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FITNESS, HEALTH, WELLNESS

features

Interview : Brian Schuring

London’s boutique fitness market is due a shake-up, but if you focus on quality of results you’ll succeed. The co-founder of boutique fitness brand Heartcore talks to Kate Cracknell

By Kate Cracknell | Published in Health Club Management 2016 issue 7
Brian Schuring
Brian Schuring
We firmly believe all businesses win on quality, not price or brand – and in fitness, it’s about quality of results - Brian Schuring

I meet Brian Schuring, the co-founder of boutique fitness studio brand Heartcore, in Kensington on a sunny morning in May. “I love it round here,” he enthuses, a huge smile on his face. “It’s right in the centre of London but it has a village feel to it – you get to know everyone. When we [Schuring and his then wife, and still business partner, Jess] came over from the States a few years ago to check it out, it just felt right.”

That visit, back in 2006, was to decide whether they wanted to move to London to set up an office for Ares, the private equity and investment firm he was working for at the time. The answer: a resounding yes – and Jess was immediately eyeing up a new opportunity.

“Jess is a graphic and interior designer by training, but she had a passion for fitness and qualified as a personal trainer when we were living in Los Angeles. She worked at the studio of a guy called Brad Bose in Beverley Hills, and ended up training an impressive list of celebrities including Robert Downey Jr.

“Brad had a style of training that was ahead of its time: high intensity and weights-based. So Jess was immersed in that, and she also caught on to a new dynamic pilates trend that was emerging in LA at the time. I remember her coming back from her first class saying it was one of the best workouts she’d ever done. And this was the girl who ran marathons and who’d tried every workout under the sun.

“It was almost exactly at that time that Ares asked if I’d go to London. Even that first weekend we came to have a look around we knew, if we were able to create the sort of fitness offering we were used to in Los Angeles – homely, cosy, personal but effective – it would work just as well in London.

“From that point on it was just a question of where we opened the first one, what exactly our offering would be, and how we’d bring the whole thing together.”

Heartcore is born
In the end, the first Heartcore studio opened in their adopted home of Kensington. So how would Schuring describe the concept?

“When we opened that first studio back in 2007, we were offering small group training in a boutique environment – essentially an alternative to personal training. It was a 55-minute, highly focused session that didn’t cost £80 or £100 – it cost £20.

“We’re now up to nine studios and the essence of what we offer is the same as it always was. It’s still about how we can take 55 minutes of your time and give you the most effective workout possible, delivering results you wouldn’t achieve on your own.

“Creating a homely, personal space – somewhere people are happy to go, where they tell us they’d actually be happy to live – is also still at the heart of our model. That’s really important, because however motivated our customers are, over a 12-month period there will be at least 10 times when they absolutely don’t want to get out of bed to train, or make time after work. And for every one of those 10 they miss, it multiplies exponentially the chance they’ll miss the next one. Those are the points at which they’re most likely to stop their routine.

“We can’t get everyone to come all 10 times, but we might get them to come five or six. And to do that, we have to understand and address all the friction points. Is the floor too cold? Are the flowers still fresh? Is the lighting just right? Any niggles make a big difference. We’re obsessed with the customer experience at all times.

“We also create an environment where people genuinely like to be and where their friends are – people they’ve trained with in the same time slot so many times that they’ll be missed if they’re not there, and the instructor will miss them too because they know them by name.”

Embracing group exercise
He continues: “So the essence of Heartcore has stayed the same. However, people probably don’t think of us as an alternative to personal training any more. We embrace the group aspect of our training a bit more than we used to, by offering classes with enough spaces that it helps generate an energy.

“It’s been a marginal change – classes are still small enough that the instructor can correct everyone’s form – but it does now feel like group training rather than the quiet, five-person sessions it used to be.

“To put that into numbers, our largest pilates studio holds around 10 people; barre classes cater for between 10 and 20; TRX is 10 to 12; and yoga is 20 to 30.

“We bought the yoga business – Blue Cow Yoga, located in Moorgate in the City – a couple of years ago to see what we could do with it, and relaunched it in January last year.

“It’s working really well. Obviously it’s a different kind of experience, but the same principles are true for Blue Cow as they as for Heartcore: if you create a community, an energy, a personality behind your brand and you focus on what genuinely matters – which isn’t delivering 10 things, but delivering three really well – it will move the business forward.

