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The Leisure Media Company Ltd
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FITNESS, HEALTH, WELLNESS

features

The way forward

In the light of more people being authentic about their gender identity, how should the health and fitness industry respond? David Minton reports

Published in HCM Handbook 2023 issue 1
NDY is taking its LGBTQ+ community into health clubs / photo: NDY
NDY is taking its LGBTQ+ community into health clubs / photo: NDY
Fitness brands need to reimagine how gender appears across the whole company

With the NHS experiencing a huge growth in the number of people expressing a sense of unease because of a mismatch between their biological sex and their gender identity, the fitness sector can no longer ignore the shifting gender norms.

Sex is based on a rigid idea of biological traits, which societies use to assign people as either male or female, while gender is more fluid and determined by what an individual feels and does. Gender identity refers to our sense of who we are and how we see and describe ourselves.

So how should the fitness industry respond? Many operators I have spoken to are unsure about how to cater for the specific needs of this community and some LGBTQ+ people feel a high degree of gymtimidation about entering a health club.

Having developed a QPOC/non-binary/trans-centred community – which is connected through health – during the worst of the pandemic, Ryan Lanji, founder of Not Dead Yet (NDY), is working to bridge this gap (p50).

NDY is working with premium gym spaces in London to promote classes which prioritise gender inclusivity and marginalised communities of colour. Personal trainers and instructors unlearn their biases by incorporating NDY’s ethos. Sites also agree to convert changing room signage to gender neutral for the duration of the NDY’s booking. Blok has been one of the first operators to get on board and is working towards building a fully-inclusive community.

Fitness brands need to reimagine how gender appears across the whole company, from market research to survey forms, customer experience, the products on sale and programming.

Gender-inclusive marketing means leaving behind those favoured visuals – which have limited appeal to the wider consumer – and considering those representing a range of fitness products being used by a wider range of members.

Using inclusive language which highlights the benefits of physical activity will broaden appeal and brands which expand their focus to respond to this change could start to recognise the bigger business opportunity in 2023 and beyond.

David Minton is founder of research company Leisure DB

Gender insight

• Globally, 25 per cent of Gen Zers expect to change their gender identity at least once during their lifetime.

• 5,000 referrals were made to the NHS Gender Identity Development Service in 2021 – twice as many as the previous year.

• According to the Office for National Statistics, 262,000 people – 0.5 per cent of the population – reported their gender identity differed from their sex registered at birth.

• It’s estimated that the number of US millennials identifying as transgender or gender non-conforming was 12 per cent in 2020.

• 56 per cent of US Gen Zs know someone who uses a gender-neutral pronoun. (Harvard Business Review)

• 59 per cent of Gen Zs believe forms and surveys should include more options. (Harvard Business Review)

Ryan Lanji
Not Dead Yet: founder
photo: NDY
How did your fitness community come about?

I did the first lockdown on my own and used the time to focus on my body and mind. To help queer people in the same position, I curated a seven day a week workout schedule.

Monday was a sound bath, followed on Tuesday by a sensual movement class, led by a pole performer. Weight lifting anything in your house conducted in British Sign Language was on Wednesday and then HIIT, a version of spin, yoga and pranayama on the other days.

DJs from London clubs curated playlists, which provided a way for the queer community to integrate into the fitness community. To make it a fully inclusive, safe space I made sure the trainers were trans, non-binary, of colour or queer. Offered free and promoted on social media, it soon gathered momentum and received 10,000 hits from all over the world.

How have you taken it from an online community into clubs?

I approached gyms to see if we could host some classes. Blok has been really supportive, putting on one class a week and the Adidas gym at Brick Lane allows me to host one class a month. I recruit the instructors and bring the kids. I meet them to provide a familiar face and alleviate any anxieties they have about the environment.

What should operators know about this community?

Queer people need a bit of extra time, patience and kindness. They might not know how to enter the gym, or the class, or how to lift the weights and lots of them are scared to go into these white, CIS, heterotypical male spaces.

Loads of PTs misgender without realising it: for example addressing the class as “guys”. It’s better to say team, people, or everybody and it’s super important for trainers to say my name is and my pronouns are and I will call you they and them. In the marketing, we need to start seeing a range of bodies.

Do any of the people who come to NDY classes go on to join a gym?

The kids who come regularly feel like they’re part of a community. Once they come three or four times they know the receptionist and coach and it gives them a launchpoint to access the fitness industry.

What are your future plans?

I have exciting plans with Adidas to create a city-wide community, with a website and podcasts. I want to work with anyone in the fitness industry who believes in the future of an integrated, healthy world and who wants to be more inclusive.

PTs can misgender people, addressing classes as ‘guys’ / photo: NDY
Ed Stanbury
BLOK: founder
photo: BLOK
Why did BLOK partner with NDY to run these classes?

We want to create a safe space in the fitness industry to avoid the alienation of queer and trans people. Modifying our offering to cater for this community is in line with our founding principles of wanting to be an inclusive and safe space for all communities in which we operate and is in line with our diversity and inclusion strategy.

What were the challenges?

