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Technogym | Fit Tech promotion
Technogym | Fit Tech promotion
Technogym | Fit Tech promotion
features

Interview: Tom Galvin

Barnsley Premier Leisure has pushed on with a major rebrand, in spite of the pandemic. Tom Walker talks to its head of corporate fitness about the impact

Published in Health Club Management 2021 issue 2

Results from the first rebranded site have been overwhelming,” says Tom Galvin, head of corporate fitness at Barnsley Premier Leisure (BPL). “Our Net Promoter Score went from 65 into the 80s and, commercially, the site went from 1,700 members to nearly 3,000 in the space of a year.”

Galvin is describing the results achieved at Pontefract Leisure Centre, the first location to benefit from a rebranding exercise, which BPL embarked on in 2017.

The social enterprise, which operates 11 sites on behalf of local authorities, set out on the rebranding journey partly due to customer feedback, which suggested its ’Fitness Flex’ brand was no longer hitting the spot. The early results it has achieved with its new brand – Your Space – have been transformational.

Revitalise and reposition
Galvin says BPL began to sense in early 2017 that the Fitness Flex name didn’t position its gym offer strongly enough in the market or portray BPL’s core values around being a local operator. In addition, the brand image was generic and had connotations of being a bodybuilding gym.

BPL decided revitalisation and repositioning was in order, with the plan being to move away from the value gym marketplace and focus on the trust’s purpose – to enrich people’s lives within their community, through fitness.

“Fitness Flex didn’t resonate with our members in the local areas in which we operate,” says Galvin. “And this was reflected in customer surveys.”

The original brand had not really landed, says Galvin: “Our members are proud of their towns and instead of using Fitness Flex, people were still calling our sites by their ‘old’ names – such as Worksop Leisure Centre.”

BPL brought in Leeds-based brand design agency WPA Pinfold, which took a holistic look at the brand and gym operations.

“We defined the target audience and developed a new brand proposition and positioning,” says creative director Richard Hurst. “We wanted to emphasise the focus on BPL’s local communities, their members and their personal fitness goals, and their not-for-profit nature.

“From there, we created a ‘big thought’ at the centre of the brand, to guide creative thinking and give people a reason to believe in the brand’s message. This thinking communicated the good that the not-for-profit operation does for the community, the good that it does for its employees and, ultimately, the good that exercise and fitness does for your body and mind.”

The brand guidelines have also helped reduce design time for BPL’s internal studio, as they have clear templates and guidance. The guidelines have also delivered a clear scheme specification for future venue fit-outs, allowing BPL to procure and tender signage contracts, uniform and merchandise requirements. This has allowed them to get the best value on agreed specifications, quantities, and warranties.

Vibrant identity
The resulting Your Space brand has a more vibrant identity, designed to place members at the heart of the operation. The message is simple – making facilities “your space to do what you want, and your space to feel good”.

The brand was unveiled in mid-2018 and BPL chose Fitness Flex in Pontefract to be the first to get a makeover. As well as a new brand identity, Pontefract was given a new gym floor layout, new equipment and a refreshed programme of classes.

“We went on-site at Pontefract in December 2018,” says Galvin. “We held brand training days for the staff and replaced all the brand architecture to reflect the new name.

“Converting the site took 14 days – out of which the gym was closed for two, as we wanted to have minimal impact on members. We communicated the process fully with customers, replaced posters with digital screens, launched gym challenges and came up with a rallying call of ‘make someone feel good today’,” says Galvin.

“The results were immediate,” he says. “As well as a 30 per cent increase in members, the improvement in the value of the offer led to a boost in staff morale.

That isn’t to say that everything went without teething problems, as Galvin explains: “Fitting a refurbishment into that timeframe will always bring complications.

“Also, there were some members of staff who didn’t buy into the changes and didn’t see the value in them. For us, that highlighted the members of the team who didn’t see their future with us.

“On the flip side, once we revealed the new brand, all our other GMs wanted their site to be done! I’m not exaggerating when I say it created a bit of a frenzy.”

In total, BPL invested around £140k to create the new-look Your Space Pontefract. In addition, more than £230k was spent on innovative, ultra-modern fitness equipment – which includes an extensive range of kit from equipment partner, Technogym, and a selection of IFI machines, tailored to support disabled members.

