Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1390: The State of the Gym Industry with UFC Gym President Adam Sedlack
Episode Date: September 28, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin speak with UFC Gym president Adam Sedlack. The funny story of how Adam met Sal. (4:00) Adam’s 24 Hour Fitness journey. (6:54) What was it like working for Ray Wi...lson and Mark Mastrov? (10:04) Was the transition rocky when 24 Hour acquired Family Fitness? (12:41) The evolution of the gym space: His take on the race to the least expensive. (13:44) The pivotal moment he knew 24 Hour was doomed. (18:54) The COVID-19 impact on the industry and how the UFC Gyms adapted. (21:22) His theory on how Planet Fitness is surviving right now. (27:34) Why he believes Governor Gavin Newsom’s policies are costing people their lives. (29:25) Behind closed doors conversations: The strategic way UFC Gyms are bringing back the fitness model. (38:39) How to get involved politically to make a change. (42:06) The mental health effects. (46:00) Changing the narrative of fitness, how the at-home model is bringing more fitness awareness. (49:33) Mark Mastrov, making BIG moves. (55:58) How to build consumer trust in the COVID-19 era. (57:35) Their strategy with new media. (1:00:30) Does he see any permanent changes to the market? (1:05:49) Is remote work a way of the future? (1:10:03) His advice to the single gym owner. (1:10:55) How to create a community in a two-dimensional world. (1:12:47) How you live your journey today will make the difference. (1:15:30) From the front desk to President, the evolution of Adam Sedlack. (1:16:54) The moment in his journey that changed his life. (1:20:04) How to identify honest and authentic people. (1:24:47) Fitness, the best personal growth tool there is. (1:26:36) Navigating family life during a pandemic. (1:28:28) Building a legacy through actions. (1:31:58) Are there things he would have done differently when starting a family? (1:34:45) Going all-in on being the RV guy. (1:37:25) What you may not know about Mark Mastrov. (1:38:35) Featured Guest/People Mentioned Adam Sedlack (@ufcgymprez) Instagram Gym & Fitness | MMA Training | UFC GYM Simon Sinek (@simonsinek) Instagram Related Links/Products Mentioned MAPS Fitness Products Visit Paleo Valley for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “Mindpump15” at checkout for 15% discount** 24 Hour Fitness declares bankruptcy, citing "devastating" coronavirus hit Demand at Planet Fitness better than anticipated - JPMorgan Health Clubs Are Not Spreading COVID-19, Study Finds California Fitness Alliance Apple Just Announced a Fitness Service. Are You Signing Up? Peloton Earnings Top Views As At-Home Fitness Boom Continues Will work be remote forever? - Simon Sinek
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mite, op, mite, op with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pump, the world's top ranked fitness health and entertainment podcast,
we interviewed one of the leaders of the gym fitness industry, Adam Sedlack, who's the president of UFC gyms.
And we talked to him all about the current state
of the gym industry, the direction that the UFC gyms
is taking, which is different from a lot of other gyms.
What he thinks about the current regulations
and laws around operating health clubs,
his opinion on Gavin Newsom,
that's a fun part we enjoyed that part.
And telling stories of the gym industry.
So if you're in the fitness business,
you're gonna love this episode.
If you wanna hear more about how the economy is working
and what it looks like for segments of the economy,
you will not wanna miss this episode.
Now you can find Adam Sedlack on Instagram at UFC Jim Prez that's spelled UFC GYM PREZ.
You can also find the UFC Jim's websites at UFCJim.com or UFCFit.com.
These Jim's are some of the best ones we've ever been to.
Great equipment, great atmosphere.
Make sure you go, check them out.
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I want to go back to how you and I might have met in Palm Desert.
Yeah, yeah, man. So that, okay, so just a little background.
I, at the time, before I, before that,
I was managing a club in Sunnyvale.
Left, that's a whole nother story.
Went down to Palm Desert and owned shares of a club
in the Palm Desert area.
And, you know, when you run a club,
you look at your competition and and there was a gold
Jan that was closer in Palm Springs and there was a Cathedral City 24th Fitness and
So the you know the whole process you go and you do the flyer thing and you try to poach their people and the whole thing and
One day I'm in there working and I was with Don Cardona who is my partner at the time so you know Don is and we're in there
It work and Don goes in the back for something
and two guys in suits walk in, look real nice.
And I'm like, oh great, you know, I got some potential members.
So I do the whole, and I had no idea who these two guys were,
right, so I give them a tour, do the whole thing.
And I can tell they're listening,
but it can tell they're kind of not interested,
but whatever, either way, I'm going to do my thing.
And as we go back to the desk, Don walks out and he goes, hey, aren't you Mike Apple?
And I'm like, huh?
And so he knew who you guys were, and then I think you guys walked out, and then that
was it, but I read it too fast.
So I want to know your side of story.
What brought you guys in to the club, do you remember?
Well, I remember, and I was a district manager in the Inland Empire, and I think Mike had
just come in.
I think it was, you guys were conquesting our consumers, and I was a young district manager,
I was very, very young at that point, and Mike said, let's just go shop them, and let's
go check them out.
And I think that Mike didn't know it was Don,
so I think Mike and Don knew each other really well.
And so once Don appeared, then there was some connections there.
And I remember, I remember you were hustling.
I mean, you were a little closer.
I was trying to get you guys the buyback.
And that's why I connected the dots there,
because I remember your energy, and I was like, I'm never, I'm never, and that's why I connected the dots there because I remember your energy
and I'm like, I stepped out of there and go, man,
I gotta figure out how to get that guy in my district.
That's hilarious.
You know what's funny about that is that
then when I went back to 24,
I go up to Hillsdale,
they did a whole re-grand opening.
I go in there and they said,
hey, before you show up,
this was at the time Curtis Harmon was the VP
or whatever, DM, no, the VP at the time,
they said, hey, we want you to meet with the new VP.
And I said, new VP, I thought it was Curtis.
And I knew him, right?
So I walk into the corporate office
and there is Mike Apple.
Dude, that walked in and shot Mike up.
Good to see you again, Mike.
I was like, oh no, is this gonna be good or bad?
Anyway, turn it up, it'd be great.
Mike and I became friends and I,
but I learned a ton growing up in that space
and I left or whatever,
but now you're,
now from there did you move to what you're doing now
or what was your path from 24?
Oh man, so the 24 hour timeframe for me was interesting.
So I started with family fitness down south.
Oh, so you were with Ray Wilson?
I was a Ray Wilson guy.
Wow.
And I started in 94.
And I started as a front desk person and, you know, gradually moved up to sales, AGM,
did the whole run.
And then finally got to a GM spot in 96.
And then they put me in Rancho Pena Ski Dose,
which was kind of the first,
when 24 hour Nautilus acquired family fitness,
that was the first true 24 hour fitness new sport club
that they built.
And so jumped into that club,
and then I remember one day,
I was eating a big old hamburger
and Mark Mastroff walks in.
And I had, at that point, obviously he's an icon and he's the owner of 24-hour
Nautilus who just acquired us.
And so there was anticipation and a little bit of an anxiety to go meet him and did so.
And Trip went really well, a guy blew my mind in regards to what I knew about fitness
and what he knew about fitness and
It took me to a whole another level, another paradigm and and then at that point Mark meant to start mentoring me
I was very very lucky, you know and and I literally moved 20 times with 24-hour fitness from wow
96 all the way to 2007 ended up as a divisional president in Texas, overseeing Texas, Florida in
the Midwest in 2007. And of course, Carl Liebert came in as the
CEO. And I was very, very close with Mark and Carl Liebert
decided that he didn't want Mark Skies to be running
divisions and asked me in a very polite way,
they'll not be there anymore. So exit it out and then, you know, right when Mark
exited and then 30 days later, there was a conversation with the Renzo Frittita and Dana White about
starting a fitness concept with the UFC, he has a 50-50 joint venture, and I didn't understand it at
the point. I'm thinking to myself, how is a fitness concept with UFC fighters going to translate into
mainstream fitness?
This didn't make sense to me.
And I had an opportunity to go watch a fight camp for 30 days.
Just observe and understand it.
And then I understood it.
And of course, Mark being a genius and kind of seen where fitness was going around being
functional and being very community based.
We kind of put the dots together and then UFC gym was born.
Wow.
And what a great opportunity because you worked under two of the, I guess the guys who
wrote the framework of how to build a successful gym company,
because before Nautilus and before family fitness,
you didn't really do well business-wise with the gym.
You know, you know, you know, meet heads in Gold Gym,
and but it wasn't really a business.
And then you guys came in, you know, EFT and how to do the sales process and a lot of stuff.
And what was it like working under, you know, for Ray Wilson and then Mark and how were
they very different?
I mean, there were rumors about the pace structures being different and Ray Wilson guys were more
like owners and, you know, what was that like?
Well, first of all, both cultures were incredible.
You know, family fitness used to have these blast-offs and literally the grossing
mentality of family fitness was absolutely unreal. They had white sheet partnerships where
you got 26% of the revenue to pay all your labor and then you kept whatever was left.
And then you got up to 30% of the profit. Now, it's good if you're an investor
and you're in that club and you're driving that club,
but as an organization, if you're growing a company,
it makes it more complicated and more difficult.
So then when you look at Mark's strategy,
which was to pay his people very well
to create an incredible culture
and to be predictable to grow a brand around the globe,
that's exactly what family fitness needed.
Because there was no way we could get to scale with the way that, you know, the pay structure
was working at family at that point.
So Mark came in, still paid people extremely well, and it was interesting.
The people that weren't there for the culture left because of the compensation changes
that were different.
You weren't a partner anymore.
You were more of a team member.
But those were there for the culture grew in a significant way
and found their own pathway of success.
Well, I can imagine that with that old,
that family fitness pay structure,
you probably had guys running clubs very lean
and making significant profit and probably working all day
by themselves or doing a lot of stuff themselves.
Well, what Mark saw was competition was going to come, right?
And family was operating as though we were the only game in town
because we were.
You know, our competition was another family fitness 15 miles away.
And we felt that that was going to be a competitive threat to us
if we had one within 15 miles.
And so Mark knew over the next 10 to 15 years that, you know,
it's great that we're monopolizing, you know, in California here, but it's coming.
And we gotta be prepared.
And there's no way that the current process
of family fitness was scalable
to be able to grow in the way that we needed to grow.
And so yeah, it was an interesting transition
of understanding that, but what we found was the people again
that were engaged and that were open to adapt and change
were the ones that were
ultimately successful.
Yeah, maybe they weren't a one club operator, you know, making 26% payroll and so forth,
but they ended up becoming district managers and vice presidents.
