The Trend: Women’s Sports Economy
Summer 2025 will be remembered as a landmark season, shaping the future for women’s sport. While star athletes such as British football player Chloe Kelly and British tennis player Emma Raducanu dominated the headlines, behind the scenes, the women’s sports economy broke just as many records. Building on sporting milestones such as the Lionesses’ UEFA Euros win in 2022, women’s sport is no longer treated as a sub-genre of the men’s game but as a thriving industry in its own right.
This momentum is attracting a new wave of female founders focused on the needs of female athletes and fans. The 400 Club, founded by Cherry Beagles, is a cultural consultancy and global collective at the intersection of sport, fashion and community, working with clients including TikTok, Nike, Wimbledon, IMG and the Women’s Tennis Association. Communications agency Good Culture entered the space in February 2025 with the launch of Good Sport, a specialist venture that already represents talent such as Formula One ambassador Naomi Schiff and British tennis player Katie Boulter.
Meanwhile, PR agency AP Communications has expanded into the sector with AP Talent, a global agency founded by Amelia Penfold to represent female athletes beyond their on-pitch careers. Its roster includes England rugby player Tatyana Heard, skier Sharifa Al-Sudairi, and Newcastle United footballers Shania Hayles and Elysia Boddy, offering services from style development to brand partnerships.
Fast becoming one of the most culturally influential and commercially valuable forces in global sport, the future of women’s sports belongs to the brands ready to help build it – by supporting athletes, infrastructure and advocacy to help build a more equitable sporting economy.
Read the full report for more on the Women’s Sports Economy.
The Big Idea: Muscle Longevity
Muscle health is emerging as the next frontier of longevity lifestyles, with consumers increasingly focused on building and preserving strength well into later life. This urgency is intensified by the rise of GLP-1 weight loss drugs, with research showing that up to 20% of weight lost can come from muscle mass, raising concerns about metabolic health and sarcopenia (source: Dairy Reporter).
In response, brands are accelerating innovation across functional nutrition, biotech and wearable technology. Danone’s Oikos Fusion yoghurt drink and Boost’s 35g-protein nutritional shakes are designed to support muscle retention during weight loss, while peptide-based supplements such as The Vitamin Shoppe’s Whole Health Rx directly target GLP-1 users.
Muscle optimisation is also gaining momentum within the women’s health vertical. Products from Tranont and Levelle Nutrition address menopausal and cycle-specific protein needs, while celebrity-led launches such as Kourtney Kardashian Barker’s Lemme Tone signal muscle’s shift into the mainstream.
Beyond nutrition, AI-powered platforms like Springbok Analytics’ US Food and Drug Administration-cleared muscle scans enable precision muscle care, from imbalance detection to recovery tracking, while wearable robotics such as Arc’teryx and Skip’s MO/GO trousers push muscle support beyond rehabilitation into performance enhancement. As a result, muscle health is becoming a visible marker of discipline, status and commitment to future-proofing the body.
Read the full report here.
The Campaign: Oura flips the script on ageing in new Give Us the Finger campaign
In June 2025, wearable health tracker Oura launched a campaign challenging cultural norms around ageing
Entitled Give Us the Finger, the campaign highlights the Oura Ring’s signature placement on the index finger, where it captures optimal health data, but also serves as a symbol of shared identity among users.
Oura chose to cast real people in the ads, including New York streetball artist George Papoutsis and tango dancers Mónica Romero and Omar Ocampo – all of whom are thriving in later life, fully immersed in their passions. ‘This isn’t a pitch for peak performance or the illusion of staying young for ever,’ said Doug Sweeny, chief marketing officer. ‘It’s a quiet rebellion against perfectionism and a celebration of presence and purpose.’
In a culture obsessed with youth, Oura offers a counter-narrative: growing older with intention is the real achievement. The lesson for brands? Move beyond outdated tropes of decline and dependency when it comes to talking about ageing. Instead, position every life stage as a unique chapter of growth, opportunity and vitality.
To learn more about changing attitudes to ageing, read our Redefining Mid-life report.
The Viewpoint: Democratising wellness
In 2018, Spotify founder Daniel Ek teamed up with engineer (and son of doctors) Hjalmar Nilsonne to found Neko Health, a full-body scan service designed to democratise preventative healthcare. Originating in Sweden, Neko Health opened new UK clinics in Manchester and London (Covent Garden and Shoreditch) in 2025, with the latter becoming the brand’s new flagship location capable of scanning 30,000 customers annually.
The Future Laboratory sat down with Franquibel Lima, lead architect at Neko Health, and Dr Sam Rodgers, Neko Health’s lead UK GP, to discuss the strategy behind the company’s sci-fi design and the company’s mission to democratise optimal health.
Positioned as a disruptive alternative to reactive medicine, the company combines non-invasive skin, metabolic and cardiovascular tests with immediate doctor-led feedback and a full digital health record, priced at £299 ($400, €354). More than just a medical clinic, however, Neko offers a sci-fi wellness experience designed for today’s health-optimised consumers, re-imagining medical spaces through pastel tones, layered lighting and human-centred design.
Lead architect Franquibel Lima describes the spaces as ‘welcoming, optimistic and uplifting’, while lead GP Dr Sam Rodgers frames the service as shifting healthcare ‘from reactive to preventative’, likening annual scans to a full-body MOT. By pairing clear, meaningful data with proactive lifestyle guidance, Neko Health aims to make longevity feel approachable, engaging and part of everyday life.
Read the full interview here.
The Space: Nike and Palace build a playground for London’s creative youth
In November 2025, Nike and Palace joined forces to launch Manor Place, a free cultural and sporting hub in South London that brings skateboarding, football and art under one roof.
The space re-imagines a historic 1895 building as a community playground designed to inspire the next generation of London’s creatives and athletes.
Divided into three zones – The Park and The Cage, The Front Room, and The Residency – Manor Place offers a polished concrete skatepark above an underground football cage, a gallery and shop showcasing London artists, and rotating studio spaces for emerging talent. With free access six days a week, Manor Place embodies Palace’s street DNA and Nike’s mission to democratise sport and creativity.
The cultural placemaking initiative echoes insights from the social sports spaces section of our Third Space Retail report, which unpacked how innovative brands are creating community hubs and immersive spaces that offer consumers a way to engage beyond products, driving positive brand associations and long-term loyalty.