Wishaw Press

Take advantage of fitness trends to help get in shape

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It’s time to take a look into our crystal ball and predict what the fitness trends for next year might bring.

Of course, it’s always hard to predict the future but, by looking backwards, we may get a clue to what might happen in the next year.

As the fitness industry is a business just like any other, they react the same way to financial trends and pop culture that any other business does.

The giants behind the public face of fitness are well aware of their market, so to second guess where they will move next year we have to think like they do.

The starting point is technology and how it affecting the leisure world.

Firms spent millions developing wearable technology last year, and we saw fitness fans investing in Fitbits and i-Watches to monitor their progress in the gym.

Next year we will see another rise in technology specific to gym-users. Expect new lines in tracking apps and monitors that will streamline the functional­ity of already available tech.

Last year, some products were criticized for not recording data efficientl­y enough, so expect upgrades to the way we count how many calories we burn at our fitness sessions.

Along with wearable tech, expect to see a rise in group exercise classes that require participan­ts to wear monitors that record everything they do in class.

We have seen a rise in such classes late last year, with group exercisers wired up in their class, with the results being projected on to screens so everyone can see who’s doing well and who’s letting the side down.

Such classes will appeal to highveloci­ty exercisers who want to push themselves to the limit – and let everyone know it at the same time.

As well as technology in the gym, there was also a definite rise in more specialise­d fields of fitness last year – trend likely to continue in 2017.

More and more niche classes appeared on timetables up and down the country, and next year we can expect to see even more fringe sessions in the schedules.

Classes such ballet-inspired barre, and multifunct­ion yoga classes look set to capture the imaginatio­n of the general public, while more people will drift towards high-quality specialist training in areas such as pilates.

With the increase in more bespoke fitness, the UK can expect to see a rise in fitness boutiques that specialise in sessions such as yoga, pilates or dance.

This trend will steer people away from bigger all-purpose gyms that tend to offer everything to everyone, as exercisers look for more personal approaches to their fitness.

Large budget gyms will continue to do well – we saw a rise in that area last year – but as big chains drop prices and expand, I imagine more discerning clients will look for quieter and calmer fitness diversions.

Also on the increase next year will be fitness breaks and holidays.

As we embrace a new era of fitness,

 ??  ?? Strictly fit Darcy Bussell launches fitness classes for 2017
Strictly fit Darcy Bussell launches fitness classes for 2017

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