“It’s a 5,000sq ft location, so we’ve had space to add more studios on-site. Alongside the Blue Cow yoga studio we now have Heartcore-branded pilates and barre studios.

“We’ve kept Blue Cow and Heartcore as separate brands for now. In the long run we may merge the two – I really don’t know – but for now we’ve brought Blue Cow yoga classes to our brand new Notting Hill studio, which soft launched last month.”

Delivering results
Schuring continues: “One thing that hasn’t changed much at Heartcore over the years is the price. In fact, we’ve only raised prices once, so a class today will cost on average £21, and on a package no more than £27 even at our most expensive locations.

“And our list price is what you pay. For many operators, the list price serves primarily to set their ClassPass price, which is where a large proportion of their classes clear. We don’t use ClassPass because we’re running at capacity based on word of mouth.

“From a marketing perspective, ours is what I call a dinner party business. In our first three years of operation, so many people who knew me in the City would say: ‘I just heard about you the other night at a dinner party.’ Our customers meet up with friends, are told how great they look, and they credit Heartcore. That goes for men too – around 20 per cent of our customers are men, including some of our most passionate clients. If that’s your entry point to a brand, it’s very powerful.

“That’s one of the reasons we haven’t had a marketing person in the business so far. We put all our time, effort, energy and investment into the product and the experience, continually reviewing to make sure we’re delivering the best, most effective class every time.

“We firmly believe all businesses win on quality, not price or a sexy brand – and in fitness, it’s about quality of results.

“That’s something the big box gyms struggle to deliver in their unsupervised environments. People aren’t being pushed that extra 10 per cent beyond what they’d do on their own, which is where all the results happen, so sooner or later they leave.”

The customer experience
He continues: “Another reason I believe we’re as popular as we are is our focus on the customer experience. You have to have a relationship with every person who walks through the door. Our first four studios didn’t even have receptions, so it was down to the instructor not only to teach the class but also to make sure everyone felt valued and special. That was in our DNA from the beginning, because it’s come from us – from Jess and from me. That’s how we are. It’s how we treat people.

“And the third reason is hard work, pure and simple. We have an ethos that we commit to getting better at one thing every week, and we’ve made a lot of small improvements to the business over the years because we’re willing to try things.

“Much of that is facilitated by the data we hold – boutique fitness has better data than almost any business model I’ve seen in over 15 years as an investor. That’s because it’s all booked online, which naturally creates a lot of useful data points. So while Jess is in the studios reporting back on how things feel, how the energy is, I’m able to look at the underlying data: what classes are filling, what classes aren’t, how new instructors are performing. We get both sides of the picture.”

Expansion plans
So what does the future hold for Heartcore?
“Looking purely at London, at the moment I’d probably say we could get to a total of 15 studios, and there may even be scope beyond that – the upper limit moves as the market matures.

“However, you have to ask what your ultimate long-term goal is. Do we want to be a 15-studio London fitness business or do we want to be something different? Do we want to be, for lack of a better term, a financial and cultural centre business, with a few studios in major markets around the world? Or do we want to go outside of London?

“Because I believe we’re getting to a point where, beyond London, the UK is probably ready for something like this. Disposable income is the big driver, but there are ways you can do it – you change your floor plan a bit and it becomes more accessible to the people who live in that area.

“It would make a lot of sense for us to explore this avenue, because there seems to be this mad rush in London right now. Everyone wants to be involved and that puts pressure on a few key drivers, from rents to pricing to wages. That’s not a bad thing per se, but it’s something you have to recognise as an investor. 

“What I’d rather do with Heartcore is read the market and find places where we’re doing the interesting thing, rather than the thing we feel we have to do because we’re Heartcore. From that perspective, we have some important decisions to make with the next studio.”

He continues: “It’s always been our own capital in the business and we wanted to get to a point where, as fast as we can build new studios, the business can fund them. I think we’re there – it’s just a case of finding the right places at the right time.

“And the right time for the next studio isn’t quite yet. We’ve opened five locations in 24 months and that puts a lot of strain on a small team like ours – I feel we’ve earned a little time to refresh, refocus and refine the business.

“If you were to show me the perfect property tomorrow, I’d take it – because I always take it – but I wouldn’t do anything with it until late this year. From an expansion standpoint, we’re going to go really quiet for a couple of months. Money doesn’t get tired, but people do.”

