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"We wanted to create a place that was for everyone, no matter if they hadn’t worked out since PE or were a top athlete. Most importantly we wanted to build a community."
What did you do when you were “young, a bit stupid and naïve”? If you were Pip Black and Joan Murphy, you quit your advertising jobs, raised some money, set up shop in a car park in Shoreditch and launched a lifestyle brand.
Pip Black is one of the co-founders of the achingly cool FRAME. Having played “a lot of top-level sport” at school and university, she realised that there was nothing similar on offer in London. “[In 2007] being active and exercising was not cool.”
It’s always been about being social and going with your mate, and then going for a drink or dinner or brunch after. It didn’t exist, so we just created it.
Pip Black
Fast forward to last week, almost ten years to the day, and her team are now happily ensconced in their first ever HQ. From the start, the co-founders’ roles at the heart of the business have been integral to maintaining a cohesive culture. As the brand continues to rapidly grow, Black hopes that having everyone in one office will only serve to cement this. “Right now, it’s important to have everyone together at HQ to really have our culture engrained as we grow.”
Black is at pains to point out that, while frequently categorised in the boutique, glamorised corner of the fitness industry, FRAME is about more than that: “We’re very much about making people feel good … it should be for everybody.” With seven studios across London and over 280 instructors, Black’s next step is to expand outside of the city.
While the brand seeks to remain aspirational, Black is also looking into how they can work more closely with schools and teenagers to promote positive mental health and wellbeing. As she says, perhaps only half-jokingly, “Ideally we’ll be the Jamie Oliver of school PE.”
Ideally we’ll be the Jamie Oliver of school PE.
Pip Black
Black reveals that they tend not to look at what’s happening across their own sector but instead look to how other industries are using smart technology. “We try not to look at our own industry because it’s generally quite painful and backward so it’s looking at external influences”. For example, the idea for the FRAME card, which allows gym visitors to top up on the go, came from looking at mobile phone companies, while their online booking system drew inspiration from the set-up at ASOS.
When she’s not working out or running after her young children, Black is a self-proclaimed magazine junkie, drawing inspiration from art and culture, as well as trips abroad, The High Low podcast and long dinners with friends. As she says of the original thought behind FRAME, “it’s always been about being social and going with your mate, and then going for a drink or dinner or brunch after. It didn’t exist, so we just created it”.
We wanted to create a place that was for everyone, no matter if they hadn’t worked out since PE or were a top athlete. Most importantly we wanted to build a community.
Pip Black
For our type of business, word of mouth is key, so we put all our events into building a strong local community in Shoreditch...and ensuring that the experience was ‘bang on’. This didn’t mean being premium and fancy, but fun, authentic and an effective workout.
Pip Black
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