Pandemic proportions
Although the intention was all along to introduce the brand across the BPL estate, the success of Pontefract confirmed the project’s importance and in 2019, detailed plans were laid to roll out the brand across the portfolio during 2020. But then the pandemic hit.

While COVID-19 and the subsequent lockdowns and closures have certainly had a huge effect on BPL, it has kept on-course with its rollout plans – even though it meant significant investment at a time when revenues are under unprecedented pressure.

“Once the pandemic hit, we decided to keep the original timeline we’d identified for sites to be refurbished,” Galvin says. “Some sites received more investment than others and this was dictated by the level of return and yield predicted from each site.”

“So far, we’ve refurbished and rebranded seven out of 10 of our sites. We’ll finish the rest now we’ve got a better steer on reopening dates, which will enable us to forecast.”

Digital assets
As well as ploughing on with its facility rollout plans, BPL utilised its new Your Space brand when launching a digital service during the pandemic.

Your Space at Home was launched in July 2020 and was designed entirely in-house – apart from a support help from a local website developer. The original purpose was to create a digital service which would both keep members engaged and introduce them to the new brand.

“During the lockdowns we’ve offered members the chance to use Your Space at Home for free, as we felt that if we could create some brand loyalty while we’re shut, we’d reap the benefits in the medium- to long-term,” Galvin reveals.

“During the three lockdowns, we’ve offered discounted codes for the two local authorities we work with (Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council and Bassetlaw District Council), as well as other partners. In addition to the subsidised partnership approach, there’s a commercial element – we actively market Your Space at Home to non-members too.”

Your Space at Home offers a live streaming timetable of 30 live classes per week and has more than 80 hours of on-demand content. The selection of exercise options, presented by local instructors who have a personal touch, has proven hugely popular – Your Space at Home currently has 2,500 paying members.

“The affinity the users have with our instructors resonates a lot better than if we’d use a generic platform – with instructors from the US or elsewhere,” Galvin says. “A recent survey we sent out to 3,000 users of the system resulted in 250 returns and the average NPS score was 90.”

Galvin adds that what started out as a way to introduce the brand to existing customers while facilities were shut, has now become a permanent fixture of BPL’s offer. “Home working and at-home fitness is here to stay, so we feel this really has legs,” he says, adding that plans are already underway to further develop the platform.

“We’re looking at speaking to partners to create a legacy for this, working closely with Public Health England and the NHS to potentially get into hard-to-reach communities,” Galvin reveals. “We have already offered it for free to all NHS employees for 12 months.

“A customer survey also showed that the digital offer is something that our members want as part of their membership.”

Future plans
BPL is planning to complete the rebrand project across its entire estate by the end of 2021 and is aiming for the new identity to help it bounce back from the effects of the pandemic. Galvin says the brand – paired with the way it’s utilised its digital platform to keep members engaged – will be crucial to the recovery.

“We’ve lost around 14 per cent of our members during lockdown, but we feel bullish that when consumer confidence begins to grow again these will return,” he says.

He adds that the new ‘hybrid model’ will play a key role. “Embracing digital is something all operators need to do, or they risk being left behind.”

“For us, there have been huge levels of improvement in the way we communicate with our members digitally. The perceived value of the brand – and us offering the digital platform for free for nearly six months – will help when it comes to reopening.”

Galvin says that, as a result, BPL is hugely buoyant about not only its own prospects, but the sector’s future as a whole. “We’re firm believers that the future of fitness is going to be brighter than ever, once we’re open and get back to business,” he says.

“People have reassessed how much their own health means to them during this pandemic and the flexibility of a hybrid approach makes total sense for people’s busy lifestyles.”

That also means looking for further opportunities for the Your Space brand.

“We’re now actively looking at growth opportunities,” Galvin reveals. “We feel extremely confident to parachute this brand into a new club or local authority contract and make a success out of it.”

REBRANDING RESULTS

• Member usage up by 85% (target 50%)

• Attrition rate now sits at 3.2% (previously 4.5%)

• Secondary spend has seen a 55% increase

• Net Promoter Score since rebrand went from 58% to 82% (target was 69%)

• 100% increase in membership sales at Pontefract compared with previous year

• Annual sales target reached in first three months (net gain of 500 members for the first site)

• Increased employee engagement and understanding of core values

• Staff sickness has decreased from 3.8% to 1.6%

• Staff retention increased from 65% to c100%

Before (top) and after
Sign up here to get Fit Tech's weekly ezine and every issue of Fit Tech magazine free on digital.
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Interview: Tom Galvin

Barnsley Premier Leisure has pushed on with a major rebrand, in spite of the pandemic. Tom Walker talks to its head of corporate fitness about the impact

Published in Health Club Management 2021 issue 2

Results from the first rebranded site have been overwhelming,” says Tom Galvin, head of corporate fitness at Barnsley Premier Leisure (BPL). “Our Net Promoter Score went from 65 into the 80s and, commercially, the site went from 1,700 members to nearly 3,000 in the space of a year.”

