cole, CEO of FitXR, talks to Fit Tech about taking digital workouts to the next level, with an immersive, virtual reality fitness club
Profile

Sohail Rashid

My vision was to create a platform that could improve the sport for lifters at all levels and attract more people, similar to how Strava, Peloton and Zwift have in other sports
Ageing

Reverse Ageing

Many apps help people track their health, but Humanity founders Peter Ward and Michael Geer have put the focus on ageing, to help users to see the direct repercussions of their habits. They talk to Steph Eaves
App analysis

Going hybrid

Workout Anytime created its app in partnership with Virtuagym. Workout Anytime’s Greg Maurer and Virtuagym’s Hugo Braam explain the process behind its creation
Research

Physical activity monitors boost activity levels

Researchers at the University of Copenhagen have conducted a meta analysis of all relevant research and found that the body of evidence shows an impact
Editor's letter

Two-way coaching

Content providers have been hugely active in the fit tech market since the start of the pandemic. We expect the industry to move on from delivering these services on a ‘broadcast-only’ basis as two-way coaching becomes the new USP
Fit Tech People

Laurent Petit

Co-founder, Active Giving
The future of sports and fitness are dependent on the climate. Our goal is to positively influence the future of our planet by instilling a global vision of wellbeing and a sense of collective action
Fit Tech People

Adam Zeitsiff

CEO, Intelivideo
We don’t just create the technology and bail – we support our clients’ ongoing hybridisation efforts
Fit Tech People

Anantharaman Pattabiraman

CEO and co-founder, Auro
When you’re undertaking fitness activities, unless you’re on a stationary bike, in most cases it’s not safe or necessary to be tied to a screen, especially a small screen
Fit Tech People

Mike Hansen

Managing partner, Endorphinz
We noticed a big gap in the market – customers needed better insights but also recommendations on what to do, whether that be customer acquisition, content creation, marketing and more
More features