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San Francisco, California, United States
Mark Golob has built a top career in the health & fitness and entertainment industry. Mark Golob is a retired entrepreneur.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Mark Golob produced and promoted Freedanse with Marine Jahan From the hit movie Flashdance




Mark Golob produced and promoted Freedanse with Marine Jahan From the hit movie Flashdance.


Diversified Health & Fitness, Inc Acquires Butterfly Life Inc.


Diversified Health & Fitness, Inc Acquires Butterfly Life
Diversified Health & Fitness, Inc. of Ft. Lauderdale, Florida announces its acquisition of Butterfly Fitness, Inc., a National Chain of Health Club Franchises and enters the Japanese market.Thursday, March 12, 2009 Diversified Health & Fitness, Inc., chaired by fitness industry pioneer, Roger Wittenberns, announced today that it has acquired the assets of Butterfly Fitness, Inc., a franchising company engaged in marketing and servicing women-only health club franchises. Diversified’s franchise portfolio currently consist of approximately 150 fitness clubs in 40 states and three countries and over 500 active licenses to build new clubs. The Butterfly acquisition will push Diversified’s holdings to nearly 200 clubs and will dramatically increase its market share in the women’s fitness club franchise business. This acquisition has also allowed Diversified to enter the Japanese market with 6 locations. The Japanese market is one of the fastest growing fitness markets in the world The asset purchase included the acquisition of Butterfly’s franchise agreements, FDD registrations, area developer agreements, manuals, trade names and other intellectual property. “Diversified will bring much needed corporate support and marketing and operational experience to our franchisees,” said Mark Golob, CEO of Butterfly. “This is a great opportunity to reinvigorate one of the best brand names in women’s fitness.” Diversified Chief Executive Officer, Roger Wittenberns, said “This is a great step forward forDiversified and for Butterfly. We welcome our new franchise partners to our family and we are excited to bring our experience and knowledge to such a promising organization.” Diversified Health and Fitness, Inc. is a franchise holding company for multiple fitness franchise concepts. The company was founded in 2007 and is the brainchild of thirty-seven year industry expert Roger Wittenberns..

Jane Fonda Live Workout Tour




Mark Golob promoted “The Jane Fonda Live Workout Tour.” “Jane’s live workout tour sold out in every city. She was a pleasure to work with. She was so down to earth. Women just love being with her.” said Golob.


One of the original owners of Alanta's famous Electric Ballroom


The Electric Ballroom is well known as Atlanta's first major rock music hall. Every mid-size touring act of the mid to late 70's played the room. From Bruce Springsteen, Lynyrd Skynyrd, The Electric Light Orchestra. Highly anticipated and enthusiastically received, Atlanta's rock scene hit its stride in the old ballroom at the Georgian Terrace Hotel.
Mark Golob was one of the original owners and partners with Alex Cooley.
Golob said “of all the famous people that performed in the ballroom, my favorite night was when Bill Graham came to the grand opening and shared some of his great rock n’roll stories with me”



New Miami Night Spot is Alternative to Area Clubs



click to read posts about the: NightClub

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

LUMEX, INC. ANNOUNCES CYBEX EXCLUSIVE AGREEMENT WITH LINDA EVANS FITNESS CENTERS, INC.




BAY SHORE, N.Y., Oct. 6 /PRNewswire/ -- Lumex, Inc. (AMEX: LUM) announced today that its CYBEX division has reached an agreement to be the exclusive supplier of cardiovascular and strength training equipment for Linda Evans Fitness Centers, Inc., a new fitness center chain targeted at women. Linda Evans Fitness Centers, Inc. has opened seven centers in Northern California and is planning to expand nationally. James E. George, President and Chief Executive Officer of Lumex, Inc., said, "This agreement represents an important collaboration between CYBEX and Linda Evans Fitness Centers to help meet the fitness needs of women by providing specially designed equipment in a supportive environment. We look forward to working closely with Linda Evans Fitness Centers as the company expands its unique concept across the country." Linda Evans stated, "We are thrilled that CYBEX, which represents the highest standard in the fitness industry, will provide our centers with equipment to address the special needs of women for strength training and cardiovascular exercise. This equipment will help give women the incentive to improve their health, which is what we're all looking for." Ms. Evans, a star of television and movies, has long been a fitness enthusiast and is especially concerned with the fitness and nutritional needs of maturing women. She formed Linda Evans Fitness Centers, Inc. in early 1994 with Mark Golob CEO and Tom Gergley President, two health club industry veterans. The centers provide members with a wide range of services and programs designed to offer special support to women, including on-site child care, one-on-one personal training, and on-site nutrition directors and registered dietitians. CYBEX will provide Linda Evans Fitness Centers with customized strength training equipment designed especially for women, including its market-leading line of CYBEX Strength Systems. In addition, CYBEX will provide its line of cardiovascular exercise equipment, including THE BIKE and THE SEMI. Lumex, Inc. is a leading manufacturer of medical and fitness equipment through its LUMEX and CYBEX divisions, serving extended care, home health care, physical therapy/sports medicine and fitness market segments worldwide through a broad domestic and international distribution network.