Galvin is describing the results achieved at Pontefract Leisure Centre, the first location to benefit from a rebranding exercise, which BPL embarked on in 2017.

The social enterprise, which operates 11 sites on behalf of local authorities, set out on the rebranding journey partly due to customer feedback, which suggested its ’Fitness Flex’ brand was no longer hitting the spot. The early results it has achieved with its new brand – Your Space – have been transformational.

Revitalise and reposition
Galvin says BPL began to sense in early 2017 that the Fitness Flex name didn’t position its gym offer strongly enough in the market or portray BPL’s core values around being a local operator. In addition, the brand image was generic and had connotations of being a bodybuilding gym.

BPL decided revitalisation and repositioning was in order, with the plan being to move away from the value gym marketplace and focus on the trust’s purpose – to enrich people’s lives within their community, through fitness.

“Fitness Flex didn’t resonate with our members in the local areas in which we operate,” says Galvin. “And this was reflected in customer surveys.”

The original brand had not really landed, says Galvin: “Our members are proud of their towns and instead of using Fitness Flex, people were still calling our sites by their ‘old’ names – such as Worksop Leisure Centre.”

BPL brought in Leeds-based brand design agency WPA Pinfold, which took a holistic look at the brand and gym operations.

“We defined the target audience and developed a new brand proposition and positioning,” says creative director Richard Hurst. “We wanted to emphasise the focus on BPL’s local communities, their members and their personal fitness goals, and their not-for-profit nature.

“From there, we created a ‘big thought’ at the centre of the brand, to guide creative thinking and give people a reason to believe in the brand’s message. This thinking communicated the good that the not-for-profit operation does for the community, the good that it does for its employees and, ultimately, the good that exercise and fitness does for your body and mind.”

The brand guidelines have also helped reduce design time for BPL’s internal studio, as they have clear templates and guidance. The guidelines have also delivered a clear scheme specification for future venue fit-outs, allowing BPL to procure and tender signage contracts, uniform and merchandise requirements. This has allowed them to get the best value on agreed specifications, quantities, and warranties.

Vibrant identity
The resulting Your Space brand has a more vibrant identity, designed to place members at the heart of the operation. The message is simple – making facilities “your space to do what you want, and your space to feel good”.

The brand was unveiled in mid-2018 and BPL chose Fitness Flex in Pontefract to be the first to get a makeover. As well as a new brand identity, Pontefract was given a new gym floor layout, new equipment and a refreshed programme of classes.

“We went on-site at Pontefract in December 2018,” says Galvin. “We held brand training days for the staff and replaced all the brand architecture to reflect the new name.

“Converting the site took 14 days – out of which the gym was closed for two, as we wanted to have minimal impact on members. We communicated the process fully with customers, replaced posters with digital screens, launched gym challenges and came up with a rallying call of ‘make someone feel good today’,” says Galvin.

“The results were immediate,” he says. “As well as a 30 per cent increase in members, the improvement in the value of the offer led to a boost in staff morale.

That isn’t to say that everything went without teething problems, as Galvin explains: “Fitting a refurbishment into that timeframe will always bring complications.

“Also, there were some members of staff who didn’t buy into the changes and didn’t see the value in them. For us, that highlighted the members of the team who didn’t see their future with us.

“On the flip side, once we revealed the new brand, all our other GMs wanted their site to be done! I’m not exaggerating when I say it created a bit of a frenzy.”

In total, BPL invested around £140k to create the new-look Your Space Pontefract. In addition, more than £230k was spent on innovative, ultra-modern fitness equipment – which includes an extensive range of kit from equipment partner, Technogym, and a selection of IFI machines, tailored to support disabled members.

Pandemic proportions
Although the intention was all along to introduce the brand across the BPL estate, the success of Pontefract confirmed the project’s importance and in 2019, detailed plans were laid to roll out the brand across the portfolio during 2020. But then the pandemic hit.

