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Rush Cycle Takes The Franchising Path

Rush Cycle, a chain of indoor cycling studios started seven years ago by two childhood friends in their 20s in La Jolla’s Bird Rock neighborhood, is poised to expand over the next few years from a handful of San Diego sites to dozens nationwide.

Founders Tim Suski and Corey Spangler quit their day jobs after pinpointing a business opportunity in the studio fitness market: boutique cardio.

For Spangler, it was an indoor cycling class with a DJ in a warehouse in Los Angeles that hooked him on the concept of instructed stationary biking, often called “spin class.”

Suski said he teased Spangler, who wanted Suski to come to a class, for his obsession. “Then I tried it,” Suski said.

Witnessing firsthand the devotion the class inspired in attendees — plus trying every spin class in San Diego — spurred the duo to start Rush in 2012. Spangler taught about one-third of the classes; Suski manned the front desk at that first studio.

Franchising

Rush Cycle has since opened five more studios, in California, Colorado and Texas. It started awarding franchises in 2016. Since then the company has awarded more than 30 in states including California, Colorado, Texas, Florida, North Carolina and, as of Jan. 24, New York.

Now major brands, such as the New York-based behemoth SoulCycle, are entering the San Diego market. Suski credits luck as an element in how Rush Cycle managed to build its own cycling brand in an industry crowded with boutique fitness offerings. The company was the first to open indoor cycling studios in the San Diego region.

“We got in at the right time,” he said.

Rush Cycle has one corporate store in Carmel Valley. The company, which is approaching $1 million in annual revenue, plans to award a total of 40 new franchises in 2018 — starting at least that many entrepreneurs on the path to opening a new Rush Cycle studio. Nine new studios are slated to open during the year.

Kiran Gupta, who runs the Rush Cycle studio near state Route 56 and Camino Del Sur in Torrey Highlands, was one of the brand’s first franchisees, inspired by her experience as a patron of the Bird Rock studio.

After 20 years as an attorney, Gupta said she was on the lookout for a new career, preferably one that would involve her passion for fitness, when she heard the owners of Rush Cycle had decided to franchise.

“I wanted to start my business, but nothing seemed right,” she said. “Then, this just fit so well.”

Franchisees put in $350,000 to $400,000 to open a studio, a fee that includes everything from architecture and construction to the towels with which riders will dab away their sweat.

Target Market

Gupta exemplifies Rush Cycle’s target user: a fitness devotee who patronizes a variety of studios depending on what type of workout they want.

“I believe everybody should mix things up: cardio, strength training, flexibility…I think that’s really important,” she said. “People don’t want to go to the box gym and motivate themselves: They’d rather pay specific studios for the type of fitness they need.”

Jenn Null, marketing director for San Diego-based Invictus, a CrossFit brand, has been in the fitness industry since graduating from the San Diego State University Sports MBA program in 2012.

Boutique fitness studios have capitalized on some of the negative attention CrossFit has received, she said. (Critics say the brand’s difficult workouts have caused some participants injury through overuse and bad technique.)

However, the market for studios is getting saturated, she said, and franchising, in particular, has its challenges.

“It takes a lot of education and intention to really form a holistic, lifelong health program,” she said. “Some see franchising as a quick way to make money, and from what I’ve seen, it’s a lot harder than people think.”

Gupta said her studio is performing well, with revenue in line with what the Rush Cycle team told her to expect.

Vetting Prospective Owners

The Rush Cycle founders said they resisted franchising because of its negative connotations, but then decided to go that route, but at a measured pace, to ensure the brand didn’t lose its cultural DNA.

That includes the friendly, collegial environment Rush Cycle studios aim to offer riders, Suski said. Some of its competitors, such as SoulCycle, have a reputation for a more competitive atmosphere.

Suski said Rush Cycle has invested in training its instructors to both ensure they are knowledgeable enough to teach — putting each through a weekslong program before allowing them to instruct — and that they are in alignment with the brand’s community-focused ideology.

In the past seven years, the company has retained 95 percent of the instructors who have completed the training, he said.

Prospective owners undergo vetting, too, he added, to avoid degrading the brand with sites that don’t reflect its corporate philosophy.

“We could be growing three to four times faster if we said ‘yes’ to everyone,” he said. “We can’t risk that just to grow.”

The team behind Rush Cycle is not the only one looking to capture some of the value from consumers’ interest in wellness.

According to the International Health, Racquet and Sportsclub Association (IHRSA), a trade group, the number of health clubs, gyms and studios has increased each year in the past five, from about 30,500 in 2012 to more than 36,000 in 2016.

Locally, SoulCycle has said it will open its first studio in San Diego in 2018 at the recently revamped Westfield UTC mall.

SoulCycle’s Sale

SoulCycle’s founders, who started the company in 2006, sold a majority stake to gym chain Equinox in 2011, earning a reported payday of nearly $90 million each. The company reported profits of $25.3 million on revenues of $111.9 million in 2014.

CycleBar, founded in 2004 in Boston, opened its first San Diego-area studio in Hillcrest in 2017 and in January, its second, in Carmel Valley. The brand, which began franchising studios in 2014, has since opened more than 100 studios.

Suski said Rush Cycle welcomes the competition — and the attention rivals’ arrivals will draw to indoor cycling.

“It’s exciting to have another big-name brand,” he said.

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