So they ended up getting incremental pay and then stock options, which proved out to be
very successful later.
Now, it's statistically speaking, acquisitions actually fail more often than they're successful.
So was it a smooth transition when they bought Ray Wilson or was it a little rocky?
It was a little rocky. You know, I remember being in San Diego and when Nautilus acquired us, of course
they painted the picture as though it was a merger as they always do, right?
But we knew that there was an acquisition and we went up to with Curtis
up in a santee and
gross month. That was their first two locations in San Diego and all of Nautilus boys were big
boys. They were all linebackers, man. And us family fitness guys were like basketball and baseball
players, right? So it was definitely interesting. It was Dave Dunlap and Wellby Boyles and Curtis
Harmon and that group and, you know, there was a little bit of conflict initially,
but then once things settled down
probably six months post-merger,
it became one big family.
And then it really became about professional opportunity
and growth and becoming district managers and VPs
and going to different markets and trade areas
to help grow the brand.
Awesome. Now just to set us up for where things are now,
I think we should also talk a little bit about how
some of the evolution of the space
which was led by for a long time,
24-hour fitness.
I mean, anytime you're the leader of a market,
I think the things that you do,
then your competitors tend to copy,
you tend to set the standard.
And I remember working for 24,
late 90s, early 2000s,
and what it looked like was a little bit of a shift,
especially, and this is just from my perspective,
so I'd love to hear from you,
especially when Mark kind of left the company,
there was a bit of a shift in the culture
where when, you know, in 1999 or 2000,
an all club membership without sales or promotions was, you know,
I don't know, two hundred of three
and a bucks to join,
45 bucks a month.
And later on, it started to get cheaper and cheaper
and cheaper, and I noticed that there was less emphasis
on quality value or, you know, that we're gonna charge more
because we offer more and it just became a,
almost like, and for lack of better term,
a race to who can get to the least expensive. Am I painting the picture correctly? Was that my
own personal experience? Was that what the, it looked like the industry was doing?
Yeah, you're right. So, you know, family fitness, the pricing model was 19 bucks a month.
And when Mark acquired family, he goes, you guys are ridiculously cheap and there's, it doesn't make sense for you guys
to be that price because you're the only game in town.
And so we were brought up with that culture of 19 a month.
So when Mark says, no, you're taking your price
to $44 a month, you're doubling your price tomorrow,
we didn't know if we could do it.
We didn't understand how to take a presentation from 19 and double
it and try to get the same type of closing percentage and guess traffic. And what happened
was what Mark was a genius at was understanding what the true value, what the core value
proposition is and then providing an incredible university or a great culture to be able to help you drive to get
to that price point.
So that's when Mark inserted incorporated PT in the sales room, right?
In the past, I'll tell you, at family, we didn't sell PT ever at point of sale.
And so when Mark came in, I don't know if you remember Ron Thompson.
Oh, yeah.
In PT is personal training for the audience.
I started off as a trainer, by the way.
I remember this distinctly. And so we at family, we didn't want to sell in PT.
We just wanted to sell memberships and sling them. And then Ron said, listen, if you don't sell
at least $2,000 in PT a month, I'm going to find you $1,000 on your paycheck. Oh shit. And so all
of a sudden, guess what we started doing. We started selling PT and then eventually,
Eric Jenkins became the head of personal training
and did a great job at creating this culture.
And then we learned how to drive a value proposition.
And then we became very competitive
with the Nautilus group up North.
And because there was very little competition up
at that point, all of a sudden
our dues bases were going up, you know, 15, 20 percent month over month. And it was an
incredible growth period. And then, you know, as Mark continued to drive culture and drive
production, do everything that he did through his leadership. And he sold the company. And
then eventually that company said, hey, you know, we're going to try to go a different process
and bring sigma strategies in here and become efficient
and reduce the value proposition by reducing labor
and taking everything digital without needing a salesperson.
And then of course, what happened at that point?
Things started to go backwards and then people started
re-enrolling the same members.
Price points started to drop because everybody thinks
you can make a volume by reducing price point,
but you can't.
You have about a 14 day period in which volume will increase,
but typically that's because you're re-enrolling
the same consumer.
And then after that 14 day period,
the guest traffic goes back to being the same,
but now you're enrolling at $10 less than what you
originally had. Now, if you're enrolling at $10 less than what you originally had.
Now, if you're a member at 24-hour fitness,
and you're paying $49, $45 a month,
and all of a sudden you see new members paying $30 a month,
what are you gonna do?
Right.
And so that's what happened,
and that's why dues bases, in my opinion,
started to reduce, and then as you start reducing
dues bases and revenue and profits start to go down,
then paycheck start to go down. Paycheck start to go down, culture reduces, right?
One thing leads to the other, and then the company starts having negative comps and so forth
and it puts itself in a difficult position.
And so they listen, there's things that happened that were successful and the digital landscape
was changing in that 10 year period, and certainly,
I'm sure there's some things that were dynamic,
that 24 introduced to the market,
and let's face it, 24, you know,
if you go back to 2004, 2005, 24 was the game.
LA Fitness was a distant second,
lifetime wasn't really in the conversation.
And then through that change of Mark leaving 24 hour and new people coming in, 24 lost its way
and never became the same organization it was back in the early 2000s.
Is there a pivotal moment when you realize that?
Yeah, you know, I realized it when, and with all due respect to everybody, I don't, I always like to, you know,
take the high road in people communication.
But when the conversation started to become about how to reduce your way to profit versus
getting the profit with offense, I knew we became more of an organization
that was driven around accounting principles
versus fitness and winning and culture.
Prevent defense never works, right?
No, no.
You just end up tightening your belt, making bad decisions
and it just doesn't work.
And so certainly there's times that you have to be on the defensive when you're going
through periods like COVID and so forth.
But that was the time.
I mean, if Mark, Mark my words, if Mark would have stayed in the organization driving the
company north of 2006, 24-hour, I think, would have a thousand
clubs today.
I remember being in a meeting and it was a big meeting about how we're going to change
the process.
I was part of that meeting because I was one of the early trainers who became a manager
and I did sell fitness first.
I saw lots of value.
I was a fitness guy.
I never start off as a sales guy.
I was a fitness guy. I remember we're as a sales guy. I was a fitness guy.
And I remember we're in this meeting
and they're presenting and they're saying,
you know, if you just have a menu,
look, we have all the clubs.
We got beautiful facilities.
We got great equipment.
All you need is a menu, prices.
You don't need to sell anything.
We're the best.
People will pick the best one.
And to me, I was like, this is not right.
I know that you put me in a club that is half the size
of the one down the street with crappy equipment
and a pool that's broken half the time.
And I'll do better because the people will show up for me
not for the equipment and trainers know this.
I could train someone, give them an excellent,
amazing workout with a pair of bands,
better than the person can do on their own
in a the most beautifully equipped facility.
So I heard this, I remember,
I think it was my disc manager of the time,
is listening to the person say this and stands up
and says, how many memberships have you sold
to a guy who was presenting, he's like, well, none.
And then he points to me, how about you selling them?
I don't know, thousands, he goes,
I'm gonna take his advice over yours.
And I remember hearing this and going, wow.
And so this is kind of leading to,
you know, what seemed, what looked like,
almost like the final straw
on the camel's back, because what it look like
is a fitness space started to go in that direction,
lower cost, lower labor cost,
that's how we're making our profits.
Now gyms are selling very, very cheap memberships,
big facilities, they're counting on people not working out,
not getting results, otherwise,
if they all showed up the club would have to shut down.
And then you have COVID, which it makes that model impossible because you have two factors.
Lots of local governments telling clubs, first off, you can't open, oh, and then when you can,
you got to run at 15, 20% capacity.
Now your equipment, we got to space it out, and now it's even lower service,
and all the people that are,
people who tend to pay 15 bucks a month
and don't show up, now are like,
well, I'm not gonna pay anymore.
That model doesn't work,
and then on top of it, the fear of showing up at the gym,
and you have people who are afraid to go in,
but those hardcore people who really value fitness,
I think would show up,
and pay more for that kind of service.
So it's almost like the market moved in that direction.
COVID hits hammered.
Now, like two giants, gold, gem, 24-feet, fitness, bankrupt, clubs, but you guys took a different,
a bit of a different approach.
Can you explain kind of what you guys, I think you guys did the right thing.
Well listen, COVID has been difficult for everybody in the industry and really any service
business.
And, you know, maybe we can talk about my feelings around governor Newsom shortly.
Oh, we're going to get back to that though.
I'd love to share that.
Don't worry, I've been salivating over and over and over for that.
But yeah, we'll get to that.
But, you know, the, in the conversation as we're dealing with COVID, you know, and you have lease liabilities
and you have to try to figure out how to do the right things for people, it's not cheap.
And when you don't have revenue coming in, it makes it complicated.
And it's not that it wasn't part of the discussion.
It's that I'm very blessed to have great ownership
and with Mark Maastroff and with the UFC and with our private equity.
We're so fortunate that they looked at it as an opportunity to try to do the right thing
and to double down on what we think we were capable of doing. You mentioned it nicely earlier,
is that influencing fitness influences a big thing.
And if you aren't good at fitness influencing,
you might as well charge $2 a month for your product.
And that's why I think, in my opinion,
24 started to reduce price,
and you have all these planet fitnesses
and all these low
cost players that you don't need labor. You can reduce labor in a significant way, open
your gems and just hope people show up. Listen, it's a respectable business model and it's
flourishing, which is why LA fitness, I'm sure you guys are seeing or debranding a lot
of their clubs and going low cost and you're seeing in multiple facilities.
And so what we chose to do is be an influencer and stand for something and say, you know what,
we're not going to be the lowest price club in town. But we're going to try to have the deepest
value proposition where you're part of a community, where you're going to have insight to nutrition and discipline and mental mindset
and so forth.
So, yeah, it's challenging still.
There's people that can't afford memberships.
There's people that are going through challenges and frustrations.
And you learn a lot about your people.
You learn a lot about the people that are in your company that are there for the right
reasons and those that are just a hundred percent self-serving.
And I'm, I got to tell you, I'm blessed. I, I, I look at some of the people that are in our clubs and our company with the GMs, the fitness directors, OMs, you know, through maintenance texts, you know, everybody that, that really wasn't all about them being self-serving and saying,
hey, what's in it for me?
It's about, hey, I want to go out and help my community.
I want to go out and help my other team members be able to not only have a job,
but be able to create and make an impact in their specific trade areas
so they can take on this evil pandemic that we're dealing with.