Creating gender neutral changing rooms has been a challenge in our existing sites, as they weren’t designed with this in mind, we create them specifically for the NDY classes and schedule classes at times which won’t affect our timetable.

Any advice to other operators?

Make this community feel welcome. Represent the LGBTQ+ community in marketing materials, create gender neutral changing rooms and avoid the use of gendered language, such as ‘guys’.

We want to create a safe space in the fitness industry to avoid the alienation of queer and trans people
Blok is working with NDY to make its sites welcoming to all / photo: BLOK
/ photo: NDY
Language and marketing used by gyms can be alienating to the LGBTQ+ community / photo: NDY
Language and marketing used by gyms can be alienating to the LGBTQ+ community / photo: NDY
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/2023/70033_783553.jpg
David Minton reports on how to make the industry welcoming to the trans community, and talks to Ryan Lanji who has created a burgeoning scene in London which grew out of lockdown sessions.
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features

The way forward

In the light of more people being authentic about their gender identity, how should the health and fitness industry respond? David Minton reports

Published in HCM Handbook 2023 issue 1
NDY is taking its LGBTQ+ community into health clubs / photo: NDY
NDY is taking its LGBTQ+ community into health clubs / photo: NDY
Fitness brands need to reimagine how gender appears across the whole company

With the NHS experiencing a huge growth in the number of people expressing a sense of unease because of a mismatch between their biological sex and their gender identity, the fitness sector can no longer ignore the shifting gender norms.

Sex is based on a rigid idea of biological traits, which societies use to assign people as either male or female, while gender is more fluid and determined by what an individual feels and does. Gender identity refers to our sense of who we are and how we see and describe ourselves.

So how should the fitness industry respond? Many operators I have spoken to are unsure about how to cater for the specific needs of this community and some LGBTQ+ people feel a high degree of gymtimidation about entering a health club.

Having developed a QPOC/non-binary/trans-centred community – which is connected through health – during the worst of the pandemic, Ryan Lanji, founder of Not Dead Yet (NDY), is working to bridge this gap (p50).

NDY is working with premium gym spaces in London to promote classes which prioritise gender inclusivity and marginalised communities of colour. Personal trainers and instructors unlearn their biases by incorporating NDY’s ethos. Sites also agree to convert changing room signage to gender neutral for the duration of the NDY’s booking. Blok has been one of the first operators to get on board and is working towards building a fully-inclusive community.

Fitness brands need to reimagine how gender appears across the whole company, from market research to survey forms, customer experience, the products on sale and programming.

Gender-inclusive marketing means leaving behind those favoured visuals – which have limited appeal to the wider consumer – and considering those representing a range of fitness products being used by a wider range of members.

Using inclusive language which highlights the benefits of physical activity will broaden appeal and brands which expand their focus to respond to this change could start to recognise the bigger business opportunity in 2023 and beyond.

David Minton is founder of research company Leisure DB

Gender insight

• Globally, 25 per cent of Gen Zers expect to change their gender identity at least once during their lifetime.

• 5,000 referrals were made to the NHS Gender Identity Development Service in 2021 – twice as many as the previous year.

• According to the Office for National Statistics, 262,000 people – 0.5 per cent of the population – reported their gender identity differed from their sex registered at birth.

• It’s estimated that the number of US millennials identifying as transgender or gender non-conforming was 12 per cent in 2020.

• 56 per cent of US Gen Zs know someone who uses a gender-neutral pronoun. (Harvard Business Review)

• 59 per cent of Gen Zs believe forms and surveys should include more options. (Harvard Business Review)

Ryan Lanji
Not Dead Yet: founder
photo: NDY
How did your fitness community come about?

I did the first lockdown on my own and used the time to focus on my body and mind. To help queer people in the same position, I curated a seven day a week workout schedule.

Monday was a sound bath, followed on Tuesday by a sensual movement class, led by a pole performer. Weight lifting anything in your house conducted in British Sign Language was on Wednesday and then HIIT, a version of spin, yoga and pranayama on the other days.

DJs from London clubs curated playlists, which provided a way for the queer community to integrate into the fitness community. To make it a fully inclusive, safe space I made sure the trainers were trans, non-binary, of colour or queer. Offered free and promoted on social media, it soon gathered momentum and received 10,000 hits from all over the world.

How have you taken it from an online community into clubs?

I approached gyms to see if we could host some classes. Blok has been really supportive, putting on one class a week and the Adidas gym at Brick Lane allows me to host one class a month. I recruit the instructors and bring the kids. I meet them to provide a familiar face and alleviate any anxieties they have about the environment.

What should operators know about this community?

Queer people need a bit of extra time, patience and kindness. They might not know how to enter the gym, or the class, or how to lift the weights and lots of them are scared to go into these white, CIS, heterotypical male spaces.

Loads of PTs misgender without realising it: for example addressing the class as “guys”. It’s better to say team, people, or everybody and it’s super important for trainers to say my name is and my pronouns are and I will call you they and them. In the marketing, we need to start seeing a range of bodies.

Do any of the people who come to NDY classes go on to join a gym?