Schuring on… property

Brian Schuring
Brian Schuring

“We had a long negotiation a couple of years ago with the City of London as landlord. They had a bar/pub they were trying to lease out and we were the only bidder. It was perfect for us and we were willing to bend over backwards, but they didn’t want to take a bar away and put a fitness offering in.

“I appreciate that, over the years, large health clubs’ track record hasn’t been great – giving back leases and running through administration filings and restructuring. For landlords, continuity is key – if you’re going to be around for 20 years, that’s a huge benefit to them, and that’s a tough one to prove even for us.

“However, I do believe – with the maturation of retail and the evolution of what we’re doing on the fitness side – that it’s at least as good a risk over time to have a gym in your estate as it is to have a retailer.”

Schuring on… the boutique market

Brian Schuring
Brian Schuring

“I think most people look at boutique fitness right now and assume the guys who’ve been around for a while are making money hand over fist.

“But I believe we’re in a period where, even with the strong growth in demand, there’s an over-supply of boutique fitness spaces. In fact, we probably reached that point 12 months ago. ClassPass came in and helped studios clear their capacity, creating a bunch of full classes that made it look from the outside like all the studios were raking it in. However, the price point on any kind of generic offering has been eroded to the point where I’m not sure there’s much return on the initial investment for more than a small handful of operators.

“Nevertheless, the perception remains that it’s the market to be in, so I think we’ll see continued expansion of capacity in London where ordinarily you’d have a market that pauses or ratchets back a bit.

“There are 500 boutique studios in New York City and it feels like everyone wants London to be that. One day it might be – and it might not be. But the demand for that isn’t there today, and even if we do eventually get there, it will be by a series of very natural ebbs and flows along the way. I believe there’s a bit of a shake-up coming.”

Schuring on…. wellness

Brian Schuring
Brian Schuring

“The progress we’re making in understanding what drives true wellness is what excites me most about being alive right now. I believe we’re in a convergence phase where people understand, in a way they didn’t before, how what they eat and how they train and how they engage internally, emotionally and mentally is all connected – and how that unified pathway is having a huge impact on the quality of their lives.

“Meanwhile the rate of scientific progress makes discoveries so exciting – it’s unlocking things that make it hugely interesting to be a human being right now. We can look better, feel better and create wellbeing from the inside out in ways that ultimately change what it feels like to be alive.

“My investment fund Rubicon Ventures was set up with this in mind. At the moment Heartcore, Blue Cow and my new software company Fynder – which was created to make everyday service capacity searchable on a far broader scale than it is today – are the only three equity positions in the fund, and for now they’ve all been funded internally. However, in the long run I’d like to continue to express my views on wellness through further investments by the fund. Depending on scale and fit, it could also be interesting to broaden the fund at some point to include other investors with similar long-term perspectives.

“My vision for Rubicon is inspired by the likes of Google – which uses capital and influence from its core business to fund a bunch of smart people doing interesting research around meaningful issues, to see if one day it might be able to use some of that – and before that Xerox’s PARC lab which, in the space of two years and from just one lab, came up with some of the most transformative ideas and technology of the personal computing age. I admire both organisations because they had a curiosity about what comes next, a whole team of people who were passionate about innovation, and the courage to use some of their resources to fund it.

“That for me is what Rubicon should be. We might not return anything to investors over the space of two years, but health and wellness is a super interesting space in which to be curious and to support innovative minds right now. That’s what I’d like to do.”

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Brian and Jess Schuring opened their first Heartcore studio in 2007 / PHOTOS: PAUL McLAUGHLIN
Brian and Jess Schuring opened their first Heartcore studio in 2007 / PHOTOS: PAUL McLAUGHLIN
Heartcore in St John’s Wood is housed in a former church
Heartcore in St John’s Wood is housed in a former church
Around 20 per cent of customers at Heartcore are men – and they get results
Around 20 per cent of customers at Heartcore are men – and they get results
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/792964_667373.jpg
A shake-up is coming to the UK's boutique fitness market, says Heartcore's Brian Schuring
Brian Schuring, co-founder of boutique fitness studio brand Heartcore Jess Schuring, co-founder of boutique fitness studio brand Heartcore Kate Cracknell, Editor, Health Club Management ,Brian Schuring, Heartcore, wellness, boutique, yoga, pilates, Kate Cracknell, Blue Cow
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features

