New This Girl Can campaign focuses on women and cycling
By Andy Knaggs
HSBC UK Breeze has attracted 250,000 participants since its inception in 2011
Sport England and British Cycling are partnering on a new "This Girl Can" campaign designed to highlight British Cycling's recreational, women-only bike riding programme, which offers hundreds of free bike rides across the UK.
The HSBC UK Breeze initiative has attracted 250,000 participants since its inception in 2011, helping women to overcome barriers to participation such as lack of confidence, fear of judgement and simply fitting activity into a busy lifestyle.
Using a series of targeted social media films and image adverts, the six-week campaign will mirror previous bold and eye-catching This Girl Can campaigns, showing how women, regardless of age, background, fitness or experience, can take up cycling and overcome those barriers in a judgement-free environment.
Kate Dale, Sport England's campaign lead for This Girl Can, said that the huge number of women attending HSBC UK Breeze events every week showed how effective the programme had already been: "This Girl Can is designed to break down the emotional barriers women face when considering exercise. One of these emotional barriers is fear of judgement around capability, and HSBC UK Breeze is brilliant at addressing these barriers with friendly and knowledgeable female ride leaders who help attendees to build their confidence and skills."
Faye Downey, women's cycling project manager at British Cycling, added: "We are constantly looking at innovative ideas and projects to get more women on bikes, and we are excited about this campaign's potential to introduce HSBC UK Breeze to a new audience and put cycling on the radar of more women."
British Cycling’s female membership base has grown to its highest-ever level – although women still ...
Sport England and British Cycling are partnering on a new "This Girl Can" campaign designed to
highlight British Cycling's recreational, women-only bike riding programme, which offers hundreds of
free bike rides across the UK. Using a series of targeted social media films and image adverts, the
six-week campaign will mirror previous bold and eye-catching This Girl Can campaigns, showing how
women, regardless of age, background, fitness or experience, can take up cycling and overcome
those barriers in a judgement-free environment.
For every member with a tripod and a big following, there are others irritated at the way equipment is being hogged or wary they’ll be in the background on someone’s Insta feed. Do influencers offer valuable, free marketing or are they just a nuisance? Kath Hudson finds out how operators are responding
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New This Girl Can campaign focuses on women and cycling
By Andy Knaggs
HSBC UK Breeze has attracted 250,000 participants since its inception in 2011
Sport England and British Cycling are partnering on a new "This Girl Can" campaign designed to highlight British Cycling's recreational, women-only bike riding programme, which offers hundreds of free bike rides across the UK.
The HSBC UK Breeze initiative has attracted 250,000 participants since its inception in 2011, helping women to overcome barriers to participation such as lack of confidence, fear of judgement and simply fitting activity into a busy lifestyle.
Using a series of targeted social media films and image adverts, the six-week campaign will mirror previous bold and eye-catching This Girl Can campaigns, showing how women, regardless of age, background, fitness or experience, can take up cycling and overcome those barriers in a judgement-free environment.
Kate Dale, Sport England's campaign lead for This Girl Can, said that the huge number of women attending HSBC UK Breeze events every week showed how effective the programme had already been: "This Girl Can is designed to break down the emotional barriers women face when considering exercise. One of these emotional barriers is fear of judgement around capability, and HSBC UK Breeze is brilliant at addressing these barriers with friendly and knowledgeable female ride leaders who help attendees to build their confidence and skills."
Faye Downey, women's cycling project manager at British Cycling, added: "We are constantly looking at innovative ideas and projects to get more women on bikes, and we are excited about this campaign's potential to introduce HSBC UK Breeze to a new audience and put cycling on the radar of more women."
British Cycling’s female membership base has grown to its highest-ever level – although women still ...
Sport England and British Cycling are partnering on a new "This Girl Can" campaign designed to
highlight British Cycling's recreational, women-only bike riding programme, which offers hundreds of
free bike rides across the UK. Using a series of targeted social media films and image adverts, the
six-week campaign will mirror previous bold and eye-catching This Girl Can campaigns, showing how
women, regardless of age, background, fitness or experience, can take up cycling and overcome
those barriers in a judgement-free environment.
For every member with a tripod and a big following, there are others irritated at the way equipment is being hogged or wary they’ll be in the background on someone’s Insta feed. Do influencers offer valuable, free marketing or are they just a nuisance? Kath Hudson finds out how operators are responding
If the health service is to
survive, we must recognise
that it is a disease service
– and that wellbeing rests with
us, says the activity advocate
and healthy ageing champion.
He talks to Kate Cracknell
Strength training is evolving,
driven by changing consumer
preferences. Julie Cramer talks
to innovators about how their
products are meeting this demand
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Active Blackpool is deploying Cornerstone Connect, a new digital interface allowing
disparate information from multiple systems to be aggregated into one dataset, to support
its focus on reducing health inequalities and improving healthy life expectancy.
CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an
on-demand personal training platform that connects the right personal trainer to the right
client in under 10 seconds.
CoverMe, the UK’s leading fitness workforce management and recruitment platform, now gives
operators access to talent for every level of their business, thanks to a new strategic
partnership with Jobs In. Fitness.
To bring their concept to life, Salt partnered with BLK BOX to design and equip a facility
that would deliver a premium training experience while supporting the needs of a diverse and
growing community.