Congratulations to Orange Theory Fitness! The news is just out that since their formal launch in 2010 they have built a team training workout model that has opened over 1000 franchise stores, reportedly generating over *$1M million in revenue per store (*stores over the age of 12 months), and best of all, they have not closed even one store. That math suggests they are approaching $1 Billion in network revenue. Nice work!
Let’s begin with the notion that any business strategy is a set of activities working together Tumcoherently to gain an advantage over time. Orange Theory is no different than any other facility, so it is hard to merely say “they are successful because of X.” In reality they are successful because of the blend of many activities they chose to partake in, which leaves their members all working together.
That said, their most striking difference is not the treadmills in the polished bootcamp studio, it is not the suspension ropes, it is not the resistance bands, nor the color of the store itself, but it is the heart rate technology.
You see Orange Theory has positioned itself in the gym space by suggesting if you work out in a given heart rate zone, you will benefit from EPOC or after burn. EPOC or after burn is when your metabolism will be boosted during your 36-hour recovery post class. Orange Theory attests that you will burn more calories doing it this way than if you didn't work out in the said heart rate zone, which in their case is the orange zone, or 84%-91%of your max.
This narrative has worked well. I have heard many well-educated professionals at my son's soccer games talking to each other about this new “Orange Theory” and how it is the fitness hack to burning body fat. These people go on to explain how the big screen display helps you adhere to this special zone, and how the smartphone app post class validates the experience. The science is not exact, and max heart rate settings can really throw this science off if you want to get technical, but the story is interesting, and their members can hang their hat on that explanation when raving about their weight loss success to their friends. The reality is that working out hard will burn fat.
For gyms who are not Orange Theory, I suggest you don't mimic them with your programming, but position against them, as they say, ‘different is better than better.’ If you leverage a platform like Myzone, you can assign points beyond just the HIIT zone and in doing so you can be different in 2 key areas.
As a fitness executive, you must identify what trends are catching on and ask yourself how to capture that trend while positioning yourself as being not better, but different. I hope the above give you a good example of doing this.