Interview : Brian Schuring

London’s boutique fitness market is due a shake-up, but if you focus on quality of results you’ll succeed. The co-founder of boutique fitness brand Heartcore talks to Kate Cracknell

By Kate Cracknell | Published in Health Club Management 2016 issue 7
Brian Schuring
Brian Schuring
We firmly believe all businesses win on quality, not price or brand – and in fitness, it’s about quality of results - Brian Schuring

I meet Brian Schuring, the co-founder of boutique fitness studio brand Heartcore, in Kensington on a sunny morning in May. “I love it round here,” he enthuses, a huge smile on his face. “It’s right in the centre of London but it has a village feel to it – you get to know everyone. When we [Schuring and his then wife, and still business partner, Jess] came over from the States a few years ago to check it out, it just felt right.”

That visit, back in 2006, was to decide whether they wanted to move to London to set up an office for Ares, the private equity and investment firm he was working for at the time. The answer: a resounding yes – and Jess was immediately eyeing up a new opportunity.

“Jess is a graphic and interior designer by training, but she had a passion for fitness and qualified as a personal trainer when we were living in Los Angeles. She worked at the studio of a guy called Brad Bose in Beverley Hills, and ended up training an impressive list of celebrities including Robert Downey Jr.

“Brad had a style of training that was ahead of its time: high intensity and weights-based. So Jess was immersed in that, and she also caught on to a new dynamic pilates trend that was emerging in LA at the time. I remember her coming back from her first class saying it was one of the best workouts she’d ever done. And this was the girl who ran marathons and who’d tried every workout under the sun.

“It was almost exactly at that time that Ares asked if I’d go to London. Even that first weekend we came to have a look around we knew, if we were able to create the sort of fitness offering we were used to in Los Angeles – homely, cosy, personal but effective – it would work just as well in London.

“From that point on it was just a question of where we opened the first one, what exactly our offering would be, and how we’d bring the whole thing together.”

Heartcore is born
In the end, the first Heartcore studio opened in their adopted home of Kensington. So how would Schuring describe the concept?

“When we opened that first studio back in 2007, we were offering small group training in a boutique environment – essentially an alternative to personal training. It was a 55-minute, highly focused session that didn’t cost £80 or £100 – it cost £20.

“We’re now up to nine studios and the essence of what we offer is the same as it always was. It’s still about how we can take 55 minutes of your time and give you the most effective workout possible, delivering results you wouldn’t achieve on your own.

“Creating a homely, personal space – somewhere people are happy to go, where they tell us they’d actually be happy to live – is also still at the heart of our model. That’s really important, because however motivated our customers are, over a 12-month period there will be at least 10 times when they absolutely don’t want to get out of bed to train, or make time after work. And for every one of those 10 they miss, it multiplies exponentially the chance they’ll miss the next one. Those are the points at which they’re most likely to stop their routine.

“We can’t get everyone to come all 10 times, but we might get them to come five or six. And to do that, we have to understand and address all the friction points. Is the floor too cold? Are the flowers still fresh? Is the lighting just right? Any niggles make a big difference. We’re obsessed with the customer experience at all times.

“We also create an environment where people genuinely like to be and where their friends are – people they’ve trained with in the same time slot so many times that they’ll be missed if they’re not there, and the instructor will miss them too because they know them by name.”

Embracing group exercise
He continues: “So the essence of Heartcore has stayed the same. However, people probably don’t think of us as an alternative to personal training any more. We embrace the group aspect of our training a bit more than we used to, by offering classes with enough spaces that it helps generate an energy.

“It’s been a marginal change – classes are still small enough that the instructor can correct everyone’s form – but it does now feel like group training rather than the quiet, five-person sessions it used to be.

“To put that into numbers, our largest pilates studio holds around 10 people; barre classes cater for between 10 and 20; TRX is 10 to 12; and yoga is 20 to 30.

“We bought the yoga business – Blue Cow Yoga, located in Moorgate in the City – a couple of years ago to see what we could do with it, and relaunched it in January last year.

“It’s working really well. Obviously it’s a different kind of experience, but the same principles are true for Blue Cow as they as for Heartcore: if you create a community, an energy, a personality behind your brand and you focus on what genuinely matters – which isn’t delivering 10 things, but delivering three really well – it will move the business forward.

