Timed for the holidays and New Year’s rush, the boutique fitness giant’s newest ad campaign features the authentic transformation stories of four Orangetheory members
As the fitness world gears up for its busiest and noisiest season, Orangetheory is taking a surprising route.
Instead of louder promises or ripped bodies, the boutique fitness brand is leading with unfiltered member stories and projected images of past selves that emphasize progress over perfection in its upcoming ad campaign.
Breaking mid-November and running through early Q1 2026, the marketing effort is intentionally timed to hit the holiday season and the height of New Year resolution planning, featuring four Orangetheory Fitness members who each show a different path to progress in the brand’s heart-rate-based group fitness workouts.
There’s Amber, 33, who rebuilt strength and confidence after postpartum depression, losing more than 40 pounds and tripling her treadmill speed; Katie, 43, shifted her focus to strength, dropping 20 pounds and more than 9% body fat; Dr. Moran, a physician and mother of two, prioritized her health for the first time in years, losing more than 30 pounds and rediscovering her passion for running; and Perla, a full-time teacher, moved from stress-eating to a consistent routine, going from a size 10 to a size two and gaining visible muscle.

The campaign comes after Orangetheory merged in 2024 with Self Esteem Brands, a historic move that united the company with Anytime Fitness and led to the creation of Purpose Brands, which now operates Orangetheory, Anytime and several other fitness concepts.
It also feels like a fine-tuned extension that’s been nearly a year in the making.
Late last year, Orangetheory debuted “Every Reason is the Right Reason,” a rebrand that refreshed the boutique fitness franchise’s visual identity and introduced a more inclusive spirit, highlighting the many motivations behind showing up to class. Now it flips the lens, and instead of why people show up, the new creative shows what happens when they stay.
According to David Chriswick, senior vice president of brand strategy and experience at Purpose Brands, the latest creative direction came from a simple realization.
“We just listened harder to our members; that’s the short version,” Chriswick told Athletech News. “Every brand claims to be authentic, but when you spend time in studios or read what people share on social, you hear the same thing again and again. Real results don’t look like the airbrushed version of fitness the industry keeps pushing. It’s too far from how people actually live.”

Chriswick said Orangetheory has always had the science to back its training model, but advertising hadn’t always captured the emotional meaning behind change.
“What we perhaps hadn’t shown enough in broad-reach advertising was the raw proof of what fat loss and muscle gain mean to people,” he said. “That includes confidence, control, health and the ‘I didn’t think I could do this’ moments that genuinely change lives.”
With roughly 60% of Orangetheory members joining because someone they know shared their own story, he believes the path forward is clear.
“Glossy aspiration blends in. Humanity and honesty stand out,” Chriswick said. “This campaign is about putting real people and their real results back at the center.”
Progress Over Polish
While data has always been central to Orangetheory, the team believed the time was right to bring more emotional transparency into its messaging. It is a delicate balance, especially during a season when plagued by resolution rhetoric. It is also an environment Chriswick thinks consumers are exhausted by.
“January is full of hype, fads and unrealistic promises,” he said. “It all starts to sound the same.”
“There was minimal scripting and no manufactured drama,” Chriswick said of OTF’s new campaign. “Anytime something started to feel too neat or too heroic, we pulled it back. This campaign reflects the truth of transformation, not the Instagram version.”

Chriswick also points out that the members featured represent a broader shift in fitness culture: a new mom rebuilding strength, a doctor training between shifts and a teacher managing stress.
“The next era isn’t defined by one archetype,” he said. “It’s not just the ripped 25-year-old influencer. It’s anyone who wants to feel better and live better, in any body and at any stage of life. Everyone has a before. Everyone has an in-progress. And everyone should see themselves reflected in our brand.”
Moving Toward Relatability
The pivot toward honesty also reflects a wider trend in the fitness economy. Recent research shows that hyper-attractive fitness influencers see lower engagement than those who appear more relatable. Followers often view polished images as less trustworthy, while creators who show effort and imperfection connect more deeply with audiences.
Chriswick sees that same pattern influencing how brands need to communicate.
“A quieter and more honest story cuts through because it doesn’t feel like advertising. … People can spot authenticity instantly, especially when they’re saturated with marketing,” he said. “And right now, consumers are looking for what feels sustainable rather than what feels sensational.”
A Glimpse Into 2026
The new campaign also sets the stage for what members can expect inside studios next year, beginning with the rollout of the OTconnect Beat Performance Monitor in December, the brand’s most accurate heart-rate tracking system to date. The device connects directly to OTconnect, giving members clearer insight into effort and giving coaches smarter data to personalize cues in real time.
Chriswick said that foundation will support new programming formats, elevated coaching and more tailored studio experiences throughout 2026.
“We are leaning into a future where every member’s journey feels more personal, more guided and more rewarding,” he said. “You’ll see that come to life across our studios next year. It will be a pivotal year for the Orangetheory experience.”