And I got to tell you, I was inspired.
Whereas I saw some of the best grocers that I had ended up not having that same attitude, no longer
with us. And listen, I respect you. Thanks for all the work that you've done. I appreciate
to this point, but your attitude is not the right attitude to be able to take us where we
need to go to adapt with what we're dealing with in the current market conditions. And people
started to separate themselves as true leaders inside this industry, not just
in UFC gym, but this industry.
So yeah, I think that's where we see it.
And I think the people that we have today, I'm so proud of them and I'm excited to continue
to work with them.
And Mark and the private equity back team said, Hey, let's go find real estate.
You know, 24 hour is, you know, announced chapter 11 and we know,
obviously we know the site's well and, and, uh, and let's go figure out how to,
you know, if 24 is going to reject, let's go see if there's an opportunity.
And, and certainly, you know, we're excited that we're jumping into these.
I just signed the lease of a club that I was a sales counselor at in 1995.
No way.
And in Point Loma, you know,
I was a sales counselor there and I stepped in
and walking through it and I'm just like, man,
full circle, full circle on this.
Yeah, it seems like you guys doubled down
on increasing service, increasing value.
So maybe lower volume, charging more,
but providing more service, which to me seems like that.
Okay, two things, well I think that's great.
One is it appeals to my trainer sense.
I like fitness, I think it's extremely valuable,
but from a business sense with the current climate,
I can't see the other model doing well at all.
I feel like that's the only model that'll succeed
where okay, we have to have 25% capacity,
fine, we're high service, high volume, but you pay more,
and people who want that kind of service
and that value you're gonna pay for.
That's true then, why is someone like planet,
why is planet fitness surviving right now?
What's your theory on that?
Well, first of all, low cost is gonna stay.
I mean, it's not going anywhere,
and let's face it, low cost is a very easy entry point for consumers
that don't know about fitness.
And so that's why it'll always sustain.
And I have a lot of respect and a lot of friends that are in the crunch franchise low cost,
right?
And they do a fantastic job.
They've got a good value proposition and they do well.
When you look at planet, I mean, listen, the name recognition for planet now is second to none.
And so they're gonna survive.
There's gonna be some planets that shut down,
but they're gonna survive.
And there's trusted brands, right?
So people will go pay 10 bucks a month
and they'll do their thing.
Now, in my opinion, if you join a planet
or you join a UFC, you're going to have the ability
to take advantage of twice the amount of, you're going to have the ability to take
advantage of twice the amount of services and your chances to get the results that you're
looking for to stay with, working out, are going to triple quadruple because you have best
in class trainers and coaches because you have recovery stations that you can do normative
and cryotherapy because you can take classes like Jiu-Jitsu and boxing and kickboxing and
hit classes where you form communities and relationships with people.
You go to plan a fitness with all due respect to their model, what do you do?
You go in, you get on a tremolo, you get on some training equipment, and yeah, a little
bit of pizza, but there's no relationship connectivity, like you'll find in the higher
value proposition brands, which is why I think
we're going to perform exceptionally well, not only as we get through the end of COVID,
but as we get outside of it.
Yeah, I mean, CrossFit proved that.
I mean, their explosion was warehouse gyms, they're not fancy, they're not nice.
People paying $100, $150, $200 bucks a month, they exploded because of the community.
The fitness community is what brought people in.
All right, let's get to Gavin Newsom.
It appears to me from what I see on social media
that you're kind of either part of or spearheading this,
this effort to recall them or get them out.
What's the deal with all that, what's going on?
Well, you may have saw my desire
to have Mark Mastraf run for governor.
I've been pushing that,
but we'll talk about that in
a little bit. But yeah, I mean, listen, I'm, I've never in my life seen anything like we're going
through today. And I've never been so disappointed in a governor than governor Newsom. And when you look,
I have the benefit of being seeing 35 countries because we're in 35 countries around the globe.
And when you see how other countries, other states are dealing with this pandemic by far, California is the worst.
And I would say Hawaii is just a little bit behind California.
And it's the inconsistencies. It's the making decisions without thinking things through.
It's not trusting business owners. It's not trusting the people that put him in office
And it's frustrating and disappointing and so if you if you just look in the river mirror and you say, okay, you know
I understand when this pandemic hit you got to shut down because we didn't know what we were dealing with right so I get it
And really you know the US shut down for a couple weeks there, and they had to learn,
they had to understand, and the one thing that I wanted to make sure that UFC Jim did was
respect the process, right? Not break the rules and make sure that we respected the decision
of what our government was telling us. So we did that, we shut down, and we were respectful to that.
And then there were many committees
that were formed that were able to give Governor Newsome feedback on fitness. And if you guys
think about fitness and you think about how fitness is provided, if you go to Home Depot,
which is by the way, considered an essential business that's packed in today's world,
is there a membership system to say
if I have COVID at home depot
that I can automatically call all the home depot customers
and say, hey, somebody had COVID in home depot?
No, they don't track it that way.
They don't track it.
In a gym that's focused on cleanliness all the time.
By the way, before COVID, we were focused on cleanliness.
When COVID hit, we doubled down our efforts on cleanliness, right?
And so you took temperatures, you did everything that was being asked, you wore a mask
inside the facilities if that's what was being asked.
And because we checked every member in, if somebody happened to get COVID
or if somebody thought they had COVID, guess what we could do?
We could automatically notify every single customer that checked in over the last 14 day period.
And so we ran the play beautifully. notify every single customer that checked in over the last 14 day period.
And so we ran the play beautifully.
And as you guys may have seen, the data says that there's a 0.002% infection rate, which
is basically 0% in regards to fitness clubs that are respecting the boundaries of what
COVID brought to.
I just read that.
It was a huge study published in Urshah and it kind of made its rounds
and it said that of more than 40
and I haven't written down
of more than 49 million health club visits,
only 0.0023% tested positive for COVID-19.
This is more than 500 times less
than the current estimated US national average.
Based off of this, 49 million visits,
one of the safer places you could go
that's outside of your home is a health club and a gym.
And I'll tell you this is that,
and I say this, I'm trying to be respectful
with the way that I say this, but I believe
governor, new sums, policies are costing people their lives.
You guys have always done a great job.
I've listened to your podcast and you guys always talk about mental health.
Take a look at the increase of mental health issues over the last four months.
New side rates, all of it.
Mental health guys is if you eat bad,
you have worse mental health.
If you don't exercise, you're mental health diminishes.
If you don't take care of yourself
and socialize with others, you're mental health diminishes.
If you do all your communication on Zoom,
you're mental health diminishes.
If you think about Zoom, you're watching a two-dimensional screen.
Well, physiologically and mentally, you're used to three-dimensional conversations. And so by
putting yourself in that position, they always have two-dimensional conversations, you're ruining
your mental health. When mental health starts to go south, everything else follows. And so by
Governor Newsom saying, hey, we're going
to say that, you know what, we're going to close all gyms, even though you guys approved
out scientifically that you're safe, we're going to close you down. That put all of us
in a position not to provide the best potential opportunity for new consumers to go after
and improve their mental health.
I 100% agree with you.
And there's also this that of all of the businesses
where people congregate, essential businesses,
now restaurants are a part of that.
With health clubs, you have a stronger natural control.
There's a self-selection bias.
People, if they're feeling a little bit under the weather,
don't work out.
They usually do not work.
The only people that work out when they're feeling
a little under the weather, whether
are the super maniac, fanatic fitness people,
which make up a very small percentage
of the people that work out in gyms.
Now that's not true for restaurants.
People have a little sniffle,
a little bit of feeling under the weather.
Yeah, I can go eat at a restaurant.
Yeah, I can go to the mall, not a problem.
Do you want to go work out?
No, no, no, I'm not feeling 100%.
So there's also that going on where when you go to the mall, not a problem. Do you want to go work out? No, no, no, I'm not feeling 100%. So there's also that going on where, when you go in the gym,
I mean, look, I manage gyms for decades,
you never saw sick people in the gym.
People who feel sick don't work out.
So that on top of all of the cleanliness
and the fact that there's also the bias of the sense
that people who exercise have strong immune systems,
you implement all of the negative safety procedures.
It's like they took zero regard for the actual results
and it's a feel good policy.
Oh, people are in a place together, sharing equipment,
ban it, and I agree with you.
I think it's contributing to worse outcomes.
And then you mentioned something about Zoom.
You know where you see that real clearly?
You said you had kids.
I have two young kids.
I have a 11 year old daughter and a 15 year old son.
They're doing distance learning.
And you see this, you see the decline in their health
quite dramatically, probably because they're young
and they're developing minds.
And it's like, I have to make efforts to get them out
around people.
Otherwise they turn into children I don't recognize.
No, I mean listen, I have four kids and they're all older, but my daughter is a senior in high school,
and you're absolutely right, the social connectivity, the ability to have discipline and so forth,
it's being modified and changed. And listen, I think it's important also to talk about this,
and it's a little bit of an elephant in the room, is that there's people out there
that do have health conditions,
and they shouldn't be going to the gym right now.
They really shouldn't.
I don't want them to risk it.
I don't want them to risk their life
if you are in a category that will allow you
to potentially die from a COVID-19
if you happen to contract it.
So I don't want the message to be clear is that I just want people to be respectful and
understand that, and that's what we're finding by the way.
When we opened the gyms and we started taking temperatures, nobody came to the gymsick,
like you talked about.
Nobody came to the facility if they just felt, you know, if didn't have the right energy level. They respected the boundaries and those that could
not come back to the gym. Let's freeze your dues. Don't come back. Do what you need to do.
Be comfortable before you step through our doors. So then we can provide you a level of,
of what I would call sanity for both the consumer that needs to make sure they stay healthy and for
the consumer that is unsure
because they have prior conditions, respect that.
Now, why do you think that they listed gyms
as the bottom of the barrel in terms of essential businesses?
Is it because the fitness space in, let's say, California
doesn't have a lobby?
We don't have enough power to,
because I know that makes a big difference.
I know powerful lobb a big difference.
I know powerful lobbies will get favors and things
to be passed, and it seems like the gyms
of all the businesses, it seems like that's one
of the last ones to be allowed to operate.
Like anything, it's education and awareness.
And I think that we live the industry.
You guys live the industry. You guys live the industry.
You know about the human body.
You're very educated and you understand
how to make sure you can navigate this tightrope.
If you don't know the industry and you're not aware
and you just think about it on the surface and say,
okay, I'm gonna have 100 people in one building sweating
and working out hard and breathing hard.
Man, you're gonna be able to get COVID in Adirina, right?