“It’s a 5,000sq ft location, so we’ve had space to add more studios on-site. Alongside the Blue Cow yoga studio we now have Heartcore-branded pilates and barre studios.

“We’ve kept Blue Cow and Heartcore as separate brands for now. In the long run we may merge the two – I really don’t know – but for now we’ve brought Blue Cow yoga classes to our brand new Notting Hill studio, which soft launched last month.”

Delivering results
Schuring continues: “One thing that hasn’t changed much at Heartcore over the years is the price. In fact, we’ve only raised prices once, so a class today will cost on average £21, and on a package no more than £27 even at our most expensive locations.

“And our list price is what you pay. For many operators, the list price serves primarily to set their ClassPass price, which is where a large proportion of their classes clear. We don’t use ClassPass because we’re running at capacity based on word of mouth.

“From a marketing perspective, ours is what I call a dinner party business. In our first three years of operation, so many people who knew me in the City would say: ‘I just heard about you the other night at a dinner party.’ Our customers meet up with friends, are told how great they look, and they credit Heartcore. That goes for men too – around 20 per cent of our customers are men, including some of our most passionate clients. If that’s your entry point to a brand, it’s very powerful.

“That’s one of the reasons we haven’t had a marketing person in the business so far. We put all our time, effort, energy and investment into the product and the experience, continually reviewing to make sure we’re delivering the best, most effective class every time.

“We firmly believe all businesses win on quality, not price or a sexy brand – and in fitness, it’s about quality of results.

“That’s something the big box gyms struggle to deliver in their unsupervised environments. People aren’t being pushed that extra 10 per cent beyond what they’d do on their own, which is where all the results happen, so sooner or later they leave.”

The customer experience
He continues: “Another reason I believe we’re as popular as we are is our focus on the customer experience. You have to have a relationship with every person who walks through the door. Our first four studios didn’t even have receptions, so it was down to the instructor not only to teach the class but also to make sure everyone felt valued and special. That was in our DNA from the beginning, because it’s come from us – from Jess and from me. That’s how we are. It’s how we treat people.

“And the third reason is hard work, pure and simple. We have an ethos that we commit to getting better at one thing every week, and we’ve made a lot of small improvements to the business over the years because we’re willing to try things.

“Much of that is facilitated by the data we hold – boutique fitness has better data than almost any business model I’ve seen in over 15 years as an investor. That’s because it’s all booked online, which naturally creates a lot of useful data points. So while Jess is in the studios reporting back on how things feel, how the energy is, I’m able to look at the underlying data: what classes are filling, what classes aren’t, how new instructors are performing. We get both sides of the picture.”

Expansion plans
So what does the future hold for Heartcore?
“Looking purely at London, at the moment I’d probably say we could get to a total of 15 studios, and there may even be scope beyond that – the upper limit moves as the market matures.

“However, you have to ask what your ultimate long-term goal is. Do we want to be a 15-studio London fitness business or do we want to be something different? Do we want to be, for lack of a better term, a financial and cultural centre business, with a few studios in major markets around the world? Or do we want to go outside of London?

“Because I believe we’re getting to a point where, beyond London, the UK is probably ready for something like this. Disposable income is the big driver, but there are ways you can do it – you change your floor plan a bit and it becomes more accessible to the people who live in that area.

“It would make a lot of sense for us to explore this avenue, because there seems to be this mad rush in London right now. Everyone wants to be involved and that puts pressure on a few key drivers, from rents to pricing to wages. That’s not a bad thing per se, but it’s something you have to recognise as an investor. 

“What I’d rather do with Heartcore is read the market and find places where we’re doing the interesting thing, rather than the thing we feel we have to do because we’re Heartcore. From that perspective, we have some important decisions to make with the next studio.”

He continues: “It’s always been our own capital in the business and we wanted to get to a point where, as fast as we can build new studios, the business can fund them. I think we’re there – it’s just a case of finding the right places at the right time.

“And the right time for the next studio isn’t quite yet. We’ve opened five locations in 24 months and that puts a lot of strain on a small team like ours – I feel we’ve earned a little time to refresh, refocus and refine the business.

“If you were to show me the perfect property tomorrow, I’d take it – because I always take it – but I wouldn’t do anything with it until late this year. From an expansion standpoint, we’re going to go really quiet for a couple of months. Money doesn’t get tired, but people do.”

