Living with Purpose
In a new book, Lynch School Professor Belle Liang helps readers navigate school, work, and life.Â
Photo: Jennifer Pottheiser
Fitness for All
Heather White '10 is on a mission to diversify the wellness industry.Â
Growing up in the Bronx, Heather White â10 played soccer, basketball, and volleyball, but ânever thought I would be a fitness instructor,â she said, âbecause I never saw a fitness instructor who looked like me.â And later, as a postgrad living in Boston, she was often the only person of color in the boutique gym classes she took.
In 2015, these experiences spurred White, then working in marketing for the sports apparel company Puma, to launch Trillfit, a fitness company with the goal of diversifying the $4.4 trillion global wellness industry. âIâm doing this to get people of color moving who have not had the opportunity to do so,â she said. âAnd thatâs whatâs most important to me.âÂ
Trillfit began humbly, as a series of fitness pop-ups around Boston. From there, White and her team rented a permanent space, first in a dingy fourth-floor walkup on Massachusetts Avenue, and then in a bigger place in Downtown Crossing. By then, Trillfit was holding several classes a week and White realized that if the company wanted to continue to grow it would need its own studio. In 2018, she settled on a spot in Bostonâs Mission Hill neighborhood. To pay for the required buildout of the space, she said, âI literally liquidated my entire 401K.â White, who studied English and gender studies at Boston College, left her marketing career in 2021 to become Trillfitâs CEO full time. And in early fall 2022, Trillfit opened its second, flagship location in Brooklynâat 5,500 square feet over two floors, itâs twice as large as the Boston original.Â
Now, White and her cofounder, Melisa Valdez, hope to raise $2 million from angel investors and an online investment campaign. They want Trillfit to become a national fitness brand, and their plan calls for opening sixteen more gyms around the country by 2027. âWe want to be the next big thing within this industry that we are actively changing,â White said. âIf you picture [cycling studio] SoulCycle as being vanilla Breyers ice cream, weâre Ben & Jerryâs. We come from New England. We lead with our values.â
The first thing you might notice at Trillfitâs Boston studioââtrillâ is slang for true and realâis the neon sign on the wall proclaiming âYou Belong Here.â âItâs a very big photo op moment,â White said with a laugh, noting that the sign will be displayed in every future studio. âIt resonates with people. This is your home. This is your space. Make it your own.â The high-energy boxing, sculpt, and signature cardio dance classes are set to hip-hop mixed by a DJ, and the crowd comprises a variety of ethnicities, gender identities, and body types. âYou might be next to a woman in a hijab, next to a Black girl, next to someone with their hair in a bonnet,â White said. âItâs very much âcome as you are.ââ As the gym member Mercy Bell put it in the Boston Globe in 2018: âHere, connecting through a passion for dance, to move and sweat free of inhibition,â she said, âand itâs exercise? Hello.â
But itâs not just the participants who are diverse. At Trillfit, 92 percent of the staff are people of color. A company initiative called the Instructor of Color scholarships is creating a pipeline of talent. Each year, a steering committee selects twenty people to participate in a complimentary two-month Trillfit instructor training, and recipients then audition for a spot on the schedule. This is a first step in the makeover of the wellness industry, which, as White points out, exists to make people feel better, live longer, and be happier. But all too often, she said, wellness spaces donât make marginalized communities feel welcome: âThey are exclusive. They are unkind.âÂ
Trillfit began 2020 with fifty straight days of sold-out classes, and the company was on track to have its most successful year yet. Then came the pandemic. White shut the Boston studio down in March and a few days later, transitioned to online workouts. With COVID-19 disproportionately affecting people of color, Trillfit kept its classes free for more than five months. Suddenly, Trillfit was reaching a wider audienceâten to fifteen thousand clients from around the world logged in each month. Soon, the company was appearing in Womenâs Health magazine and the New York Times. Then in January 2021, White and Valdez, Trillfitâs cofounder, appeared on Good Morning America and led a virtual cardio-dance demo for hosts Robin Roberts and Michael Strahan. Two months later, during Womenâs History Month, Foot Locker named the women as Icons of Movement.
White is looking at Detroit, Washington, D.C., and Houston, as well as other Boston neighborhoods, for future Trillfit locations. She plans to focus on âfitness deserts,â the areas where White said âpeople donât have access to green space to walk or run in a park, or donât have gyms or a YMCA or another option to be able to work out in the way that Trillfit promotes. We consider ourselves truly part of the fabric of the community.â Her ambitions for the company go beyond opening additional studios, too. Trillfit recently held a pop-up fitness event at the London Marathon, and will also be at this yearâs New York Marathon. And this fall, the team is launching its Starlight Sessions, camping trips geared toward getting people of color into natureârecent National Park Service data showed that 77 percent of visitors to Americaâs national parks are white. âWeâve had enough praise and votes of confidence to know that weâre actually doing it, that we actually have a seat at the table, that people are actually listening,â White said. âThe biggest billion-dollar organizations in wellness are taking our calls, and theyâre considering investing in Trillfit.âÂ