Linda Evans and Mark Golob

About Mark Golob


Mark Golob is a Health and fitness expert and a prominent marketer who has promoted bands like Madonna in concert, Fleetwood Mac and Bruce Springsteen. He laid the foundation of the health club, The Bodyworks Health and Fitness Center in Miami, in 1976.
Mark Golob promoted the celebrity Jane Fonda in 1981. Freedance, an aerobic workout was also created by Golob which was taught at over 200 health clubs across the country. It included a workout video featuting Marine Jahan. Marine Jahan also gave hit movies like flashdance. Freedance also received a place in Billboard magazine’s top 10 lists and the video was voted video of the year by Shape magazine.
Golob worked with numerous celebrities like Pamela Anderson, Mike Tyson and Arnold Schwarzenegger and prepare promotional campaign strategies. The CEO of 24 Hour Fitness, Mark Mastrov hired Mark Golob as vice president of marketing in 1991. In 1992, Mark Golob became the CEO of Linda Evans Fitness Centers and Women's workout and weight loss centers. Golob’s company Butterfly Life Fitness Inc. - a women’s fitness franchise - was sold to Diversified Health. Diversified Health & Fitness, Inc. of Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
Mark Golob is now retired and spends his time with his family in Northern California.

The 24 hour Fitness Story



Based in San Ramon, California, 24 Hour Fitness Worldwide, Inc. is the largest privately owned and operated chain of fitness centers, with more than 300 clubs located in 16 states and Asia and a membership in excess of 2.7 million. As the company name implies, the centers are open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. They come in five types. "Active" clubs are basic fitness centers up to 25,000 square feet in size, offering cardio equipment, free weights and other weight training machines, and group exercise classes. Somewhat larger, from 35,000 to 50,000 square feet, are the "Sport" clubs, which also include a basketball court and swimming pool. Somewhat larger than these facilities, the "Super-sport" category is able to offer massage, sauna, and steam room amenities. 24 Hour Fitness's "Ultra-sport" clubs are in the 100,000-square-foot range, large enough to feature day spas, racquetball courts, rock climbing, and a running track in addition to the "Super-sport" offerings. At the other end of the spectrum is a new club type geared toward women, the Express Club, just 6,000 to 10,000 square feet in size, offering limited weight equipment, while emphasizing cardio equipment, group exercise, and personal training. 24 Hour Fitness is majority owned by private equity firm McCown De Leeuw & Co., which in February 2005 put the company up for sale.

Company's Founding Dating to the Early 1980s

The man behind the founding of 24 Hour Fitness is its chief executive officer and chairman, Mark S. Mastrov. He was born in Oakland, California, and raised in nearby Castro Valley. While attending junior college, Mastrov played on the basketball team and blew out his knee; to rehabilitate his injury he relied on Nautilus machines. While earning a business administration degree from California State University at Hayward, Mastrov began working out at a small health club, 5,000 square feet in size, in San Leandro, California. Because he was familiar with the club's Nautilus equipment through his rehab, the owner offered Mastrov a job training the staff on how to properly use the machines. Instead, Mastrov agreed to work four hours a week at the club in exchange for a free membership. He completed his degree and found work as a natural foods salesman, but switched to the fitness industry when the club owner decided to sell out in 1983 and asked if Mastrov was interested in becoming an investor. Mastrov raised $25,000 ($15,000 of which he borrowed from his grandmother), bought a stake in the business, and became the new manager of the club. His partner was a software programmer, and together they developed a front-end system for managing a fitness club, which they then sold to other clubs in the area. The project provided a valuable education, helping Mastrov to gain the fundamental business skills needed to run a fitness club. But perhaps of more importance was his feel for the business. After seeing that members were always lined up at the door when the club opened in the morning, while others were reluctant to leave at closing time, he figured that keeping the club open 24 hours was a selling point and could provide a competitive edge. The club made the change and took the name 24 Hour Nautilus.

