On arrival,Mika Muroi Archives ClassPass took the fitness world—and the tech world—by storm, when it debuted its subscription service for boutique fitness classes. These days its model is less certain, especially now that its founding champion just stepped down.
CEO Payal Kadakia co-founded ClassPass in 2013, with a deal that let subscribers pay one fee to attend as many yoga classes, spin classes, and barre classes as they liked. Co-founder Mary Biggins even went on to apply that model to MealPal (formerly MealPass), which offers a similar deal for workday lunches.
In the years since, ClassPass has had to up its prices and do away with its unlimited plan to stay afloat. Where it once offered unlimited classes for $99 a month, it now charges $135 for 10 classes a month.
Kadakia announced on Friday that she'd step down as CEO of the company to become executive chairman. Fritz Lanman, the current chairman, is stepping in as CEO.
“I have unwavering confidence in his ability to help make ClassPass everything I’ve always envisioned,” Kadakia said about Lanman.
Even as ClassPass' own success has wavered, it's become the Uber of the subscription startup scene: ClassPass for blowouts, ClassPass for beauty, ClassPass for kids' activities.
The company has raised $84 million and been valued as high as $400 million.
But, important question, still not answered: What's the ClassPass for turning a profit?
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Stablecoin bill advances in U.S. Senate as Trump critics call to end his crypto dealings
Are you the assh*le? This community will give you an honest answer.
We're one AI and brainwave experiment away from x
Kim Davis, Kentucky clerk who refused same
This Stan Lee column from 1968 has a powerful message about racism
New emoji for iOS and Android: Shaking face, donkey, talk to the hand
The Brickleback fight in 'The Sea Beast' is an action set piece for the ages
Every MCU movie villain ranked, from "Iron Man" to "Thunderbolts*"
Kellyanne Conway uses 'alternative facts' to explain that doctored Jim Acosta video
Watch how an old Venus spacecraft tumbled before crashing to Earth
Apple launches Music Sessions with exclusive live releases in Spatial Audio
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。