If you don't know any better.
So I think you have uneducated, unaware people
making policy decisions and not trusting
the body that put them there.
So what are the conversations behind closed doors
that you guys are having about California right now?
Are you having conversations around what if and should we do this, should we do that?
Or because you guys are bankrupt, you can weather the storm, what are the behind the doors
conversations that are happening right now?
In regards to continued operations.
Yes.
Yeah, no, first of all, I think you guys have seen the California Fitness Alliance and
First of all, I mean, I think you guys have seen the California Fitness Alliance and we are suing Governor Newsom and the state of California behind the way they're looking at fitness.
So I think that is going to continue a conversation that has to happen.
When you look at from an operational perspective, it's just about being smart.
And listen, as much as I disagree with what Governor Newsom
is doing, I'm respecting the law and I'm respecting the boundaries.
I'm not going to be a rogue company that decides just to open my gym and give the middle
finger to Governor Newsom.
Although in spirit, I'd like to do that.
But it's just not the right thing to do.
If I'm going to expect my people and my team
to respect and have integrity in a process,
I have to show the same integrity
as it relates to the state of California.
That being said, is that we're planning to perform
and we're planning to maximize our ability
to take the rules that we currently have.
And hopefully as we get through this period of time
and we get some sort of vaccine, and there's a,
and by the way, I think there's COVID fatigue going on
where people just don't care as much anymore.
I think it's not part of,
I think it's just people are forgetting
the way they're massed, they're, you know,
they're, it's just like, okay, I've had enough
and you're starting to see it and feel it a little bit.
But we're already taking our workouts outside.
So the majority of our Cubs in California
are doing outdoor workouts in Hawaii.
They're gonna start doing outdoor workouts.
That was just authorized last week.
When you look at international,
most of the international countries are coming back
to normal as a matter of fact,
they just had a call with our partner in Shanghai last night.
He started his next presale and literally they're having parties and life is normal in China.
Oh wow.
And so it's going to trail, it's going to get here.
And we just have to make sure that we've got the right people around us in our clubs
and at our support center, which I believe in my heart that we've got the right people around us in our clubs and at our support center,
which I believe in my heart that we do.
And then we have to be very strategic
on how we make sure that we take care of our consumers
and listen to our consumers, not just try to open
and charge people and get as much revenue as possible,
but be very strategic and saying,
hey, listen, we're in this together.
We also have to make sure that we're working
with our landlords and we're having some very good
dialogue and conversations of how we're going to
mitigate these waters.
And I gotta tell you, our landlords have been fantastic.
And when you take a look at the potential
of doing a chapter 11 or having landlords work with you,
our landlords are working with us.
And I feel very good about the relationships we have with them.
So that's through transparency.
And so I think it's about slowly bringing back
the fitness model and making sure you stay true to who you are,
controlling what you can control,
and then making sure that we're listening to our consumers
and our team members so we can navigate the business
the right way.
Now we kind of briefly went over Gavin Newsom
and I kind of want to go back just a little bit.
Just because there's a lot of people
that have those same feelings
and about how everything's been handled.
And what does the recalling process actually look like
and what can people sort of get behind
and kind of get involved, like politically
to address this
if they have concerns about the way
if things been handled as well.
Well, you got the power of social media
and you'll see that there's now recall stations
all over the state with, and again,
I have a great alternative for Gavin
or Newsom, his name is Mark Mastroff
and I think nobody could run this state better than Mark.
Oh, that'd be a dream.
Yeah, that'd be amazing.
But listen, recalling is decisive and I get it.
And the emotional part, the ego part of me would say, let's get him out of office.
I would rather Governor Newsom to say, hey, come to the table and let me understand and
get educated on what your point of view is.
Let me understand that I'm affecting millions of
people that live in the state of California and their ability to improve their health. Let me
understand how I'm letting down thousands and thousands and thousands of team members that no
longer have a job. And let me understand the science behind what you guys are talking about about
a .002% infection rate.
If he were just to come to the table and meet us halfway and have a dialogue, we'd appreciate
it.
It's about science, let's match those together.
And that's when he gets on his daily calls.
That's what he's talking about is science, but at the same position, he's not holistic
in that view.
It's very, in my view, it's, and against my opinion, but he's very, very self-ser holistic in that view. It's very in my view, it's in against my opinion,
but he's very, very self-serving in his view.
I think it's incredibly political.
And I think some of the people that he surrounded himself
with are following suit in that political environment.
And I think we need to buck the system a little bit,
and we need to start, just like I talked about listening
to our team members and listening to our customers, he's got to buck the system a little bit and we need to start just like I talked about listening to our team members
and listening to our customers,
he's got to do the same thing.
I don't feel like this is an educational,
I don't think that he's lacking the information, the knowledge.
I mean, maybe I'm just more skeptical
like I think that there's, when it comes to politicians,
it always seems to come back to money.
There's, there's, there's, there's, there's,
I can get reelected.
Right, you, you to believe that, right?
Do you really think, do you really think this man doesn't have someone as smart as one of us in this room that's in his ear telling him the
or he can't read an article like Sal was just referring to?
You got, don't you think there's something else behind all this?
Well, listen, if you, if you select a person that's giving you advice that's against fitness before COVID,
then more than likely the advice they're going to be given during COVID is don't open gyms.
And I think, if I'm not, I might be incorrect, but I think that's who he's selected as his
head of health services.
And so he has somebody in his ear that isn't supportive of fitness gyms and doesn't really
think it's the answer to, or it's the solution to what I've
been talking about. Now, that being said, I agree with you. It's tough. It's a tough position to be.
I like to look at things half full. I like to trust people. I like to think that we can get through
anything with respect and emotional intelligence. But I'm just so disappointed and really, quite frankly, I'm sad because I'm reading stories
where people are looking at life just half empty and they don't see tomorrow and their
futures are going away.
I'm looking at senior classes graduating without the same emotional highs that all of us
have when we graduated.
I'm looking at big events like weddings and funerals and other things that families have that have been conditioned not to have a
community come together. And there's ways to do this guys in a safe way and a respectable way,
but I just, it feels very one-dimensional. Well, look, when you see that the health transformations
that a fitness journey can produce for people, and I mean, in all respects, you have to weigh that out against the,
now you don't have a place to work out.
Okay, so you maybe reduce your risk of contracting COVID by, you know, zero, zero,
two percent, but you dramatically increased your risk of all these other health problems.
Dramatically, it makes a huge, especially if you're older, by the way,
I mean, I've trained people in advanced age,
and I see what happens to them,
they don't work out for a month.
It would like when you're younger
and you don't work out for a year.
The health decline is tremendous.
I've seen this in my grandparents,
who were isolated because they're high risk,
and my grandmother had a stroke,
and my grandfather now is ill,
and part of it is they're not around.
Other people are not moving as much as they used to.
I don't think they're weighing that out, I think it's very political I agree with you
that being said are and because you've managed and worked in so many different states and you see
a lot of different jurisdictions right now what areas are doing a better job what areas do you see
that are different than the way we're operating. Texas, Florida, in my opinion,
are doing a fantastic job.
And listen, it's so funny when you hear data through the media,
because I quite frankly, guys,
I don't know what media source to even trust anymore.
I don't know where to go.
And I'm both in both sides.
It's my pump media.
Yeah, that's my body.
You go to, and listen, I'm calling it on the right
and the left side. I mean, I think both sides are polarizing right
now. And I just, I don't understand where to go to get
information in day to the right way. But I will say this is that
I've been traveling the Texas. I've been traveling the, the Florida
and you can just feel the difference of life in those two states
versus the state of California.
And so I think it's night and day and I think there's better leadership there. I think there's
more understanding and awareness of how to move a society and keep them moving and keep their mindset
right. And I'll tell you, I'm just, you know, throw out me being in the fitness business
and throw out that self-serving aspect of me wanting
to have my company thrive and stay alive.
Just the thing that you guys talk about with mental health,
I mean, I, it's just, that's the number one issue
in this country right now that we're gonna be dealing with
for the next six months to probably 12 months
and that's after, that's post COVID.
And that's in addition to all the economic challenges
that we're gonna have, and that's all gonna be incremental.
But the mental health issue will be the number one problem
in this country for the foreseeable future.
And to me, it's trainers, it's great fitness offerings
and it's great, it's the ability it's great fitness offerings and it's great.
It's the ability to make sure you bring communities together that solve that and we have to figure it out.
Agreed fitness.
The fitness space is really the answer to chronic modern health problems, whether you're talking about obesity,
diabetes, you know, Western medicine and science, you have yet to solve those problems as effectively as leading
a fitness and health journey.
And even if you include mental health issues like anxiety, depression, we know this mild
to moderate depression, which is the most common form of depression, is treated by exercise,
at least as effectively as medication in the medium term.
In the long term, any scientist believe it to be superior because of the added continual benefits
that you get from fitness versus medication
where it tends to stop working after a certain period of time.
I wanna talk to you a little bit more
about the business of fitness
because you run big clubs,
you've run a lot of these companies,
you're with, I believe to be one of the more successful
fitness companies in the world.
So you're always dealing with competitors.
There's always competition coming in and it looks like because of the current climate,
there's a new competitor on the scene that poses a new challenge that maybe wasn't so
challenging before.
And that is the at-home gym market and the tech market.
I mean, now that gyms are hamstrung by regulations
and maybe fear from consumers, Peloton is blowing up.
We just now, Apple is getting into the mix.
It looks like...
Mayor Tonal.
You have.
You have.
You have a man of some kind.
By, you know, home gym equipment, I saw dumbbells.
This is this true story.
This is when this all went down.
I saw dumbbells on the, what is it, like that Facebook marketplace or whatever. It was a pair of dumbbells. This is just true story. This is when this all went down. I saw dumbbells on the Facebook marketplace or whatever.
It was a pair of dumbbells.
It was like 150 bucks.
Yeah, like 10 times the price.
For a pair of 12 pound dumbbells.
And I know that's because everybody's buying them out
and the demand is so high.
So how are you guys dealing with that competitor?
Which maybe you didn't even have to consider it before.
Yeah, it's a great question.
And let me ask you a question.
If you want to go work out in the gym today, where are you going to go? Yeah, it's a it's
a good quite right now. I mean very few of them are open. So almost never. And if you're
into doing cardio, Peloton's a great option, right? There's no that about it. There's the
mirror. There's there's all these virtual sites. But when, and listen, it's not going anywhere,
it was already building before COVID.
It was already something that was going to be
part of a holistic fitness journey.
I embrace it, I'm fine with it.