A year after Mastrov and his partner took over the club, they recruited a third partner, Leonard Schlemm, who held a Harvard MBA in finance. Schlemm served as Mastrov's mentor, in many ways rounding out his partner's business education, so that in addition to knowing how to run a single club, Mastrov learned how to manage a large organization. The three partners soon fell out, however, with the programmer taking the software business and leaving Mastrov and Schlemm to run the club. While seeming modest in retrospect, Mastrov and Schlemm's goal at the time was to build a chain of ten Northern California health clubs. Mastrov began to raise his sights, however, after attending a Club Industry convention in the mid-1980s. Meeting with other club owners and gaining a better understanding of the industry fueled his creative instincts and competitive drive. Because banks refused to provide the funding he needed to grow a large chain of fitness clubs, the partners developed a business model that could fund expansion through cash flow, while keeping the company free of debt. A major component of the plan was the pioneering use of electronic fund transfers. This was coupled with the adoption of month-to-month payment plans that opened up club membership to a large number of people who could not afford a large outlay of cash.

Mastrov and Schlemm steadily added 24 Hour Nautilus clubs in California through the rest of the 1980s. In 1991 the chain spurred further growth by hiring Mark Golob as vice-president of marketing. Golob, who started out in the music industry promoting the likes of Bruce Springsteen and Fleetwood Mac, turned to the fitness industry in the 1970s and became involved in promoting Jane Fonda's live workouts when her exercise videotapes were bestsellers. During his brief tenure at 24 Hour Nautilus, Golob drew on his experience with celebrities to develop promotional campaigns using Pamela Anderson, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and Mike Tyson, resulting in a sharp increase in club memberships.

Pamela Anderson and Mark Golob


By 1994 Mastrov and Schlemm were operating 32 Northern California clubs. Along the way, the chain focused on membership retention, eschewing the traditional "churn and burn" mentality of the health club industry that devoted more energy signing up new members than keeping existing members happy. The chain also attracted new business by offering membership fees well below the industry average. Given these beliefs, it was not surprising that Mastrov turned to the fast-food industry for inspiration on how to deliver a consistent product that kept customers coming back. In fact, he once told a reporter that the person he was most interested in meeting was McDonald's founder Ray Kroc, noting, "It would be interesting to see how he could keep quality in so many places around the world." Mastrov also took a page from fast food by only targeting markets that he could dominate by building a cluster of clubs. In this way members could find a club close to home as well as where they worked, permitting them to conveniently schedule their exercise sessions during the week and weekends. The company also began to develop a hub-and-spoke approach, offering different types of clubs and price points in the same market, so that some locations offered basketball courts and swimming pools while others provided the basic, cardio machines and weight training equipment.



Major Expansion in the Mid-1990s

The 24 Hour Nautilus chain was stable enough that Mastrov could now approach McCown De Leeuw & Co., a Menlo Park, California private equity investment firm, for funds to accelerate the company's expansion. McCown invested $30 million, money that was then put to use in 1995 when 24 Hour Nautilus acquired the Ray Wilson Family Fitness Center chain and its 68 Southern California units. A year later the company changed its name to 24 Hour Fitness, although many of the clubs continued to operate under the 24 Hour Nautilus name. During this period the company also began to expand beyond the California market, acquiring smaller chains in the Pacific Northwest and Southwest, as well as Hawaii. Schlemm also departed the company to pursue other opportunities, leaving Mastrov to run the enterprise.

In 1997 24 Hour Fitness filed to make an initial public offering (IPO) of stock. The decline of the stock market in October of that year, however, scuttled the offering. Instead, the company conducted another equity round, raising $75 million. 24 Hour Fitness then used some of that money to take its first international steps. In 1997 Fitness Holdings Europe Ltd. was formed, followed a year later by Fitness Holdings Asia. In 2000 these entities were merged with the domestic operation to create the present-day 24 Hour Fitness Worldwide, Inc. In 1998 and 1999 the company acquired health clubs in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark, then in 2000 opened centers in Germany and Spain. But management soon grew wary of the European market and elected to pull out. In the meantime, Ray Wilson, who had sold his fitness chain to 24 Hour Fitness in 1995 and briefly worked for the company, had built a new chain of fitness centers in Asia, which he then sold to 24 Hour Fitness in 2000. Some of these units were shed, but the company continued to operate centers in Hong Kong, Singapore, Korea, and Taiwan.