Schuring on… property

Brian Schuring
Brian Schuring

“We had a long negotiation a couple of years ago with the City of London as landlord. They had a bar/pub they were trying to lease out and we were the only bidder. It was perfect for us and we were willing to bend over backwards, but they didn’t want to take a bar away and put a fitness offering in.

“I appreciate that, over the years, large health clubs’ track record hasn’t been great – giving back leases and running through administration filings and restructuring. For landlords, continuity is key – if you’re going to be around for 20 years, that’s a huge benefit to them, and that’s a tough one to prove even for us.

“However, I do believe – with the maturation of retail and the evolution of what we’re doing on the fitness side – that it’s at least as good a risk over time to have a gym in your estate as it is to have a retailer.”

Schuring on… the boutique market

Brian Schuring
Brian Schuring

“I think most people look at boutique fitness right now and assume the guys who’ve been around for a while are making money hand over fist.

“But I believe we’re in a period where, even with the strong growth in demand, there’s an over-supply of boutique fitness spaces. In fact, we probably reached that point 12 months ago. ClassPass came in and helped studios clear their capacity, creating a bunch of full classes that made it look from the outside like all the studios were raking it in. However, the price point on any kind of generic offering has been eroded to the point where I’m not sure there’s much return on the initial investment for more than a small handful of operators.

“Nevertheless, the perception remains that it’s the market to be in, so I think we’ll see continued expansion of capacity in London where ordinarily you’d have a market that pauses or ratchets back a bit.

“There are 500 boutique studios in New York City and it feels like everyone wants London to be that. One day it might be – and it might not be. But the demand for that isn’t there today, and even if we do eventually get there, it will be by a series of very natural ebbs and flows along the way. I believe there’s a bit of a shake-up coming.”

Schuring on…. wellness

Brian Schuring
Brian Schuring

“The progress we’re making in understanding what drives true wellness is what excites me most about being alive right now. I believe we’re in a convergence phase where people understand, in a way they didn’t before, how what they eat and how they train and how they engage internally, emotionally and mentally is all connected – and how that unified pathway is having a huge impact on the quality of their lives.

“Meanwhile the rate of scientific progress makes discoveries so exciting – it’s unlocking things that make it hugely interesting to be a human being right now. We can look better, feel better and create wellbeing from the inside out in ways that ultimately change what it feels like to be alive.

“My investment fund Rubicon Ventures was set up with this in mind. At the moment Heartcore, Blue Cow and my new software company Fynder – which was created to make everyday service capacity searchable on a far broader scale than it is today – are the only three equity positions in the fund, and for now they’ve all been funded internally. However, in the long run I’d like to continue to express my views on wellness through further investments by the fund. Depending on scale and fit, it could also be interesting to broaden the fund at some point to include other investors with similar long-term perspectives.

“My vision for Rubicon is inspired by the likes of Google – which uses capital and influence from its core business to fund a bunch of smart people doing interesting research around meaningful issues, to see if one day it might be able to use some of that – and before that Xerox’s PARC lab which, in the space of two years and from just one lab, came up with some of the most transformative ideas and technology of the personal computing age. I admire both organisations because they had a curiosity about what comes next, a whole team of people who were passionate about innovation, and the courage to use some of their resources to fund it.

“That for me is what Rubicon should be. We might not return anything to investors over the space of two years, but health and wellness is a super interesting space in which to be curious and to support innovative minds right now. That’s what I’d like to do.”

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Brian and Jess Schuring opened their first Heartcore studio in 2007 / PHOTOS: PAUL McLAUGHLIN
Brian and Jess Schuring opened their first Heartcore studio in 2007 / PHOTOS: PAUL McLAUGHLIN
Heartcore in St John’s Wood is housed in a former church
Heartcore in St John’s Wood is housed in a former church
Around 20 per cent of customers at Heartcore are men – and they get results
Around 20 per cent of customers at Heartcore are men – and they get results
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/792964_667373.jpg
A shake-up is coming to the UK's boutique fitness market, says Heartcore's Brian Schuring
Brian Schuring, co-founder of boutique fitness studio brand Heartcore Jess Schuring, co-founder of boutique fitness studio brand Heartcore Kate Cracknell, Editor, Health Club Management ,Brian Schuring, Heartcore, wellness, boutique, yoga, pilates, Kate Cracknell, Blue Cow
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