I think it's fantastic,
because you know why it changes the narrative of fitness
and it allows for us to continue to get penetration
into our communities and let's face it.
When you only have a 23, 24% penetration rate in fitness,
anything that we can do to get penetration rates over 50%.
Let's do it.
And that word competitor is what's changing.
No longer have I got competitors? I got people that are aligned
with me on fitness journeys. We have different value propositions, we have different ideals,
but at the end of the day we're together and trying to take a movement to get people moving
across this globe. And, you know, you guys have said this before. It's about how many calories you're taking in.
It's processed foods. It's activity. It's community. It's bringing all that together. And if we can
align with Apple, if we can align with Peloton, if we can align with our own at-home services,
and bring it all together in a holistic view,
all's we're doing is increasing penetration percentages
and getting people more involved.
If I can get Peloton to introduce fitness
to another hundred people,
I promise you two to three of them
are gonna come check out my judges.
Oh, that's a great attitude.
That is so true.
I know when I would manage gyms,
I remember when curves became a thing.
This was at one point curves exploded across the scene
and I remember a few of them opening up near me
and my sales staff saying, oh my gosh,
are they gonna take our members?
And I said, actually, they're probably gonna bring
more fitness awareness in the area
and we'll probably start to see more traffic
and we did.
We absolutely did.
So that's what you're referring to.
You're saying that these companies are
Increasing penetration. Therefore increasing the amount of people now that are going to be paying attention to you guys Well, and think about the marketing investment for just peloton right now right now
They're not spending a lot but pre-covid they were spending a significant amount of money about talking about fitness at home
And the key word there is not at home. The key word is fitness.
And the more that becomes part of the conversation,
the increased percentage of people
that are gonna be thinking about fitness
and changing their life.
And let's face it, what is obesity now?
45%.
Yeah, it's almost half or majority.
Yeah, it's huge.
And so if there's that type of opportunity
and we can together align and create this narrative
where everybody's talking about doing something, we all win.
And I truly believe we can do that.
And I think what you're gonna see
is people joining Peloton, having their bike,
spending that $2,500 or whatever it is,
doing the subscription service and saying,
you know what, I also wanna do a hit class at UFC,
or I want to take a boxing class at UFC
and complimenting one another.
I also think people are going to be joining multiple fitness
facilities in the future, not just UFC gym,
but they're also going to join one that's close to their work,
maybe it's a $10 a month club because it's convenient
and they want the value proposition close to their house.
And so again, it's so funny, I was on the the the CFA call yesterday and on the call were 46 other president and CEOs of fitness companies.
And they're sitting there sharing information and data that's private to their company. Also, we could come together to help continue to drive this movement in the state of California. And that's why I may have so much respect for our competitors.
There's great people out there trying to make an impact
in the fitness space.
And we're one of them.
And listen, I wholeheartedly believe in what we're doing.
But it's going to take all of us to make this movement happen
to where it needs to go.
We're instead of 50% of the people being obese,
we get that down to the minority of maybe eight to 10%.
And we change the discussion about how people live their life.
I love that.
It gives me the chills.
I think you're right.
There is a camaraderie in the fitness space, even among competitors, probably driven
by the fact that many of us got into the space primarily because we liked to help people
through fitness.
And so that kind of unites us a little bit.
It's very similar to our message, one of the things that we didn't like
as fitness became more of the conversation.
We started to see some companies and some people start to
create their own silos and communities and our ways better than your way.
And part of our messaging is, no, man, we're all on the same side.
And for the average consumer who's just learning,
like there's so much to take from all of these different
modalities versus me versus you.
So I love that attitude, but that being said too,
and since you guys don't look at us competitor,
are there things you guys are having conversations
about how you can align or potentially get some of your stuff
on mirror.
Tonal is Mark making any moves like that or talking about that?
Listen, Mark is, that's what he does.
His makes moves and he's too football field to head of me on where we need to go, right?
He slows things down for me because I can only handle, I'm not a smart guy, I can only
handle so much at one time.
But no, he's taking us there.
And we've started this UFC fit on the go, where we have online classes that people can
take from home.
But here's what Mark and his genius said, hey, it's not just about connecting a consumer
to fitness at home, but it's about connecting different cultures with
consumer, different consumers with fitness at home. So if I can have my Shanghai
club do a hit class online and somebody in L.A. can take it, or if I can have
somebody in Sydney, Australia do a boxing class and somebody in Long Island can
take that class, you start creating
connectivity between cultures and you have even more dynamic conversations about health,
fitness, how it relates to their specific geography and how it relates to our specific
geography.
So, I think Mark's looking at it globally and figuring out how to tie fitness,
a specific fitness DNA to combine
at home training and engine training.
Oh, that's, yeah, that's very interesting.
Okay, so let's say, tomorrow, magic wand,
all regulations and rules are waived.
Now you can operate business however you want you still have to deal with
Consumer fear and perception right so even though all the rules are people still may be afraid of going to the gym
There's still that perception that maybe this is a place where I could get sick or whatever
How are how are you gonna handle that are their conversations around that around building maybe trust around
Your consumer so when they come in they feel safe and they feel like they're an environment that's healthy How are you going to handle that? Are there conversations around that, around building, maybe trust around your consumer.
So when they come in, they feel safe and they feel like they're in an environment that's
healthy.
Yeah.
So this is where it's going to be tricky.
It's a great question because you really have to put yourself in position to control the
dialogue, right?
Because you're going to have extremist, you know, always trying to create negativity
about what you're trying to do, right?
You're always gonna have that.
And typically those are the loudest voices, unfortunately.
And so to control a conversation,
you have to ask a lot of questions, right?
And so what we have to do is we have to go in
and just talk to our members and talk to our team members and let them have a significant voice in the way that we operate.
And the consumer is going to tell us, you know, we're only going to do what the consumer
wants us to do.
And so what we do know is that when we did reopen for a short period of time, we enrolled
more members than ever before as far as new membership
acquisition.
Oh, wow.
Interesting.
People were using, they were coming back and drove to use the club.
There was a huge pent up demand and they wanted more classes than we offered before.
And so we were in a position that, you know, we all of a sudden, you know, it's like it
was in 1995 again where there was no competition and everybody was coming back to the gyms.
And so I think you're going to have a little bit of that, but we want to make sure education
is on the forefront and that we're providing all of our consumers and everybody in the industry
is much information using our platforms that we possibly can use.
And we want to make sure that we're tying in digital platforms,
both social media, website, and other platforms
to make sure that that conversation
can continue to be guided in the right way.
And then as long as we have our people
that are trained and educated,
and that know how to listen to our consumers and our members
to take the right feedback the right way.
And the biggest thing that could stop all this, stop progression is the word ego.
As long as we defuse ego and we learn and we keep listening to our consumers, we'll
provide the operating system that will allow the consumers to feel or feel fulfilled in the value proposition.
Yeah, you brought up social media and media. New media has got so much power these days.
I mean, it's got power to sway entire elections and memes get shared, you know, millions of times,
very quickly, changing the conversation or the perception around things. Do you guys have a strategy around new media?
You said social media, is it the standard advertising or are you looking at trying to create
ways of changing people's perceptions through this new media that really didn't exist as
powerful as it does even just as shortly as five years ago?
Yeah, organic distribution is what's most important.
And, you know, we have a policy at UFC.
You know, if you think about how most businesses run their social media,
they do a, we'll take Facebook as an example.
They do a business page and that business page,
the business controls the entire narrative.
Right? So if there's one negative comment,
the business page deletes that comment.
Well, what we decided to do was create a community page and we said, listen, as long as a member
is not being disrespectful, we're going to leave every comment on that page. That's put on that page.
And trust me, that takes discipline because there's comments that you just want to delete.
Yeah, did you see 24-of-fitnesses page
with all the comments?
We went on there and it was like, oh my gosh.
Yeah, yeah.
It was bad because people were, I guess,
they continue charging people after they shut down
and it was not good.
Well, yeah, I mean, there's a whole other discussion there.
But what we wanna do is we want to have the customers
giving truly what they think.
We want to be able to address what they think in a public environment.
So 24-hour uses a platform that they manage the entire, all their clubs through one social
media voice.
We decided to leverage our general managers inside the facility, smart-every facility, let them be the voice and represent our brand to that
particular consumer. So if a consumer says, listen, your bathroom's dirty, the GM
is not allowed to delete that. The GM must say, I apologize. We dropped the ball.
We need to fix it. Next time in your, you're in the club,
can you grab me so we can walk through
where you saw the mess so I can better understand
your concern and your complaint?
If we, as long as we can have those types of dialogues
via social media without losing the word respect,
it's going to allow us to navigate
through all the difficult waters ahead.
Yeah, it, it, our, our, now you're adding a new skill, right?
To being a successful general manager,'re adding a new skill, right,
to being a successful general manager,
which is a skill of social media,
which is totally different.
Are people now, are you starting to see people,
yeah, their talents rise a little bit,
like, oh wow, that guy or girl,
they manage the social media page really well.
It seems to be doing real well for them.
What does that look like?
Where, what are the skills to operate your club's social media page that are surfacing as the
better skills to have?
Yeah, I mean, listen, let's face it, where this world is going, it seems like the majority
of the population gets their news from whatever social media account they prefer to jump on.
And so having that skill set of digital and having that skill set to understand
the different distribution points, whether it go from Pinterest to Facebook to Instagram,
you know, TikTok's gonna be a huge player in the future.
You know, they have to have, they have to be able to have that.
But what I love about my general managers, if they know they don't have that skill set,
you know what they do, they hire to their weakness.
And they go out and find somebody that does and they put them
in position to own it for them and then that GM checks in with them on a regular basis.
And so, you know, that's what it's about, you know, is true leadership is not being
the best at everything.
True leadership is about understanding where you're weakest and bringing in people to help
you with that weakness and that's what, that's what I think my GM team does. Yeah, some of the good news around this is,
because gyms are part of our heart and soul,
and we want to see them do well.
And at first it was a little, for us,
it was a little disheartening,
it's like, oh man, are they gonna survive?
And what's going on?
But a lot of signs are pointing to the fact
that the demand for fitness has not decreased.
Now the market has forced people to find it in different ways, but the demand is still
very high.
And I am hearing more and more reports of, you know, during the pro-abition era, you had
speak easy, right?
The demand for alcohol was very high.
So they, you know, they kind of figured out a black market way around.
I'm hearing about a lot of people opening their doors kind of black market style,
letting people into work out.
Are you hearing about this yourself?
There's a lot of gyms that aren't respecting the process
and yeah, they're doing it.
And listen, I gotta tell you guys, I thought about it.