The kids who come regularly feel like they’re part of a community. Once they come three or four times they know the receptionist and coach and it gives them a launchpoint to access the fitness industry.

What are your future plans?

I have exciting plans with Adidas to create a city-wide community, with a website and podcasts. I want to work with anyone in the fitness industry who believes in the future of an integrated, healthy world and who wants to be more inclusive.

PTs can misgender people, addressing classes as ‘guys’ / photo: NDY
Ed Stanbury
BLOK: founder
photo: BLOK
Why did BLOK partner with NDY to run these classes?

We want to create a safe space in the fitness industry to avoid the alienation of queer and trans people. Modifying our offering to cater for this community is in line with our founding principles of wanting to be an inclusive and safe space for all communities in which we operate and is in line with our diversity and inclusion strategy.

What were the challenges?

Creating gender neutral changing rooms has been a challenge in our existing sites, as they weren’t designed with this in mind, we create them specifically for the NDY classes and schedule classes at times which won’t affect our timetable.

Any advice to other operators?

Make this community feel welcome. Represent the LGBTQ+ community in marketing materials, create gender neutral changing rooms and avoid the use of gendered language, such as ‘guys’.

We want to create a safe space in the fitness industry to avoid the alienation of queer and trans people
Blok is working with NDY to make its sites welcoming to all / photo: BLOK
/ photo: NDY
Language and marketing used by gyms can be alienating to the LGBTQ+ community / photo: NDY
Language and marketing used by gyms can be alienating to the LGBTQ+ community / photo: NDY
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/2023/70033_783553.jpg
David Minton reports on how to make the industry welcoming to the trans community, and talks to Ryan Lanji who has created a burgeoning scene in London which grew out of lockdown sessions.
Latest News
There is speculation that Basic Fit will sell the five Spanish Holmes Place clubs it ...
Latest News
While British adults are the most active they’ve been in a decade, health inequalities remain ...
Latest News
Kerzner International has signed deals to operate two new Siro recovery hotels in Mexico and ...
Latest News
Nuffield Health’s fourth annual survey, the Healthier Nation Index, has found people moved slightly more ...
Latest News
Short-term incentives to exercise, such as using daily reminders, rewards or games, can lead to ...
Latest News
With the launch of its 49th John Reed, RSG Group is looking for more opportunities ...
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PureGym saw revenues rise by 15 per cent in 2023, with the company announcing plans ...
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Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: Webinar: Building a new energy future for the leisure sector
As one of the most energy-intensive industries in the UK, leisure facilities face a critical challenge in balancing net zero goals, funding and increased costs.
Company profiles
Company profile: Xplor Gym
Xplor Gym is an all-in-one gym management software with embedded payments & integrated access control ...
Company profiles
Company profile: seca Ltd
As the world market leader of medical measuring and weighing we take body composition analysis ...
Supplier Showcase
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Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
Featured press releases
Greenwich Leisure Limited press release: ‘FAB’ freebies for Barnet carers!
Being a carer – whether that’s looking after a young person, a senior citizen or someone with a long-term illness or disability – can be rewarding but stressful at times. These responsibilities may also limit the carer’s ability to find paid employment.
Featured press releases
FIBO press release: FIBO 2024: Billion-euro fitness market continues to grow
11 to 14 April saw the fitness industry impressively demonstrate just how innovative it is in fulfilling its responsibility for a healthy society at FIBO in Cologne. Over 1,000 exhibitors and partners generated boundless enthusiasm among 129,668 visitors from 114 countries.
Directory
Spa software
SpaBooker: Spa software
Lockers
Fitlockers: Lockers
Cryotherapy
Art of Cryo: Cryotherapy
Flooring
Total Vibration Solutions / TVS Sports Surfaces: Flooring
salt therapy products
Saltability: salt therapy products
Snowroom
TechnoAlpin SpA: Snowroom
Property & Tenders
Loughton, IG10
Knight Frank
Property & Tenders
Grantham, Leicestershire
Belvoir Castle
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Diary dates
10-12 May 2024
China Import & Export Fair Complex, Guangzhou, China
Diary dates
23-24 May 2024
Large Hall of the Chamber of Commerce (Erbprinzenpalais), Wiesbaden, Germany
Diary dates
30 May - 02 Jun 2024
Rimini Exhibition Center, Rimini, Italy
Diary dates
08-08 Jun 2024
Worldwide, Various,
Diary dates
11-13 Jun 2024
Raffles City Convention Centre, Singapore, Singapore
Diary dates
12-13 Jun 2024
ExCeL London, London, United Kingdom
Diary dates
03-05 Sep 2024
IMPACT Exhibition Center, Bangkok, Thailand
Diary dates
19-19 Sep 2024
The Salil Hotel Riverside - Bangkok, Bangkok 10120, Thailand
Diary dates
01-04 Oct 2024
REVĪVŌ Wellness Resort Nusa Dua Bali, Kabupaten Badung, Indonesia
Diary dates
22-25 Oct 2024
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Diary dates
24-24 Oct 2024
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Diary dates
04-07 Nov 2024
In person, St Andrews, United Kingdom
Diary dates
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