Although the company was still thwarted in its efforts to stage an IPO, 24 Hour Fitness had little difficulty finding backers. In 1999, new investors were brought in during a recapitalization of it, concurrent with another equity round. In 2001 24 Hour Fitness completed its seventh round of private investment, raising another $85 million. All told, since McCown De Leeuw's first investment in the mid-1990s, 24 Hour Fitness had amassed more than $500 million in equity from the likes of New York firms Triumph Capital, Lexington Capital, Blackstone Group, and Teachers Pension Fund, and Houston-based Rice Capital.

At this point, the company was opening 20 to 25 clubs a year, as revenues approached the $1 billion mark. In addition to attracting investors, 24 Hour Fitness was forging alliances with celebrity athletes. Basketball star Magic Johnson joined forces with 24 Hour Fitness to open athletic facilities in underserved urban neighborhoods. The first Magic Johnson Sports Club opened in Richmond, California, in 2001, and over the next two years five others followed, the facilities located in Los Angeles, Dallas, and the San Francisco Bay area. Tennis player Andre Agassi also became involved with 24 Hour Fitness, developing his own signature fitness club. The first of four 24 Hour Fitness Agassi Super Sports Club facilities opened in Las Vegas in February 2004. A key reason Agassi chose to partner with 24 Hour Fitness was the chain's 2003 agreement with the U.S. Olympic Committee in which the company became a sponsor for the next three Olympics. In addition, 24 Hour Fitness established a Commitment to Athletes Support Program, which granted club memberships to eligible athletes training for both the summer and winter Olympic Games. The company also donated equipment to upgrade U.S. Olympic training centers in Colorado Springs, Colorado; Lake Placid, New York; and Chula Vista, California, as well as provided training equipment at High Performance Centers.

Introducing Xpress Zone in 2004

Moreover, 24 Hour Fitness agreed to work with the Olympic Committee's Sports Science and Sports Medicine Divisions to create specialized training programs for U.S. athletes. This research also helped the chain to develop exercise programs for its regular members. In 2004, for example, 24 Hour Fitness introduced its Xpress Zone circuit training regimen: 30 minutes of exercises designed to be completed in a specific order to provide a full-body workout for club members pressed for time. Such an idea was typical for the innovative chain. Mastrov, a frequent traveler because of the international scope of 24 Hour Fitness, thought there might be a market for fitness centers located inside airports. As a result, 24 Hour Fitness opened a 14,000-square-foot center called Fitness on the Fly, at Las Vegas's McCarran International Airport. The chain also was willing to pick up on the ideas of others, such as Curves, a company that developed smaller clubs that catered to people intimidated by standard health clubs, offering timed workout programs. This studio approach to the fitness center led to the creation of 24 Hour Fitness's Express Club concept.

24 Hour Fitness added another sports star to its signature line of sports club in 2004, signing an agreement with basketball player Shaquille O'Neal to open a 24 Hour Fitness Shaq Sports Clubs facility in Miami, the first 24 Hour Fitness center in the Miami market. In January 2005, 24 Hour Fitness added to the fold cyclist Lance Armstrong, five-time winner of the Tour de France. The first 24 Hour Fitness Lance Armstrong Sport Clubs facility was scheduled to open in Austin, Texas, in the summer of 2005. These centers were to include large indoor cycling rooms. In addition, 24 Hours Fitness became a sponsor of Armstrong's Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team.

According to press accounts in 2005, McCown De Leeuw retained Merrill Lynch & Co. to seek out buyers for 24 Hour Fitness. The New York Post reported, "Firms such as Apollo Advisors, Bain Capital, Cerberus Capital Management and Texas Pacific Group are said to be interested in taking a look at the fitness outfit. Other potential buyers could include some hotel, leisure and recreation companies. ... Buyout firms are drawn to health clubs because they have proven to be stable cash flow generators, and also generally reflect high returns on investment." By May the company had found a buyer in Forstmann Little & Co., which had pledged $1.6 billion to take control, planning to continue to operate and grow the 24 Hour Fitness chain.

Principal Operating Units: Express; Active; Sport; Super-Sport; Ultra-Sport.

Principal Competitors: Bally Total Fitness Holding Corporation; The Sports Club Company, Inc.; World Gym International, Inc.


Mark Golob and David "Sinbad" Adkins