NewsBy Club Industry staff Other top fitness trends for the year will include strength training and programming for older adults while online training is decreasing in popularity, according to the American College of Sports Medicine’s annual survey of 4,500 health and fitness professionals. read more |
|
| Indoor activities such as indoor running, indoor rock climbing and lap swimming increased in popularity in 2022 for Garmin device users. read more |
|
---|
|
|
| At-home exercisers can access 90 Nike workouts on Netflix, including programs focused on fitness basics, core, yoga and HIIT. read more |
|
---|
|
|
From Club Industry | Club Industry called upon a range of industry leaders to gauge what they think the trends to watch will be in 2023. Download this free report to read the thoughts of leaders such as Karl Sanft, CEO of 24 Hour Fitness; Adam Sedlack, COO of UFC Gyms; Ben Midgley, CEO of Crunch Franchising; Lindsay Vastola, founder of Vast Potential; Sandy Wiedmeyer, operations superintendent at RecPlex; Ronn McMahon, president CEO of Greater Wichita (Kansas) YMCA, and more. read more |
|
---|
|
|
| Before the fitness industry looks at how it performed in 2022, Club Industry gathered data on how the industry performed during the heart of the COVID-19 pandemic and all its restrictions from 2019-2021. Companies such as Life Time, LA Fitness, Planet Fitness, Xponential Fitness, the Bay Clubs, Orangetheory Fitness and others are included. read more |
|
---|
|
|
In Brief |
|