I really did.
You know, when you're dealing with some of the economic
situations that we need to deal with right now,
that's the easy path.
But whenever you take an easy path
at the end of that path,
typically you find that you didn't get
to the destination the right way
and it'll end up hurting you.
And so we chose to be very respectful of the process,
be very disciplined about how to get there
and we think will be stronger because of that.
Yeah, I agree with you.
Now, when you look forward, right,
right now, because of COVID, it seems like there may be some lasting,
some long-lasting, maybe permanent changes to the way people work.
I would bet money that distance work,
where people work virtually,
probably it definitely went up right now,
but even when anything goes back to normal,
you're probably gonna see a large percentage of that
just maintain, where people just work from home,
with the attitudes, maybe some of the fears around gyms,
that maybe rightly or not rightly so,
with the regulations, once that's all gone,
everything kind of goes back to,
do you see any permanent changes to the market and fitness?
Yeah, yeah, I mean, I mean, listen, first of all,
I think I have to talk about our corporate support center.
You know, and I tell you, the pandemic,
I was able to identify one of my weaknesses.
And I didn't trust people.
I had a very difficult time being able to trust somebody
to do their job like I needed it to be done.
And I exposed, I was exposed as this pandemic hit
because all of a sudden people couldn't come
to the corporate office anymore.
And I'm like in the back of my head, I'm going,
I don't think they're doing their job right.
I don't think they're doing what they need to do.
I don't think they're working.
They're probably watching a soap opera and I started second guessing everything.
And my people in that corporate office inspired me.
And not only did they show that they could get in there and be disciplined and work harder
than ever before, but their results improved.
And it allowed me to understand that how powerful the word trust is and giving, and a
master of is a great example of that, right?
Master of what he does is picks leaders and trust them and let them, and powers them,
let them go.
And, and I needed to have that medicine for myself
and understand that that was my weakness.
And now I understand that the world has changed
and I need to be adaptable to understand
that as long as I pick the right people
and have the right people around me, man,
go to work and do what you need to do.
If you want to work from Thailand,
if you want to work from some abandoned island somewhere,
go do it, but as long as you get your job done,
and I'm finding that trust is going, you know, tenfold.
Now, as it relates to gyms, you know, it's interesting
because what I'm seeing and feeling is that the proposition
of community and attendance and accountability, it's what's being missed
the most.
And you remember, if you're in the fitness industry in the old days, right, you remember
that we were taught how to overcome objections.
You did listen, agree, overcome, re-enthusent clothes.
And when you thought about, I don't know if I'm going to use it or I'm going to get equipment for my house, the way your rebuttal was, you know, the typical treadmill at your
home is used to hang your clothes on, right?
And you just, you don't have the same environment.
And I think the environment in fitness facilities is so much that attendance is required that,
you know, and that's where I bring in and I intersect
mental health again, is that, you know, just showing up at a gym and having a conversation with another
member at a gym or another team member at a gym will improve your mental health and will inspire
you to do more on the fitness side. And I think that, yes, will there be 10 to 15% of consumers that probably will not feel
the same way post COVID?
I'll agree to that.
But I also think there'll be 20 to 25% more consumers that will want to go into a gym
post COVID.
So I think we're going to win, win here.
And I think over a period of time as people get more and more let's face it, and we have short memories in general, right? We're going through an
emotional time right now. So it's on the forefront of everybody's mind. But six months after
COVID, memories are going to reduce, and we're going to get back to some sort of normalization
where people like that connectivity and that engine experience.
Do you think you guys are going to continue to allow some employees to work remotely?
Is that gonna change somewhat?
Yeah, when it makes sense.
So much of our brand is about people interaction
and people awareness and making sure there's
that relationship one-on-one.
If we're gonna be a high value proposition business,
you have to be customer facing.
If you're a low value proposition business
I certainly can see there's a way that I mean listen if I was a $10 on the club with no labor
I could probably set up a check-in system and not have anybody in the club. That's not the way that
we are driving our business we're driving it through relationships and community and people
and you know the people that we have in our clubs want to be in the clubs.
They want to connect with the consumers.
By them giving that message, it's going to allow,
I think, for improved membership acquisition and retention.
Do you have any advice for just the gym owner and manager right now?
I mean, we have a lot of decent chunk of our audience,
our people that work in the fitness space and you know percentage
of those people are gym owners. They own one gym or one box or one personal training studio.
Like what's your advice for them? Because I see them struggling the most. They don't have
the capital. They don't you know they didn't save more than a couple months or three months worth
of of of rent revenue and all that stuff stuff. And what's your advice for them?
Well, listen, let me share with you some of my disappointments or sadness as I've gone
through this.
And so there's people that were in my clubs, that were my team members, that I thought
the world of, that I thought that man,
we're gonna develop this person,
they could end up running a country somewhere.
And they ended up being so self-serving
and very selfish in their intentions.
And they did not, they created divide
versus bringing people together. And, and it was
very difficult to lose those people because of the emotional connection that you have with them.
But it's interesting, once the divide goes away and the team comes together, results improve.
And so when my biggest piece of advice is know your people and do not allow division to be
part of your culture, because you have to work as a ten multiple to overcome division
and overcome negativity, work with people that want to be there.
The door runs two ways.
Have people that want to be part of your organization that want to embrace your culture and drive that culture.
So you just touched on something
that's very top of mind for me right now.
So like you, we had a lot of success
when we did the remote thing, right?
So we only have about 12 employees that work for us,
but we gave everybody that option to work from home.
And I had the similar fears, oh my God,
like I had not on them, there's accountability piece,
and are they gonna work?
And we've had a lot of initial success,
but I do have this fear of long-term Simon Sinek
just did an interview recently,
and he talked about this, that it's working
for some people right now,
but this is not the long-term answer.
Just people need that connection, they need that community.
And so what's constantly going through my brain right now is
how can I create that community, that bond,
that kind of feel in a two-dimensional world
until we can get back to normal.
Do you guys talk about that?
Are there, is there anything that you're doing right now
to make sure you keep that bond
and that community going with your team
so you don't lose that connection and culture.
Yeah, you know, probably the most difficult piece of this is you can't have everybody that you'd
like to have working working during this difficult period, right? We don't have members to service.
And so we can't just have, you know, some of our clubs have 125 people on staff.
And so I can't employ 125 people if I have no member workouts, right?
So what we chose to do is make sure that we have the management leadership team still
employed, no matter what.
And they, what they're doing is an incredible job connecting with the team that is not working their day to day.
They're doing an incredible job connecting
with the consumers that aren't there day to day.
And they're doing it through dialogues,
through going, I mean, I just saw a social media picture
where one of my GM's took seven or eight of his
personal trainers out to a dinner.
And they're not even working with us right now. They're just, they're on their own. as personal trainers out to a dinner.
And they're not even working with us right now. They're on their own, they're collecting unemployment
and they're not part of the team currently as we sit today,
but he chose as a leader to say,
I'm gonna take these people out
and make sure that they know that I'm still thinking about them.
And so again, I think it goes back to trust,
and that word that I think we're all learning to embrace more and more.
And as long as you have people that you directly work with, that you trust, and they're then cascading that down to other team members and people, people are smart.
And they know if you're sincere, authentic, or you're not.
And the work that some of these people are doing to continue to engage with their team
that can't be currently employed with us is just incredible.
Yeah, what percentage would you of the success of a gem,
would you say is the people in the culture
versus the equipment in the facility itself?
135%.
Yeah, I mean, I mean, listen,
the only, the reason I love this company is because of the people.
Otherwise, it's the gym with equipment in it and I can go to an apartment complex and find that.
I just, it's about the journey, guys.
And, you know, somebody asked me the other day, you know, about, you know, having a transaction
and making millions of dollars
and very financial-based.
And it doesn't motivate me.
What motivates me is after this conversation
with you guys going to my Sunnyvale Club
and talking to that team and hearing how they're going
through this process of COVID over the last couple months
and what they've been doing with their consumers
and other team members.
And we're always going to remember now.
We're always going to remember what we're going through today.
So in five years, when we're having this, now you guys are going to be in this 50 story
great studio that because of your success.
But when we're having a discussion again, and we're talking about, you know, this era,
we're going to look back on it and remember this.
And I think the journey is such an important part
of what we do.
And I think that, again, it's how you live that journey
today that makes all the difference.
Adam, you've talked a lot about emotional intelligence.
I've heard you reference, ego.
So you sound like a very self-aware person
and you also started as a front desk kid
and worked your way all the way up to a president
of a massive company.
So I know you've obviously had tons of financial success.
Talking to me about how much you've evolved
and change as a person from the kid
who was probably making eight dollars or less an hour
at one point to the amount of money and success
that you've had now, how much of that has changed you and is your view on that different
today than it was 10, 15 years ago?
In a big way, I remember as a GM and a district manager operating 100% with ego and when somebody
would fly my parking lot, I would get them back.
I would get them back 10, and, and, and, and, and, and listen,
their performance at that point in my life was based on arrogance and confidence.
And confidence is a good thing.
Don't get me wrong.
I mean, you have to have some ego, right?
To be able to perform in anything that you do because that comes from confidence.
But it's not until you can be aware of how others
are perceiving you that you can really make
an impact in life.
And I went through a lot of change in my professional career
from going from that front desk kid that wanted a job
to try to pick up chicks to, to becoming a family man,
having four great kids,
a great wife and understanding that other people
all have ambitions and goals of their own
and that their ambitions and goals
need to be as important as my ambition and goals.
And it wasn't always that way.
And I think when you start understanding
that everybody sees life through their own lens,
and it's okay to disagree.
Life is about disagreement.
As a matter of fact, that's how products become great, isn't it?
Is that it's debate and disagreement and finding a true way to get to the end result.
And I think this journey of life,
it's been so incredible for me as an individual
and I have a lot to learn.
I mean, I have a lot to learn.
You guys excel in many ways, right?
There's things that I look to you guys and say,
man, I wish I could articulate like this
or have experience around some of the physiological things that
you guys bring to the table each and every day.
It's a respect that I have for you guys that makes all the difference in the world.
I think that if as a human race, and I'm not just thinking it's speaking in the US, I
think as a human race, if we can just
understand how to listen to one another in a respectful way, not have our voice need to be the loudest voice in the room and continue to understand that all of us have individual opportunity,
that approach, the way that you live your life will then cascade down to others and they can
live their life in a more in a in a in a fuller way.
So do you remember a moment in your life that was either
humbling or pivotal for you where that kind of transition
happened? Like I remember it took to be, I think I was
close to 30 years old before that, because I was like you.