While COVID-19 and the subsequent lockdowns and closures have certainly had a huge effect on BPL, it has kept on-course with its rollout plans – even though it meant significant investment at a time when revenues are under unprecedented pressure.

“Once the pandemic hit, we decided to keep the original timeline we’d identified for sites to be refurbished,” Galvin says. “Some sites received more investment than others and this was dictated by the level of return and yield predicted from each site.”

“So far, we’ve refurbished and rebranded seven out of 10 of our sites. We’ll finish the rest now we’ve got a better steer on reopening dates, which will enable us to forecast.”

Digital assets
As well as ploughing on with its facility rollout plans, BPL utilised its new Your Space brand when launching a digital service during the pandemic.

Your Space at Home was launched in July 2020 and was designed entirely in-house – apart from a support help from a local website developer. The original purpose was to create a digital service which would both keep members engaged and introduce them to the new brand.

“During the lockdowns we’ve offered members the chance to use Your Space at Home for free, as we felt that if we could create some brand loyalty while we’re shut, we’d reap the benefits in the medium- to long-term,” Galvin reveals.

“During the three lockdowns, we’ve offered discounted codes for the two local authorities we work with (Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council and Bassetlaw District Council), as well as other partners. In addition to the subsidised partnership approach, there’s a commercial element – we actively market Your Space at Home to non-members too.”

Your Space at Home offers a live streaming timetable of 30 live classes per week and has more than 80 hours of on-demand content. The selection of exercise options, presented by local instructors who have a personal touch, has proven hugely popular – Your Space at Home currently has 2,500 paying members.

“The affinity the users have with our instructors resonates a lot better than if we’d use a generic platform – with instructors from the US or elsewhere,” Galvin says. “A recent survey we sent out to 3,000 users of the system resulted in 250 returns and the average NPS score was 90.”

Galvin adds that what started out as a way to introduce the brand to existing customers while facilities were shut, has now become a permanent fixture of BPL’s offer. “Home working and at-home fitness is here to stay, so we feel this really has legs,” he says, adding that plans are already underway to further develop the platform.

“We’re looking at speaking to partners to create a legacy for this, working closely with Public Health England and the NHS to potentially get into hard-to-reach communities,” Galvin reveals. “We have already offered it for free to all NHS employees for 12 months.

“A customer survey also showed that the digital offer is something that our members want as part of their membership.”

Future plans
BPL is planning to complete the rebrand project across its entire estate by the end of 2021 and is aiming for the new identity to help it bounce back from the effects of the pandemic. Galvin says the brand – paired with the way it’s utilised its digital platform to keep members engaged – will be crucial to the recovery.

“We’ve lost around 14 per cent of our members during lockdown, but we feel bullish that when consumer confidence begins to grow again these will return,” he says.

He adds that the new ‘hybrid model’ will play a key role. “Embracing digital is something all operators need to do, or they risk being left behind.”

“For us, there have been huge levels of improvement in the way we communicate with our members digitally. The perceived value of the brand – and us offering the digital platform for free for nearly six months – will help when it comes to reopening.”

Galvin says that, as a result, BPL is hugely buoyant about not only its own prospects, but the sector’s future as a whole. “We’re firm believers that the future of fitness is going to be brighter than ever, once we’re open and get back to business,” he says.

“People have reassessed how much their own health means to them during this pandemic and the flexibility of a hybrid approach makes total sense for people’s busy lifestyles.”

That also means looking for further opportunities for the Your Space brand.

“We’re now actively looking at growth opportunities,” Galvin reveals. “We feel extremely confident to parachute this brand into a new club or local authority contract and make a success out of it.”

REBRANDING RESULTS

• Member usage up by 85% (target 50%)

• Attrition rate now sits at 3.2% (previously 4.5%)

• Secondary spend has seen a 55% increase

• Net Promoter Score since rebrand went from 58% to 82% (target was 69%)

• 100% increase in membership sales at Pontefract compared with previous year

• Annual sales target reached in first three months (net gain of 500 members for the first site)

• Increased employee engagement and understanding of core values

• Staff sickness has decreased from 3.8% to 1.6%

• Staff retention increased from 65% to c100%

Before (top) and after
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

Our results showed a greater than 60 per cent reduction in falls for individuals who actively participated in Bold’s programme
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

The app is free and it’s $40 to participate in one of our virtual events
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