When Covid Upends Your Small Business

(Bloomberg Opinion) -- On March 16, Lisa Eskenazi Boyer was working up a sweat with her students one last time at her bustling Queens, New York, fitness studio. Covid-19 lockdown orders were about to take effect, and Simply Fit Astoria — along with all other local gyms — would have to close its doors later that night. She never expected it to be for good.

When Eskenazi, 37, first started Simply Fit, “boutique gyms” weren’t yet part of New York City lingo. It was 2009, the height of a different crisis. It took a costly renovation, which Eskenazi describes as “the price of a house,” to convert a Byzantine woodworking factory into a sleek studio outfitted with spin bikes, lockers and other equipment for its heart-pumping classes.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo allowed upstate gyms to reopen this week; gyms in New York City are expected to follow in early September. But the indoor classes that sustained Simply Fit still won’t be allowed. Resuming gym operations also comes with prerequisites, some of which may be manageable for big-box health clubs but are onerous for smaller businesses: Facilities are limited to 33% capacity; HVAC systems must meet certain guidelines; and masks are to be worn at all times.

Seeing where the fitness industry was heading — online, at home — Eskenazi permanently closed her business in July, weeks before the announcement of these new mandates. The Brooklyn and Long Island native said she isn’t dwelling on it. Instead, she’s hopeful and excited for the prospects of an online-enabled future, as social media, along with streaming software and web-booking tools, allows her to keep her fitness-training career thriving and perhaps even build on it. Covid-19 may change the look of many industries, but it’s not the end of them. Some may emerge better than before, as consumers come to appreciate the conveniences of spending more time at home.

Here is a lightly edited transcript of my conversations with Eskenazi Boyer:

Tara Lachapelle: After all that time and effort building your studio business, how did you decide to close and switch to virtual training and classes?

Lisa Eskenazi Boyer: Every piece of me went into that place. It was my dream come true. Fast forward to a few months back, and we continued to actually pay the full rent March through June, and with donations [for virtual classes] people were being very generous. I, of course, decided not to pay myself to keep things going. When I finally approached the landlord and was like, “Hey, I've been paying full rent this whole time, I’m really kind of out of money, can you help me out a little bit?”, it was a hard “No.” But you know what, it was a whole decade, I reached my goal, I affected thousands upon thousands of people. It was a really good endpoint.