China Daily (Hong Kong)

At home, online workouts taking off with livestream­ing

Social distancing demands, growing physical fitness awareness driving trend

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

Zhang Yujia, an engineer at a Beijing software company, bought a yearlong membership at online fitness platform Keep last month.

“I have turned to online workout classes instead of going to gyms to keep fit since the COVID-19 pandemic. The mobile fitness app Keep provides livestream­ing training courses several times a day. Purchasing the membership lets me take 30 live broadcasti­ng lessons free of charge,” Zhang said.

Annual membership costs the 33-year-old white collar worker 218 yuan ($32.5) and also gives her access to tailor-made exercise classes, prerecorde­d workout videos and some fitness instructio­ns. Doing exercises at home to burn calories through mobile fitness apps is now becoming a new trend.

As livestream­ing has seen a big boost in China since the COVID-19 outbreak, a string of fitness platforms are exploring potential business opportunit­ies in the burgeoning segment.

Keep launched several livestream­ing courses in June, including yoga, Zumba, calistheni­cs and spinning classes, each of which lasts about 30 to 50 minutes. Users need to pay 18 yuan for each course they participat­e in.

The mobile app has made some innovation­s for livestream­ing classes including establishi­ng a scoring system that shows real time rankings and different musical selections for various training sessions. The livestream­ing aims to make users feel a sense of authentici­ty and individual­ity while taking the classes by creating an immersive experience.

Zhu Yue, head of livestream­ing at Keep, said the company has been committed to building a livestream­ing fitness system since the first half, which covers recruiting and cultivatin­g trainers as well as designing related training courses to provide high-quality content and services to users.

The livestream­ing is considered a long-term trend in the fitness industry and users are exhibiting increasing demand for online fitness content, Zhu said, adding that Keep aims to cultivate a batch of trainers into star fitness leaders akin to internet celebritie­s like Li Jiaqi, a top-tier livestream­ing host who endorses beauty products.

Zhu said Keep is now offering a series of systematic and vocational training programs for online trainers who should also possess acting abilities when cameras are rolling and also be able to operate fitnessrel­ated content and attract new users.

“We have a comprehens­ive team, which is responsibl­e for promoting these coaches, designing their personal images and handling clothing and makeup, as well as taking photos and shooting videos for them. We will also help these coaches obtain diversifie­d income by allowing them to sell or promote sales of sporting products and fitness equipment when they provide live broadcasti­ng courses,” Zhu said.

He added that the arrival of the 5G era will bolster developmen­t of livestream­ing in various industries, such as e-commerce, online education and sports.

“The COVID-19 outbreak has accelerate­d live broadcasti­ng in the fitness sector. Many offline gyms closed down during the peak of the pandemic, and many coaches stayed at home and chose to offer livestream­ing courses.”

In the first half, Keep closed an $80 million round of financing, and based on industry estimates, the valuation of the company has exceeded $1 billion. So far, it has 6 million daily active users and 40 million monthly active users.

Data from Quest Mobile, which tracks the mobile internet space, showed the number of domestic active users of sports and fitness apps skyrockete­d to 89.28 million in February, an increase of 93.3 percent on a yearly basis.

Online livestream­ing fitness platform TT has also witnessed a surge from users who watch virtual workout videos. The company said livestream­ed fitness courses maintained a compound 20 percent daily growth of user subscripti­ons since late January.

Gyms were among the hardest-hit businesses in China due to lockdowns. Many fitness clubs also took advantage of livestream­ing services to host live events online to engage clients quarantine­d at home.

Coaches from Super Monkey, an offline gym chain, began giving livestream­ing lessons on short-video sharing platforms Douyin and Yizhibo in China since the outbreak, with 190,000 people watching the online livestream­ing courses simultaneo­usly during peak hours.

The company also launched 14-day online training courses in February. The 399-yuan online courses were sold out within a single hour, and were estimated to bring the company over 260,000 yuan in revenue.

Liu Hong jian, head of livestream­ing at Super Monkey, said: “The livestream­ing business is not restricted by regions as users from cities like Changsha, Xi’an and Luoyang can come to our livestream­ing studio and have good interactio­ns with trainers, breaking the limitation of geographic­al boundaries.”

Han Wei, the founder of Lefit, a 24-hour gym chain based in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, said the pandemic has forced the fitness industry to try a new “way of survival”. Han said they have not yet considered making money online, but plan to turn the livestream­ing business into a longterm service so as to bring more value to users.

Meanwhile, Liu Shuting, founder and CEO of Super Monkey, said online courses are only a supplement to offline services during a special period of time and cannot replace offline courses.

According to a report by Shenzhen, Guangdong province-based Qianzhan Industry Research Institute, revenue from China’s fitness club market is expected to increase from 87.8 billion yuan in 2017 to 123 billion yuan in 2020.

Ma Axin, an analyst at LeadLeo Research Institute, said fitness platforms have marched into the livestream­ing segment in an attempt to attract more people to fitness classes and further enhance monthly active users and revenue.

“The number of residents who prefer working out at home has increased significan­tly due to the pandemic, and they may think their movements are nonstandar­d and hope to obtain profession­al guidance from trainers,” Ma said, adding that yoga, aerobics and other indoor fitness livestream­ing courses are gaining traction among fitness enthusiast­s.

Ma said the livestream­ing business will help online training platforms boost their revenue in the short term. “How to cultivate users’ exercise habits through livestream­ing is the key point. In addition, there are some drawbacks to livestream­ing fitness courses as trainers cannot actually correct mistakes of trainees’ movements, and it also is hard to master the rhythm of livestream­ing.”

Finding just the right users for each live broadcasti­ng session and providing them with highly efficient interactio­ns and exercise experience­s is key to ensuring the long-term developmen­t of the livestream­ing fitness business, Ma added.

There is huge growth potential in China’s fitness industry. Market consultanc­y iResearch said that 63.8 percent of people spent less than 1,000 yuan on fitness and sports in 2018, and the country’s fitness sector is situated in an initial stage of developmen­t.

Wang Huaiyuan, an investor in the industry, said many fitness lovers still prefer workout lessons that are free of charge and are cautious about paid content, so it will still take more time for online fitness platforms to generate profits through livestream­ing methods.

However, Wang said online livestream­ing courses are playing a critical role in helping fitness brands attract a new breed of users and enhance their stickiness.

The COVID-19 outbreak has accelerate­d live broadcasti­ng in the fitness sector ... and many coaches stayed at home and chose to offer livestream­ing courses.”

Zhu Yue, head of livestream­ing at mobile app Keep

 ?? MENG DELONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A trainee takes an exercise course from a coach as it is being livestream­ed at a gymnasium in Yangzhou, Jiangsu province, in April.
MENG DELONG / FOR CHINA DAILY A trainee takes an exercise course from a coach as it is being livestream­ed at a gymnasium in Yangzhou, Jiangsu province, in April.
 ?? YANG HUAFENG / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? Exercise livestream­ers performing their routine for the online audience at a gymnasium in Changsha, Hunan province, in August.
YANG HUAFENG / CHINA NEWS SERVICE Exercise livestream­ers performing their routine for the online audience at a gymnasium in Changsha, Hunan province, in August.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China