New Year, new you, new campaigns

What can we learn from the health and fitness industry when it comes to engaging customers?

Every January marketers spend thousands of pounds on health and fitness campaigns, targeting Brits who are trying to shed their Christmas pounds and fulfil their New Year resolutions of being fitter and healthier. But with as many as one-in-five people giving up their gym memberships and exercise by the start of April (according to Virgin Active European marketing director Clare Gambardella), it seems that the millions of pounds invested into these campaigns may be all in vain.

Although the drop-off continues, many health and fitness brands have become increasingly savvy when it comes to using social and digital tools to promote healthy living, and engage their customers year-round. Take Nike+ for example – over the last few years they have created an entire community, giving users the ability to read valuable information, customise challenges, connect to social profiles, and other great integrations to ensure their customers are continuously engaged.

This year is no different, with more fitness brands than ever, it seems, using digital to communicate with their customers. Again Nike takes the lead, offering free online fitness tutorials during the whole of January. Once registered, users can take part on their own time on that specific day. This allows them to feel they are still part of a community, without having to leave the comfort of their living room and fit the class in whenever it suits them.

Virgin Active, whilst also offering online exercise classes, is exploring apps where members will be able to track and measure their activity levels at all times.

As well as increasing their digital efforts, many have also started to specifically target women. New initiatives such as ‘This Girl Can’ use outdoor advertising with “real women” to motivate the fairer sex to get into fitness and not feel nervous about joining gyms. In conjunction with the outdoor advertising, This Girl Can has taken social media by storm. Using every social channel at their disposal, the initiative has rapidly grown a community of women who all share their achievements and goals using the hashtag #ThisGirlCan

Aside from using digital and social, another tactic employed by sports brands is charitable giving. Need extra motivation to stay fit and healthy? The US app “Earndit” rewards you for exercising. Points are earned based on the level of activity and the time it is done for. Points can also be used to win healthy treats or support a cause. Friends can also challenge each other to support causes, again creating a sense of community.

So what can marketers learn from the fitness industry? And what can we learn from the above examples to ensure our audiences stay engaged?

  • Segment and target your audience
  • Offer 24 hour access to content
  • Promote collaborative behaviour – it’s not all about push communication
  • Add a charitable angle, which promotes the intended behaviour
  • Be part of their daily life in a useful manner

Latest Posts

There’s this idea floating around that being creative means constantly coming up with something new, something different, something you’ve never touched before. Like if you circle back to the same idea too often, you’re somehow doing it wrong. But honestly, most good work doesn’t come from chasing novelty. It comes…
Read More
Social content now has a longer commercial life You’re being asked to prove social is driving growth, and half your content disappears before it’s even had a chance to matter. Post it, watch it, report it, move on. That used to be the rhythm of social, and to be fair,…
Read More
Marketing gets more useful the moment you start asking questions. That is the point, and it’s the thread running through the webinar with the amazing Luan Wise, B2B marketing consultant, trainer and author (of 8 books!) Luan has spent years helping teams cut through panic and get back to stronger…
Read More