CBI: How important do you think
community is to fitness facilities?
AL NOSHIRVANI: What distinguishes
you from other businesses is creating
a connection to your community. To do
that, you need to behave like a local
business. You need to go to chamber
[of commerce] meetings and local
events like Saturday flea markets, and
interact with other community leaders.
All of those gestures are important for
building a community presence.
CBI: How important is it to reinvest? How much do you put back
into your club and how often?
AL NOSHIRVANI: There has to be a
clear purpose. My clubs used to be
World Gyms before we became
Method Gyms, so we went through a
full rebrand. We had to redo all of our
interiors and upgrade our equipment, so
we invested significantly in our facilities.
The other part of the equation is
that we charge annual enhancement
fees in our clubs. We survey our
members and ask them what they
want. Afterward, we make sure that
we highlight the fact that we delivered
what they asked for. We do that twice
a year in April and in October. April,
because that’s after the Q1 rush and
you’re going into the summer, so you
want to keep your members interested. Then in October because that’s
when you’re getting ready for the Q1
rush that’s coming in January.
CBI: How have you seen consumer
behavior change? For instance,
ABC Fitness just did a report about how different generations
want different experiences.
How do you service that?
AL NOSHIRVANI: I can tell you about
our own experiences, because one of
the clubs that we acquired this year
was previously owned by AARP, who
was trying to get into the club business. While the club didn’t disallow
members under a certain age from
joining, people in their 20s and 30s
didn’t want to join a club with an older
population. When we took over that
club, we had a real challenge, but I
think that if you create programming
and packaging, you can solve the issue.
This is part of your packaging, promotions, and pricing strategy. Certain
things like scheduling can incentivize
people of all ages. Create senior
memberships that motivate people
over a certain age to come in during
the middle of the day as opposed to
the bookends. Other factors like pricing naturally create barriers or
openings for different age groups.
For example, Planet Fitness has a
proportionately high number of people
under the age of 30 than most other
organizations, because they have their
high school program every year, so
that drives their numbers. We prefer
people 25 years and older. We don’t
really want the young, pumped-up
guys in there, because they tend to
push everybody else out, but these
are interesting topics to bring up
because there are so many different
factors to consider.
CBI: Do you think it’s important
for club operators and owners to reach out to the local medical
community?
AL NOSHIRVANI: Yes. I have a friend
who’s a bariatric surgeon who does
weight-loss surgeries. I was talking
to him last year about the Fitness
Technology Summit, and asked him,
“What are you guys doing to prepare
your patients for surgery? Why not
partner with gyms?” Unfortunately,
the answer was, “We didn’t know we
could do that. We didn’t know you guys
were qualified.”
Some of these surgeons have
opened up personal training facilities
in the basements of their medical
office facilities, and they’re putting
these patients into those spaces to prepare them for surgery. It’s crazy to me
that we don’t partner with them. Their
costs would go down, and so would the
insurer's costs. We’ve got state-of-the
art facilities and qualified trainers.
We definitely have missed the boat
on this, and we need to figure out how
to solve it. Partnering with the medical community would be tremendously powerful.