Company History

Peloton was started in 2012 by its current CEO John Foley along with his cofounders Graham Stanton, Hisao Kushi, Tome Cortese and Yony Feng.

The idea was born out of John observing his wife having to book spinning classes days in advance at fitness boutiques/studios such as Soul Cycle and Flywheel in New York due to their high demand. John's idea was simple - what if he could bring the goodness of a spinning class into the home vs having to go to a spinning studio which was inherently constrained by its physical infrastructure?

The start was slow, filled with countless rejection from investors. In fact in an interview, John mentioned that he got rejected by ~400 investors due to the high skepticism around the idea, market competition and the chances of success. Hardware startups are especially riddled with failure (Peloton wanted to design and manufacture it's own bike). Interestingly, Peloton even started a kickstarter campaign to get some funding and customer attention during the early part of its startup journey.

Some of the prototypes

Some of the prototypes

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Through sheer resilience and eventual support from private investors, John and his team at Peloton marched on an 8 year (and counting) journey where, with Peloton, they have brought a sense of community and excitement of a boutique fitness studio into their members' homes.

In September 2019, Peloton IPO'ed at a market capitalization of $7.2B.

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Product

Peloton offers world-class instructor led online group fitness classes delivered through high quality fitness equipment. It does this by owning every step of the production creation process:

The products and services Peloton offers can be broken down into three categories:

(a) Connected Fitness Products (at-home fitness equipment)

(b) Live/On Demand Online Fitness Classes

(c) Fitness Apparel and accessories

  1. Connected Fitness Products:

    Peloton offers 4 connected fitness products: Bike, Bike+, Tread, Tread+.

    Bike: Starting at $1,895

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    Bike+ : Starting at $2,2495

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    Tread: Starting at $2,495

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    Tread+ : Starting at $4,295

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    On top of an elegant design, what separates Peloton's fitness equipments from other players in the market is the way it has seamlessly integrated different aspects of community into the workout experience. The tablet mounted on these equipments is a window into Peloton's community. Via this tablet, the user can:

    1. Follow live/on-demand classes: Through a monthly content subscription fee, the user gets access to unlimited spinning/treadmill live and on-demand classes taught by world class instructors.
    2. Leaderboard: Compete with one another in live and on demand classes through a leaderboard that ranks members in real time.
    3. Tags: Tags allow the user to showcase things he/she is passionate about/relates to, for ex: #workingOutForACause, #nadalFans, #LinkedInEmployee. Users can add upto 10 tags to their profile and select 1 "primary" tag, which appears on the leaderboard when filtered via tags.
    4. High Fives: Users can send virtual high fives to other participates in live/on-demand classes by tapping on their avatar and celebrating their commitment, determination and hard work!
    5. Following Friends: No community is complete without the ability to follow/connect with your friends! Peloton allows users to follow their friends - allowing them to see their workout history and scheduled workouts.
    6. Video Chatting: Peloton provides the ability to video chat with friends (you follow) while doing a live class together

    Peloton members have a strong community presence on other online platforms as well - there are multiple Peloton related groups on facebook with > 10k members, with the official Peloton facebook group consisting of 340k+ members.

    Note: Here on in the doc, whenever we say "connected fitness product," we refer to a bike/bike+/tread/tread+.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9LJCt1NrBzI

  2. Live/On Demand Fitness Classes: The Peloton content team, which includes 33 fitness instructors, creates original content (in the form of live and on-demand classes) in its studios in New York City and London across 10 fitness categories: indoor/outdoor running and walking, indoor cycling, bootcamp, yoga, stretching, strength training, meditation and floor cardio. These classes are programmed to fit a diverse set of member needs across class length, difficulty levels, and music genres.

    At the time of the company going public (August 2019), Peloton was producing 950 fitness classes each month and had amassed thousands of on-demand classes as part of its library.

    Peloton members pay a monthly subscription fee to access this content through two types of offerings:

  3. Apparel and Accessories

    Peloton offers a whole range of men's and women's apparel along with fitness related accessories such as bike shoes, headphones, bike mats, weights, resistance bands and water bottles.

Market

Given that Peloton's primary focus (as of now) is on connected fitness products and content streaming, let's try to get a sense for how big the market might be:

Connected Fitness

Based on the research that Peloton has conducted, the market for Connected Fitness products is (1) big and (2) under penetrated.

Connected Streaming

Engagement & Revenue

For the latest fiscal year (2020), Peloton generated $1.8B in revenue, 71.6M in losses, 1.1M connected fitness subscribers, 317k digital subscription members.

Let's dig into these metrics a bit more. In the engagement section, we will take a look at the number of members that Peloton has and how often they use the product. In the revenue section, we will dig into the revenues and profits.

Engagement

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All in all, Peloton's engagement strategy seems two fold:

Revenue

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Business Model

Peloton has an efficient business model highlighted by:

  1. Low customer acquisition cost
  2. High gross margins
  3. High customer lifetime value
  4. Incredible retention rate

Let's dig into each one of these metrics to better understand how Peloton's business model works.

Gross Profits & Margins

Gross Profits = Revenue from products sold - Costs involved in making the product

Gross Margins = Gross Profits / Revenue generated from the products sold

Let's take a look at Gross Profits and Margins for two of Peloton's products that generate majority of its revenue: (1) Connected Fitness Products and (2) Connected Fitness Subscription

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Gross margins on both the bikes/treads as well as the subscription product are quite healthy! What's even more interesting is that as Peloton continues to scale and sell more bikes/treads (and thus sell more subscriptions), gross margins on Connected Fitness Subscription will go up and to the right (the rate of increase in revenue from adding more subscribers will outpace the cost of creating the content).

Customer Acquisition cost (CAC):

CAC as the term suggests, is the cost of acquiring a customer who pays for the products and services offered by the business. Ideally, the profits that the business makes from serving its customer should be greater than the cost of acquiring the customer.

Since Peloton makes most of its revenue through Connect Fitness Products and the monthly Connected Fitness Subscription paid by owners of these products ($39/month), it's worth understanding the cost of acquiring a Connected Fitness Subscriber.

Let's define CAC of a Connected Fitness Subscriber as Sales & Marketing costs (goal of Sales and Marketing is to increase awareness and intent of Connected Fitness Products and Subscriptions) divided by the additional number of Connected Fitness Subscribers added that year.

Based on this equation, CAC for a Connected Fitness Subscriber over the last 3 years is as follows:

Think about it for a second... for fiscal 2020, the cost of acquiring a customer who purchased a bike/tread and became a Connected Fitness Subscriber was ~$750-850.

Based on all the data we have collected so far, let us start putting together some of the pieces of the business model puzzle. During fiscal 2020: