WNiF Magazine - Autumn 2016 Edition | Page 43

Five questions with... CHRIS SKINNER MANAGING DIRECTOR OF HF INDUSTRIES WNIF: Describe your typical day. My office day starts around 5am when I talk with our US based partners and by day’s end I’ll be talking with the NZ, Australian and Asian markets. During any day, there are three major concerns: sales, service and cash flow. My job is the logistics of all three. Saturday is my day of catch up, when I can reflect on the past week and try and plan the next. As a small family business, it’s still one in, all in, so if there are containers to unload, we all unload. WNIF: HF Industries has been distributing fitness equipment for more than three decades. What’s your secret to longevity in this highly competitive industry? Service and reputation is everything, and the longer you are in the game the harder you have to work at it. As a small family business the secret is to find your niche in the marketplace. And at all times to be aware that whatever you do, if it smells of any success someone will want part of it! Every year we look to introduce something new to the industry. We specialise only in offering equipment that is out of the ordinary, compared to what everyone else is offering. We hold firm on our price, but we only offer products with very distinct points of difference, which means our prices return great value for the buyers. For example, we offer a treadmill in our range but ours – the Incline Trainer – goes to minus three and 30 per cent incline. Elite athletes use them at the Australian Institute of Sport, but these features are also ideal for the everyday exerciser or beginner who wants to achieve weight loss. WNIF: What other innovative things is HF Industries doing and how do you stay at the forefront of people’s minds? The product lines we offer are truly unique and the products we represent are often synergistic with each other. For example, Sandbells are very popular and when coupled with our Surfset provides a completely different exercise format to make multiple extensions for a club’s patrons. Similarly, the Activ Motion bar is just a weighted bar when you look at it; but when you pick it up, the rolling weights that run the full length of the bar take over which forces the user to control its movement. On its own, it’s a great exercise product, but when coupled with others it becomes a whole new group workout never before seen in the industry. Our Rip 60 and Bodhi systems are taking Suspension training to the third and fourth dimensions. Our Marpo Rope machines deliver both cardio and strength workouts in one machine, and allow users to obtain so many goals using so many more muscle groups, with just one pull of a rope. And our line of FreeMotion Strength machines is truly the most functional line of equipment on the market. Our latest introduction of a product from outside our traditional market is introduction of a pushbike, via Priority Bicycles. We produced a bike that went back to the 1960s, with a back pedal brake, a big comfortable seat, a bell, we took all the cogs and chains out and added a Kevlar belt with three gears in the hub (light, medium and high). This bike is specifically designed to attract that 90 per cent of the market who don’t want to wear the right gear or have the best accessories before they get into riding. It’s a bike you can just jump on and go; sit nice and upright and you can only buy it online, not in a shop. We’ll be showcasing this at FILEX and the Fitness & Health Expo this year but you can see it in the meantime at prioritybicycles.com.au. WNIF: In terms of staying relevant and retaining their members, what tips or advice do you have for clubs? Be different. Our industry has become lazy; we mimic or copy each other to the point that the only difference between one another is price. In your region, look at the marketplace to see what is available and offer your clients something different. Bring back the party atmosphere to the club! In our name, ‘HF’ stands for ‘have fun’; people want to have fun because if exercise and fitness can achieve that in a person then the industry will grow stronger. WNIF: What are your thoughts about wearable technology and the impact on the industry? Fitness centres used to be a great place to communicate faceto-face with each other, enjoy a social atmosphere, and be part of a group (even if participating as an individual). This technology can provide a means for one to move further into one’s shell and become more of an introvert than ever before. I’ve seen fads come and go and return again. Our role is to continue to provide products and services that move the industry forward, support the industry, and cater to the needs of the patron, even when they don’t know what needs they are looking for.