San Francisco Chronicle

Lululemon apparel firm to buy Mirror

Fitness startup sells device to stream classes

- By Sapna Maheshwari

Lululemon, the purveyor of expensive athleisure and activewear, is betting on the future of personaliz­ed remote exercise as a way to reach customers by acquiring Mirror, a home fitness startup that sells a $1,495 wallmounte­d machine for streaming workout classes.

The $500 million purchase, which Lululemon announced Monday, is the company’s first acquisitio­n and follows its $1 million investment in Mirror last year. It’s a coup for Mirror and its CEO, Brynn Putnam, a former New York City Ballet dancer who introduced the product in 2018 and has raised $72 million from investors. Mirror charges customers $39 a month to stream its live or ondemand classes.

The purchase fits with Lululemon’s ambitions to become an experienti­al brand that helps customers live a “healthy and mindful lifestyle across multiple experience­s,” as it said last year.

“This isn’t just about getting guests to buy apparel,” Lululemon CEO Calvin McDonald said in an interview. “This is about strengthen­ing our community and our loyalty and our relationsh­ip with our guests and membership­s, and it’s going to be its own

revenue stream model, which we’re excited about.”

Mirror, which is based in New York, expects to bring in over $100 million in revenue this year and either break even or be slightly profitable in 2021, McDonald said. Putnam, who will remain CEO of Mirror and report directly to McDonald, said that the interactiv­e fitness company had “tens of thousands of subscriber­s” and had seen its business accelerate during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Home fitness products like Peloton and streaming classes have boomed during the pandemic. Gyms and fitness studios are largely closed, and many customers are nervous to return to those that have reopened.

Lululemon said that while the pandemic was not the trigger for the purchase, it bolstered the case.

“It definitely has helped us learn and see quicker into the future now,” McDonald said. “Guests have accelerate­d their behavior and accelerate­d the adoption of inhome sweat.”

Lululemon, which is based in Vancouver, British Columbia, said it would promote Mirror online and sell its exercise machine in “a number of locations.”

Mirror has only two physical locations. It has built a popular following online, including among celebritie­s like Reese Witherspoo­n, Alicia Keys and Ellen DeGeneres. Its classes include Pilates, barre, kickboxing and strength training.

The acquisitio­n will also expand a “content creation partnershi­p” between Mirror and Lululemon. Classes like meditation that are taught by Lululemon’s “global ambassador­s” are already available on the Mirror system. (A key part of Lululemon’s marketing strategy has long been to team up with people like athletes and yogis to promote its brand.)

Putnam, a 37yearold Harvard graduate, was once a Lululemon ambassador herself.

McDonald suggested that it would not be surprising to see instructor­s on Mirror clad in Lululemon gear in the future. “The versatilit­y of the platform completely aligns with how we view the versatilit­y of our product,” he said.

The acquisitio­n, expected to close during this quarter, will be paid in cash, with $50 million held back and paid out over two years, the company said.

Lululemon has been hurt by the coronaviru­s pandemic, but nowhere near as badly as most other apparel chains. The company recently reported that its net sales for the quarter that ended May 3 tumbled 17% to $652 million, but in that period, its directtoco­nsumer sales jumped nearly 70%.

It said Monday that its liquidity included more than $800 million in cash, a $400 million revolving credit line and a new oneyear $300 million revolving credit line.

 ?? Steve Jennings / Getty Images for TechCrunch 2018 ?? Mirror founder and CEO Brynn Putnam (left) discusses her company at TechCrunch Disrupt SF in 2018.
Steve Jennings / Getty Images for TechCrunch 2018 Mirror founder and CEO Brynn Putnam (left) discusses her company at TechCrunch Disrupt SF in 2018.
 ?? Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle 2017 ?? Lululemon has retail locations throughout the Bay Area, including this store in Berkeley.
Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle 2017 Lululemon has retail locations throughout the Bay Area, including this store in Berkeley.
 ?? Vincent Tullo / New York Times 2019 ?? Mirror CEO Brynn Putnam will remain with the company in that capacity once the sale to Lululemon goes through.
Vincent Tullo / New York Times 2019 Mirror CEO Brynn Putnam will remain with the company in that capacity once the sale to Lululemon goes through.
 ?? Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle 2018 ?? Stanford Shopping Center is the site of a Lululemon store. The apparel firm paid $500 million for fitness startup Mirror and said it will sell the Mirror devices in some of its stores.
Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle 2018 Stanford Shopping Center is the site of a Lululemon store. The apparel firm paid $500 million for fitness startup Mirror and said it will sell the Mirror devices in some of its stores.

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