Orders were flooding in from areas under lockdown at such a rate that Peloton halted all its marketing in the U.S. The customers kept coming. Covid-19 “changed everything for Peloton,” says Lynch, the former Barnes & Noble Inc. chief executive who’s been the company’s president since 2017. “We saw what was already a rapidly growing business just explode.”
It’s awkward: booming growth while the novel coronavirus has ravaged families and caused economic upheaval. But Lynch says a broad shift to at-home workouts, which underpins Peloton’s whole business model, was under way well before 2020; the pandemic just sped it up. Now he and his colleagues are working to convince the world that Peloton’s momentum will continue once the virus eventually subsides.
Last year the company introduced a new bike and cut the price of its old model by 15% to $1,895 (not including the $39-a-month membership). It introduced programs tailored to people who don’t have free weights or a Peloton bike, like barre and dance cardio, and added classes for pandemic-sheltering families with kids. And it’s making a big push to sell treadmills, because there are far more runners than cyclists in the world.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January 25, 2021-Ausgabe von Bloomberg Businessweek.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January 25, 2021-Ausgabe von Bloomberg Businessweek.
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