JUMPY GYMS CASE EXAMPLE


Why Parents Didn’t Join for Health — And What Actually Drove Enrollment


Quick Summary

Company: Jumpy Gyms
Service: Child activity gyms (ages <10)


The Problem

Jumpy Gyms believed parents enrolled their children because of:

  • Concerns about childhood obesity
  • Desire for health and wellness
  • A valid program that backed up by childhood research studies

Their marketing focused heavily on:

  • Research
  • Health statistics
  • Long-term outcomes

➡️ Growth was steady—but inconsistent across locations.


What Compra Revealed

Parents were not primarily motivated by health concerns.

They enrolled because:

  • Class times matched daily routines
  • Open gym times provided flexibility
  • Locations were convenient for quick visits

What Changed

Using:

  • Compra Interviews (Context Insight)
  • DDM Value Scoring
  • Group Decision Tradeoff Crystals
  • Organizational Design Dashboard

Jumpy Gyms discovered:

They weren’t selling “health”
They were solving daily parenting logistics


Resulting Shift

FROM:

“Improve your child’s health and future”

TO:

“A flexible, convenient way to keep your child active—when it works for you”


Business Impact

  • Improved location performance
  • Better schedule optimization
  • Increased retention clarity
  • Clear understanding of why children age out

👉 Continue below to see how this was uncovered


Deep Dive: What Actually Happened


1. The Starting Point (Before Compra)

Jumpy Gyms was founded by child life specialists focused on:

  • Preventing childhood obesity
  • Encouraging early physical activity

Marketing Strategy

Focused on:

  • Health education
  • Obesity statistics
  • Long-term developmental outcomes

Assumption:

“Parents enroll because they are concerned about their child’s health.”


2. The Hidden Problem

Despite strong intent and mission:

  • Some locations struggled
  • Growth was uneven
  • Messaging was not converting consistently

What Was Missing:

  • Why parents actually enrolled
  • Why they stayed
  • Why they left

3. Compra Findings (Context-Level Insight)

Interviews Conducted:

  • 10 customers (Why they bought)
  • 10 customers (Why they stayed)
  • 8 customers (Why they left)

Shared Buying Context

Parents enrolled when:

  • Class times aligned with nap schedules
  • Activities fit within daily routines
  • They needed structured time for their child indoors

What Parents Said

“It worked with her nap schedule—that’s why we signed up.”

“I needed something I could actually fit into the day.”


4. DDM Quantification – Why They Bought

TAPS Score (At Enrollment)

76 / 100 → High Readiness

  • Clear situational need
  • Immediate usability
  • Low friction decision

Value Structure (Enrollment)

Value FactorWeightScore
Schedule Fit30%+2
Convenience25%+2
Flexibility20%+2
Child Engagement15%+1
Health Outcomes10%0

Total Score: +1.25


Critical Insight

Health was not the driver
It was a supporting justification


5. Tradeoff Crystal Insight

Using Group Decision Tradeoff Crystals:

Improve

  • Schedule alignment
  • Flexibility
  • Access timing

Protect

  • Convenience
  • Ease of participation

Misalignment Identified

Jumpy Gyms optimized for:
➡️ Health messaging

Parents valued:
➡️ Routine compatibility


6. Why Customers Stay

Context

Parents continued when:

  • The gym remained easy to access
  • It provided a quick, reliable activity option
  • It worked during weather disruptions

TAPS Score (During Use)

84 / 100 → Very High


Value Structure – Retention

Value FactorWeightStatus
Convenience35%Adequate
Flexibility25%Adequate
Location Access25%Adequate
Engagement5%Adequate
Health Benefit10%Moderate

Customer Insight

“It’s our go-to when it’s raining.”

“I can just drop in—it doesn’t disrupt the day.”


7. Why Customers Leave

Assumption:

Customers leave due to:

  • Price
  • Loss of interest

Compra Finding:

Customers leave due to:
➡️ Child development stage change


Leaving Context

  • Child reaches age ~6+
  • Seeks:
    • Structured sports
    • Skill-based activities
    • Social competition

TAPS Score (At Exit)

42 / 100 → Moderate


Value Breakdown

Value FactorScore
Engagement Fit-2
Age Appropriateness-2
Social Development-1
Convenience+1
Habit0

Total Score: -0.80


Customer Insight

“They just outgrew it.”

“Now they want something more structured.”


8. What Brings Customers Back (or Doesn’t)

Key Insight:

Unlike Fast Inc:
➡️ Customers do not return

Because:

  • The need is developmentally replaced

Strategic Opportunity:

  • Referral programs
  • Younger sibling enrollment
  • Transition partnerships (e.g., martial arts, sports programs)

9. Organizational Design Impact

Using the Organizational Design Dashboard, Jumpy Gyms aligned:


Messaging Transformation

FROM:

Prevent childhood obesity

TO:

Flexible, convenient activity that fits your child’s day


Operational Shift

  • Optimize class timing by age group routines
  • Expand open gym windows
  • Adjust schedules by location demographics

Product Strategy Shift

FROM:

Health-focused programming

TO:

Routine-compatible activity system


10. Strategic Outcome

Jumpy Gyms can now:

  • Improve underperforming locations
  • Align schedules with real customer needs
  • Increase retention within age windows
  • Accept and plan for natural churn

Final Insight

Jumpy Gyms didn’t have a mission problem.

They had a context misunderstanding.