That's what was dry. I had these superficial things that drove me
for me coming from not very much, was money and success and reaching a certain dollar amount.
And something happened in my life that completely flipped that on its head and changed who I was
forever.
Did you have a moment in your journey that is very memorable to you that changed who you
were?
Yep, yep.
I'm going to try to get through to that, okay, I'm an emotional guy too. So, you know, when I started with family fitness
than 24 hour and in, you know, 1994,
and if you were to walk into my closet in 1999,
I didn't have civilian clothes anymore, right?
We had nothing but purple clothes.
And every, every hanger was a 24 hour fitness shirt
or promotional shirt and all my sweats were 24 out my wife would get very
Irritated with me because we went out to dinner with our family. I'd wear 24 hour fitness stuff, right?
And you know, you know, don's a great example. I think all his team got tattoos of 24 hour, right?
And I mean, it's just it's I was so in bed with that company
It it defined me and my competitive spirit going
through that 24-hour fitness world was like no other.
I loved it.
I thought there was nothing else out there but 24-hour.
I don't know if you wanna call it brainwashed,
whatever it was, but because of leaders like Mark Maastrof
and Jim Roli and other people like that,
I was just enamored with that organization.
And the day that that organization said
that we're not enamored with you anymore
was the day that changed my life forever.
And I felt like my family died.
I felt like I didn't know what I just sat in the parking lot
and literally cried and did not know what my future looked like
and didn't, I didn't
even have an identity.
I didn't know who I was without, you know, the 24 hour fitness badge on my chest.
And, you know, an hour later, I get a call on my phone.
It's Mark Mastroff, who is still at that point the chairman of the board of 24 hour.
And he said, Adam, you know, everything that you've done
for this company, I appreciate and there's people in the room now that don't share that same
appreciation. They're taking people, people used to be the number one value proposition of this
organization is no longer that way. You go back home, spend time with your family.
I'll be calling you within the next 30 days with an opportunity.
And like clockwork, the guy gives me a call 30 days later.
And so it changed my life though, right?
It made me look at how I lived my life at 24 hour,
how I became very one dimensional,
how I was leading through arrogance and confidence.
And I almost thought because of my results,
you almost feel like you're untouchable.
And at the point when I was going through
the 24 hour fitness leadership change,
if I had learned to be adaptable,
and although I would not have been a sincere and authentic,
but I learned how to be more political
with the CEO at the time that was not Mark.
You know, maybe I would have stayed
with 24 hour for a longer period of time.
I don't know, and maybe everything happens for a reason
and that's allowed me to evolve to who I am today.
But, you know, I learned through that moment in my life,
who was important to me, it was interesting, too, because when you're
a divisional president of a company,
there's a lot of people that send you text messages
and emails on holidays.
And then when all of a sudden you're not
that divisional president anymore,
it's interesting to see who still sends you
those text messages.
And it told me a lot.
It told me a lot.
It told me a story about people and understanding, you know, who's in it just to be self-serving
and who's in it to, you know, have a true relationship.
And so, you know, that was the point in my life that, you know, me professionally, you
know, things changed.
And I learned a lot about trust and loyalty with Mark. And, you know, if you look at Mark's history
and you look at how loyal he is to people,
as long as you don't lie cheater steal to him,
that guy will be with you till you die.
And it was a huge lesson for me.
And I feel the same way about my core people
that nothing will happen to them
as long as I don't like cheater steel.
Period.
Do you feel like you have developed a skill to see that and find that in people?
I feel like I have it, but just when I think I have it, something happens that says I don't
have it.
And so, you know, I have, I feel like there's a good gut instinct that I can, I can read
people and I can sense their authentic
and real, but it's not 100%.
You know, there's always, you always get surprised.
I was very surprised, you know, over the last three
to four months by some of the people that I thought
were just all in and obsessed that just didn't feel
the way that I felt, and it was disappointing
and it was sad to me, but it just reality.
Oh yeah, you put somebody in the,
you back everybody in the corner,
it's, you see sides of people that you've never seen before,
you know, they can't feed their family,
or they don't have a job that they may not have,
and so their true character starts to come out.
And also, all you want people to do, though, guys,
is talk and communicate.
Like, you know, there was one situation
that somebody was a coach and I thought
the world of them. I thought they represented our branding incredibly well and they knew that our
business was changing and they decided to resign and instead of having a conversation about the
resignation, they snuck into the gym, they got all their client folders,
they stole a bunch of stuff from us and left.
Versus coming in and saying,
hey, I'm frustrated, I'm disappointed,
I'd like to talk to you about,
still talking to some of my clients so I can survive.
At that point, the discussion changes,
and we help them, right?
But you learn a lot about character,
and you learn a lot about people for sure.
Yeah, fear does a lot of weird things to people,
I think, and it's a very scary time.
So people are acting in ways that may not be,
and they're, even it's definitely not in their best interest.
You know, one of my favorite things about fitness, Adam,
and as you talk about your journey,
it's obvious this happened to you,
is that fitness is a very unassuming,
it's a great entry point into personal growth.
And it's unassuming because you don't realize
that's what's gonna happen.
You start in fitness and you think,
I'm gonna look better, I'm gonna get abs,
I'm gonna build some biceps.
But when you stay on the journey, you end up growing.
It's the best personal growth entry point I can think of because if you stay on the journey, you end up growing. It's the best personal growth entry point I can think of
because if you stay on the journey long enough
of health of fitness, you learn how to develop your body,
you learn discipline, you develop a good relationship
with food, then you keep going and you end up
learning spiritual health and mental health
and relationship health because as you just said,
this successful fitness businesses are the ones at the best culture
and community. And I can't think of a better time for fitness than right now.
Yeah, no, it's a huge opportunity. It's not going to be easy, though. There's a road that is
got three inches of ice on it that we're now climbing. And it's it's going to be a challenge. It's not easy. Nothing great
comes easy as we all know. And so we're going to be on this difficult journey together. Guys like you
that drive the message of why you should be working out, why you should be eating right, we need
you guys. We need you guys to help us continue to drive the message out there in the in the
facilities. And and the gyms, the facilities, the at home products,
we all need to come together as a holistic industry
and make sure that we have an opportunity for people
to continue to look at life in a little bit
different way through fitness.
And so it's not going to be easy.
We got economic issues, we got the economy,
the economy is going to be in turmoil.
The political instability is at all time high.
But to your point, if we can just get into a gym together, we can work out together,
things tend to solve themselves.
Adam, what's the conversation been like with your kids?
I know they're mostly grown, but I imagine during this time, most of us have probably
drawn closer to the family.
In fact, I think that's one of the greatest takeaways for me personally during this time is
it's forced me to slow down a little bit, reconnect with a lot of my family and have more conversations
with them. What are some of the conversations that you're having with your four kids during this time?
What's it look like? I know, I'm proud of my kids
because during COVID, one of them graduated,
one of them went from a junior to a senior,
and then the other two, once going to Oregon State,
moved up there and started her journey.
And then the other one just enrolled
in the community college.
And they've been so adaptable
and they've had, you know, they have different views for sure.
Like my youngest daughter is, she loves Bernie Sanders.
Oh, shit.
And I'm the opposite, of course.
She just rebelling.
Yeah, no, I know, I know. I know.
But she's all about it.
And she's all about that vibe.
And but she does, she wants to talk about it.
She wants to, and again, it goes back to respect and belief.
And it's about getting around that table
and just having a conversation.
And her heart's as big as ever.
But she says, hey, here's my problem.
Here's my concern is that I don't want kids to be at a border in some type of jail.
I don't want social injustices.
Look what Donald Trump has done before he got elected.
So he cited all these examples.
And quite frankly, some of the things I couldn't overcome,
some of the examples of character that we all look for
in our leaders, there's some issues with our president.
And at the same token, I love his policies.
And that's the intersection, right?
His policies are on point to me, in my opinion,
and they help us continue to prosper.
And so having that dialogue can be difficult
with your kids because you want to be truthful
and you want to make sure that the conversation stays
truly authentic and respect their beliefs,
but at the same token, you know, if in my view again,
if Bernie Sanders is the president,
then I don't have a job.
And all of a sudden, I give memberships away for free.
And we are in a very different world.
And so I think the dialogue has been out of all time high.
Pre-COVID, everybody's going 100 miles an hour
and nobody comes to a dinner table.
During COVID, everybody's at a dinner table.
I just purchased my first RV.
Oh, that's great.
And I never thought I would.
I never thought I would be that guy that purchased an RV. But I got a 35 footer and started going on
these RV trips on the weekends. And you know, you put out your whole family in one RV, you have a
lot of great spirit of conversations. And when I talked about the journey earlier,
I would say COVID has amplified the journey
in a much more family way during COVID and pre-COVID.
And I've enjoyed the experience.
Do you talk to your kids much about legacy
and there's something that you've created
or done within the family
that you want to pass down to them and then carry on?
It's a tough one because, you know, I don't want them to think they have to live up to
what I've maybe have personally accomplished, right?
I like that they know that I work hard and I like to show them through action and through things that I do for them versus,
you know, providing a huge expectation to say, if you don't hit this mark, you're a failure.
And, you know, it's an incredibly philosophical conversation. But what I know is that my kids
all have the biggest hearts and they're incredibly empathetic and they're incredibly caring and I don't agree with all their views.
A couple of them I do and a couple of them I don't.
But you know through my belief is through kind of leading by example almost like I do professionally with my family.
I hope that they feel some of that and they put that to good use
as they start developing their professional careers.
I've been blessed not to have any major problems.
I did have my middle son, it's a little bit of a maverick
and when he was 14, he decided to borrow my navigator
and go pick up his girlfriend at two in the morning
and I got called by the police.
That's a whole different story.
But when you get there, he was more afraid of my wife than me.
But it was so funny because we went to the police officer and the police officer said,
you got a hell of a son because he was so respectful to the police officer.
Admitted his blame.
Was not dishonest.
Told him exactly what was happening.
And say, listen, he told the police officer,
he was in love with the girl,
and he was just chasing her heart.
And then of course the police officer,
he means they take him home, everything's fine.
But you know what, that's, I mean, really,
is not, we all go, when you guys were teenagers,
I'm sure you got yourselves into a little bit of trouble.
I know I certainly do.
For girls, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
And of course.
And what you want is truth and empathy and honesty.
And am I going to get mad at him for being in love with somebody and trying to do whatever
it takes to connect with her?
Not really.
I mean, I mean, my wife, on the other hand.
But no, I mean, listen, it's like you guys, you learn more and more, especially during
this COVID period about being a better parent and being more aware of your family and
having slightly different discussions.
