KEY POINTS
  • SoulCycle CEO Evelyn Webster joined the company in December.
  • In her first 100 days, the former media executive has had to work through how to safely bring riders back to classes and fix what's been described among staffers as a toxic culture.
  • The company faces heightened competition from at-home fitness options like Peloton that have surged in popularity over the past 12 months.
  • SoulCycle's parent, high-end fitness brand Equinox Holdings, is reportedly in talks to go public via a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC.

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One of SoulCycle's outdoor pop-ups is in Palm Beach, Florida. There, riders strap on headphones to hear the music and instructor during class.

David Ross remembers unclipping his foot from a SoulCycle bike in March 2020. The pandemic was about to shut down indoor exercise studios. He finished the class and realized he didn't know when he would be back again. For Ross, that was a scary thought.

For months thereafter, Ross' fitness routine consisted of running up and down 31 flights of stairs in his Manhattan apartment building, five or six times a day. He was too afraid to venture outdoors. Coronavirus cases were spreading rampantly across the city last spring.

In this article