OYO Fitness set a $30K goal for pre-sales — they’ve passed $1M in just a week

May 1, 2020  |  Austin Barnes

OYO Fitness team: Nick Bolton, fitness director; Paul Francis, founder and CEO; Sonya Andrews, art director; Graham Ripple, chief operations officer; Marcus Sy, manufacturing director (not pictured)

Editor’s note: The following is part of Startland News’ ongoing coverage of the impact of Coronavirus (COVID-19) on Kansas City’s entrepreneur community, as well as how innovation is helping to drive a new normal in the ecosystem. Click here to follow related stories as they develop.

Fresh innovation is working out for OYO Fitness, as the Kansas City-based startup strengthens its grip on a market still thriving amid COVID-19 restrictions and Stay at Home orders, said Graham Ripple.

The latest iteration of OYO’s product line — The OYO Nova Gym — launched during the last days of April and already has raised more than $1 million crowd-sourced dollars through its Kickstarter campaign, the COO of OYO Fitness revealed.

“We’re thrilled. We are so excited. We’re a little over $700,000,” Ripple said Friday morning. “For context, our last campaign was 45 days long. We raised $659,000.”

Completed in 2017, the previous fundraiser was the second-highest raise for a fitness product in Kickstarter history, he added. 

“To achieve in four days what we achieved in 45 [last time] is amazing,” Ripple said. “We are overwhelmed by the response.”

Editor’s note: Two hours after Ripple’s interview Friday with Startland News, the crowdfunding total already had grown by another $25,000. By Saturday morning, it had swelled to more than $850,000. Two days later, it topped $1 million.

The Kickstarter campaign met OYO’s original $30,000 goal in its first 58 minutes, Ripple said, noting the startup expects even bigger results in the 40 days the effort has left on the clock. 

“Being an entrepreneur is hard and there’s lots of long days — but then you have days like this where all the stars align and things really come together and you really feel like you’re firing on all cylinders,” he said of the company’s progress and its gratitude for customers who’ve stepped up to support OYO despite a global pandemic. 

“This is the reason that we are entrepreneurs,” Ripple continued. “It’s just been really fun and I’m really hoping that we have more stories like this as [word of] the OYO Nova Gym continues to spread.”

Click here to join more than 4,000 backers in supporting the rollout of OYO Nova Gym. 

Sticking with the company’s commitment to provide “a full gym in your hands,” the OYO Nova Gym beefs up the startup’s original home fitness system, redesigning it to support up to 40 pounds — up from 25 pounds seen in previous models, Ripple said. 

With the Coronavirus (COVID-19) crisis holding steady, OYO has also seen an uptick in overall sales, he said. 

“Our sales, overnight, doubled,” Ripple said, noting the startup saw a sales increase of 350 percent at the height of the nation’s Stay at Home orders. 

Fulfillment of current orders and shipping aren’t expected to be greatly impacted by COVID-19, with the NOVA Gym slated for an October release, he said. 

“Operationally, I have no concerns. We have a fantastic manufacturing partner — a warehouse used to shipping out tens of thousands of orders a day,” Ripple said. “It feels like whether we have 10 orders or 10,000, we’ll be able to just scale up just fine. … We’re thrilled with the success.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2020 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Café Equinox propagates new year-round Liberty location; Nelson brothers taking perennial coffee concept evergreen

        By Tommy Felts | January 7, 2025

        Café Equinox initially was meant to operate its coffee shop concept only during the equinox, nestled inside Family Tree Nursery greenhouses, said Jonah Nelson. “From September through March when people don’t have that warm outside space, they can come to the greenhouse,” said Nelson, who operates the family-owned garden centers with his brother, Jessie. “It…

        KC Tech Council shuffles tech veterans among key board positions; their goal: keep KC tech competitive

        By Tommy Felts | January 7, 2025

        A leadership transition at the top advocacy group for Kansas City’s tech community aims to continue the organization’s mission, while opening even more doors for companies across the region that are brimming with innovation. “We plan to broaden our collective impact within the region by providing new opportunities through policy advocacy, tech talent development, catalyzing…

        Pilot program targets $50K ops grants to culturally-driven orgs, businesses in the arts

        By Tommy Felts | January 7, 2025

        Small arts programs across the region could receive a $50,000 grant from a new pilot program that aims to provide vital sustainability funding for arts-centric businesses and organizations that often fall through the cracks. Applications for the Cultural Sustainability grants are open through 5 p.m. Friday, Jan. 10. The program plans to give general operating…

        10 Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2025

        By Tommy Felts | January 6, 2025

        It’ll be a year for entrepreneurs on a mission. Many of the startups poised to make eye-catching headlines in 2025 also are working toward a better future — for the earth, for mothers, for people who love their pets, for Kansas Citians who’ve embraced the city’s craft community, and even for sports enthusiasts honing their…