But I'm just, I'm crossing my fingers every day.
You want a better life for them than maybe them what we went through as we grew up know, you know, I I'm curious about these things, but I have a one-year-old right?
So I'm new to this game and so I always like talking to someone like you that's that's kind of been to the ringer right for them
And they're all pretty much grown looking back now
And knowing that you probably had some of them in early ages when you were coming full circle ego-wise and stuff
Are there things that you wish you would have done differently
or implemented into your structure or family culture now
that you maybe didn't do 15, 20 years ago?
Yes.
I was so obsessed with work.
I was a seven day a week, 15 hour day guy.
And I didn't have enough family balance.
And so my wife's a miracle worker.
I mean, she, think about her.
She moved 20 times with four kids.
And she supported me working and going out there
and doing what I did.
And so if I could rewind the clock,
I had my kids young.
I was immature.
I was probably too young.
When you're 21 years old and having kids, you had my kids young. I was immature. I was probably too young. You know, when you're 21 years old and having kids,
you're probably too young.
I would be a different parent to an infant today
than when I was 21 years of age.
And so I think your experience and everything
you've been through in life
is gonna make you an incredible father.
And, you know, you can never replace the time
that, and I look back on this now, you can never replace the time that, and I look back on this now,
you can never replace that time of their growth.
And the best ages in the world are those toddler years.
I always say this, once they start creating body odor,
things change.
And they become very independent.
They don't wanna hang out with you as much.
But when they go from two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight,
I mean, those years where you're their center of their life.
That's when they worship you.
Oh my God, I would come through the front door. All four kids would run to me and give me a hug and, you know, you fast forward it to today.
You know, that only my dog comes and runs.
And so, so, you know, the, you know, word of advice is, is, you know, your, your way ahead of this, I'm sure with your maturity, but you only get one chance.
You only get one chance every year.
You only get one two.
When they're two, you only get that once.
When they're three, you only get that once.
And that journey and that experience
is something that can never be replaced.
And when you're on your deathbed,
we're not gonna be counting our money,
but we're gonna be remembering when they turn two,
when they turn two, when they turn four.
Yeah, I love that you said,
I have one coming in October,
but I have two older, so I've been 11 and 15 year old,
and I have a baby coming in October,
and it's gonna be different this time around.
I think I was like you, young,
and you're just not nearly as aware,
or mature as a parent,
so I can completely relate to what you're saying.
Did you buy a pair of new balance shoes
to go with your RV, by the way?
Yeah.
It's such a funny story.
And so my wife started having me look at this.
And so I said, OK.
And so I did it.
And so they threw in a lot more.
And there is definitely things
that you have to learn about RVing, the white tank, the
gray tank, the black tank, and the apparel changes drastically.
My wife got this big straw hat.
And then we're shopping literally last week.
We went RVing the Palm Springs and came back
and on the way back we stopped by the mall.
And I never, I grew up in Oregon
and I never thought I would want a pair of Birkenstocks.
Oh no.
Yeah, you're going all in.
But campers have Birkenstock.
And you have to get them.
And so my wife got a pair.
Now I have size 14 and a half feet. They didn't have to get them. And so my wife got a pair,
now I have size 14 and a half feet.
They didn't have my size,
but now she's going online.
And so man, I've arrived.
I've arrived on the camper.
On the camper.
Like before we hang up,
I wanna, you gotta share with us,
one Mark Mastroff story that we probably don't know.
And it could be either something that's impacted you
on the leadership side, a funny story, whatever.
You gotta share a personal Mark Maastra story.
Well, I mean, I have a lot of them.
I know, right?
So, I'm trying to sift through the ones you can say on there.
Yeah, give me a good one.
I don't want one that everybody's heard.
I want one that maybe you had to dig deep and think back to
or maybe the most.
I mean, obviously you've become extremely or maybe the most. I mean, obviously
you've become extremely loyal to the person. I have a handful of people in my life. I feel
the same way. There's normally something that occurred in our relationship that made
me say this I'm right or die with this person forever.
I'm matching low back to it to something.
Ha ha. Well, you know, before I share that with you, you know, the, you know, I've thought about
this a lot because as you move up professionally, people, you get recruited a lot, you know,
and so, you know, I've been very fortunate, you know, met toward by Mark and then there's
been a lot of people that have worked with Mark that have also helped me through Mark's
association, you know, through my professional tenure and, you know, guys like Jim Roli and other people that
have really, you know, had all their contribution to help me become who I am today.
And you know, when I look at people and I look at sometimes when people, you know, leave
just for money or leave for just, you know, because you can make an extra $5,000 or what have you,
I always think back to the only reason anybody
would want to recruit me today is because of Mark Maastroff.
If he didn't invest into me over the last 20 plus years
and he wasn't there impatient with me through all my mistakes and my issues and challenges
and I get terminated from 24 hour in 1997, hypothetically.
I'm not having this conversation with you guys today.
And so could I go find another job right now
and probably make more money?
Absolutely.
But what kind of person, what kind of family person would I be
if I showed that that was my number one motivator? And what kind of family person would I be if I showed that that was
my number one motivator?
And what kind of business leader would I be if that was my number one motivator?
And I don't get me wrong, Mark pays me very well.
And so I'm very happy with what I make.
But, you know, we all have decisions to make.
And I've seen people where Mark has invested into and shown incredible loyalty to that, you know,
was became very self-serving.
And I just won't, I will never, ever leave Mark's side unless he tells me I should.
And so, you know, I hope to figure out how to lead like him someday because I think that's
the most powerful thing is that when money does not become the motivator, but being around
him becomes the motivator.
So when I think back, I'll just tell you the first time that he impressed me and I was
blown away.
So obviously when you're at New GM and he walks into your club, you're going to be on
pins and needles, right?
Because you want to impress him, you want to know your numbers, the KPIs, the DPR, you know, all that good stuff.
And so I felt like I was pretty good at all that.
And then after we went through all the business parts of,
this was in Rancho Pena, Ski-Dos,
which is really the first time I met him.
And we walked through the club and he goes,
hey, listen, Adam, you're doing a really good job.
You're tied on your numbers, you're in your community in your community. You're, you're doing well.
I got to tell you though, why are you allowing your janitors to mop the floor with water?
Because that's, all that's going to do is hurt your floors and you're going to have to replace
your floors in about 18 months. And I'm like, Oh, Mark, you're right. You know, when I apologize,
I'm going to get on that. And he goes, Okay. And, and so he leaves, you know, oh, Mark, you're right. You know what, I apologize. I'm gonna get on that. And he goes, okay. And so he leaves.
You know, we get done, he leaves.
And of course, I'm like, oh my God,
I just let him down.
I'm mopping floors with water.
And I got shit.
And so, but a week later, I mean,
Mark's, you know, a CEO of a company
in Northern California is probably never gonna ever come back.
And I just completely forgot them
about mopping floors with water.
And so a year and a half goes by and Mark is in San Diego visiting the market and towards
the clubs and at that point we started emailing back and forth a little bit and he started
his mentorship with me and I felt more confident with him and he comes into
the club and we're doing well and he's meeting the staff and graduating the staff and there's
two things that he did that blew me away.
The first thing he did was he took me outside and he taught me the lesson of understanding a journey, which he made me
go outside and look at birds for five minutes.
Just stare at birds for five minutes.
I'm like, I didn't know what the hell I was doing.
But I'm sitting there looking at birds for five minutes and then he made me tell him about
the bird's experience.
And at that very moment taught me to slow down and enjoy the little things
in life, right? And I thought it was very impactful. But the next thing blew me away
then some, which we were walking around the club. And the janitor was mopping with water.
And after a year and a half or whatever it was, after thousands of conversations with
different people, different managers, board meetings, acquisitions,
everything else has gone through.
He said, didn't I tell you not to let that janitor
mop the floor with water?
I had forgot about it, it wasn't even in my mind.
And he had to remind me again that janitor
was also again, mopping the floor with water.
And so, his recall is insane.
It's insane. recall is insane.
It's insane.
No, insane.
You know, I had only met him maybe four or five times
in my career and when we first got reconnected here,
I was at the Hawaii, I mean, I won Hawaii six years
that I was there and so I always saw him there.
But, I mean, again, he's talking to everybody.
But son of a bitch remembered conversations him
and I had 10 years,
you know, 15 years before that. I couldn't, I couldn't believe it. Knowing, like you said,
how many thousands of people he probably talks to a year.
It's, it's amazing. It's amazing. Unbelievable.
That's awesome. Well, Adam, it's been great talking to you. I want to say this and this
is not, we were, we're not affiliated at all, but it's apparent. The job you guys are
doing with UFC gyms, I've been in several of them,
and they are definitely among the best clubs I've been in.
Not just equipment, you guys have amazing equipment.
By the way, I think UFC gym, I think,
you know, MMA type stuff.
You guys have incredible bodybuilding equipment,
cardio equipment, recovery equipment.
So, I remember we all went together,
we were so impressed, but the culture you can feel it. You can tell it comes from the top down and probably
one of the, and this is where, you know, this is where you know, I'm telling the truth
here, what I think, if you're going to become a trainer and you want to learn how to
be a good trainer, we've always said it's probably better to start in a corporate type
facility because they handle a lot of things for you.
UFC gyms are probably one of the better ones to start in.
You're going to learn a lot of good culture.
You're going to be a good facility with good leadership.
So kudos to you guys.
You can tag.
It's obvious you guys are doing a great job.
And by the way, a good guess for you guys.
I don't know if you have, have you had Neil Sproos in here?
No, we know Neil.
Yeah, he's so passionate about fitness.
It reminds me of you guys in your circle here. How we know new. Yeah, he's so passionate about fitness. Reminds me of you guys in your circle here.
Yeah.
You know, hey, I want to thank you guys.
I mean, I just, I love talking fitness.
I mean, I think we could do it all.
We could probably do this for 12 hours tonight, for sure.
Just chat.
If it's okay, can I, can I shout out to a couple of people?
I just want to, I want to thank all the people in the clubs
that are fighting to fight.
And it's not just, I mean, UFC gym, obviously,
you guys have my heart, but it's the industry.
I just wanna thank everybody for going out there
and continuing that grind.
We're gonna get through this as a community, as a family,
and we're gonna be better on the other side of this.
And good luck to the new Seattle Club that we have in Presale,
and also a good luck to Poit Loma and Temeculoma and temecula that are starting pre-sale here
in the next couple weeks.
Excellent, thanks man.
Thank you Adam.
Thanks guys.
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