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Beleaguered fitness company Peloton has struck a deal with Amazon to sell a selection of fitness equipment and merchandise on the e-commerce platform, CNBC. The maker of connected bikes and other has struggled with as many people return to gyms and office life. The Amazon partnership marks the first time Peloton will sell its merchandise outside of its website and showrooms. Any fitness equipment ordered on Amazon will also include free delivery and assembly, which is the same deal currently offered on Peloton’s website.
“We want to make it as easy as possible to get a Peloton,” Peloton’s Chief Commercial Officer Kevin Cornils told CNBC in an interview. Following a sharp increase in demand for its products during the pandemic that it struggled to meet, the company now faces the opposite problem: an . Peloton has experimented with new methods to boost sales, including a and partnering with . Despite these efforts, bike and subscription sales have stagnated.
The company announced it would this summer, resulting in the layoffs of 600 Tonic factory employees. Earlier this month, it another 780 jobs, shut down a large number of its retail locations and of some equipment. It also announced that it would no longer perform deliveries of its own equipment and shifted last-mile logistics to a third-party company.
Earlier this year, the Wall Street Journal that Amazon had been in talks with Peloton to potentially acquire the fitness company. While it hasn’t yet gone that route, the success of Peloton sales on Amazon could lead to the companies teaming up on more efforts.
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“We want to make it as easy as possible to get a Peloton,” Peloton’s Chief Commercial Officer Kevin Cornils told CNBC in an interview. Following a sharp increase in demand for its products during the pandemic that it struggled to meet, the company now faces the opposite problem: an . Peloton has experimented with new methods to boost sales, including a and partnering with . Despite these efforts, bike and subscription sales have stagnated.
The company announced it would this summer, resulting in the layoffs of 600 Tonic factory employees. Earlier this month, it another 780 jobs, shut down a large number of its retail locations and of some equipment. It also announced that it would no longer perform deliveries of its own equipment and shifted last-mile logistics to a third-party company.
Earlier this year, the Wall Street Journal that Amazon had been in talks with Peloton to potentially acquire the fitness company. While it hasn’t yet gone that route, the success of Peloton sales on Amazon could lead to the companies teaming up on more efforts.
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