Pulse September 2019 | Page 39

whose goal was to provide insight into the minds of worldwide consumers. The first volume of the Consumer Snapshot was released in early 2011. “Designing a study that a man or woman in the street could fill in requires quite different techniques to designing a survey for spa managers and directors,” notes McIlheney, continuing, “certainly no one would have guessed that within a decade we would have nine volumes surveying over 12,000 people in the U.S. and beyond.” While the ISPA U.S. Spa Industry Study is designed to provide consistent, trackable metrics across many years, each volume of the Consumer Snapshot Initiative captures a different angle of the consumer experience. Past volumes have studied spa-goers vs. non-spa-goers, the prefer- ences and habits of male spa-goers, social media usage and millennials, among other topics. Each volume surveys a representative sample of the population—including both spa-goers and non-spa-goers, Americans and non-Americans, depending on the nature of that year’s Snapshot. “That first Snapshot showed us how many men were going,” recalls McNees. Indeed, this was the most surprising finding of the first volume: although a greater percentage of spa- goers were women (53.8 percent versus 46.2 percent of men), male spa- goers more frequently visited five or more times over the past 12 months (59 percent of male spa-goers versus 41 percent of female spa-goers). “There were a lot of assumptions and anecdotes from members about that, but we wanted to quantify it,” McNees adds. In essence, this has become the raison d’etre of the Consumer Snapshot Initiative: to apply analytical rigor to the assumptions that spa leaders make about their guests. continuous growth For two decades now, the ISPA U.S. Spa Industry Study has charted the growth of the industry, although this easily might not have been the case: the ISPA U.S. Spa Industry Study was not originally envisioned as a yearly endeavor. coverS over the yeArS SEPtEmbEr ■ PULSE 2019 37