Pulse September 2019 | Page 40

“The enthusiastic response of ISPA members to the original report, however, pushed ISPA to secure the necessary funding to conduct the Study annually.” “We initially viewed it as something we would revisit every few years,” says Lynne McNees. The enthusiastic response of ISPA members to the original report, however, pushed ISPA to secure the necessary funding to nearly unbroken since 1999. The only year in which the ‘Big Five’ statistics declined was, as one might guess, 2009. During that initial wave of the Great Recession, revenue declined by 4.3 percent and spa visits tumbled by amazing to see the growth in spa- going over the years among the general population.” “Research is really what put us on the map,” says McNees, and ISPA has no intention of diverting from consis- conduct the Study annually. “The ISPA Foundation’s fundraising efforts,” McNees adds, “have been able to maintain it consistently. There were a few early years that we thought we may have to skip, but that would have been very detrimental to the history. We’ve been very fortunate to be able to continue it and see the growth.” Indeed, that growth has been 10.2 percent. The past two years’ record-setting numbers, however, are a testament to the resiliency of the industry and the increasingly far- reaching impact of the spa and wellness industries. Witnessing the expanding influence of spa has been the best part of this ongoing twenty-year project, says McIlheney: “It’s been tently delivering high-quality, independent research. As the spa industry undergoes radical changes driven by emerging technologies and innovative products, the ISPA U.S. Spa Industry Study will continue to track every transformation. After all, you can’t know where you are—or where to go—without knowing where you’ve been. n the original isPa industry study also included canadian spas. Beyond the ‘Big five’ The ‘Big Five’ metrics—total revenue, spa visits, spa locations, revenue per visit and number of employees—have become the calling card of the ISPA U.S. Industry Study, but they’re most relevant to those outside the spa industry. For spa operators, looking beyond the ‘Big Five’ numbers in each year’s Study will reveal data with obvious practical applications, such as year- over-year changes in average prices by treatment type, growth in alter- native treatments and services, or what an average spa’s retail product mix looks like. 38 PULSE ■ SEPtEmbEr 2019 the Study goes global? while conducting a more global study has proved impractical in the past, ISPA never says never. ISPA leadership regularly reeval- uates the idea, and a more “incremental approach” to a worldwide industry study is a possibility, according to Colin mcIlheney.