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Peloton’s ‚Teams‘ Feature Is Surprisingly Good at Motivating Me to Work Out

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I teach spin classes in a gym setting, so I probably sound biased when I say that in-person exercise classes offer indisputable benefits over at-home workouts, but I don’t think I’m overstating things. Going to a gym involves multiple baked-in factors to keep you accountable, from the monthly membership fee to the social pressure or working out in a group setting. When you work out at home, you have more flexibility, but you can flex yourself right into not exercising at all.

That’s not to say I’m against working out at home. I love my Peloton Bike and ride it every day, and I think one reason for that is the company does a great job of finding ways to make users want to stay on track, even when exercising solo. Today, I hit the milestone of a 100-day Peloton workout streak, and while streaks are effective at motivating my lizard brain, Peloton offers much more than that—including a feature called Teams that lets you compete with or against your friends or other Peloton users. In recent weeks, I’ve been testing it out, and I’ve discovered that Teams is truly effective at creating that in-gym feeling of motivation.

How Peloton Teams works

Using Teams, you can work out with friends (or even like-minded strangers), either working jointly toward a pre-determined goal (say, a collective 100 hours of cycling in a month) or competing head-to-head. Your „team“ is a group united by whatever you decide—it can be your friend group, or a group of people who share a common identifier, like being from a certain geographical area or getting back into exercise after giving birth. In short, the feature creates a sense of community in a virtual landscape that can sometimes feel isolating, and it’s easy to access from the Peloton app.

How to set up a Peloton Team

To set up a Peloton Team, start in the Peloton app on your phone. Along the bottom menu on the home screen, you’ll see icons for Home and Classes, an icon that lets you Track an activity on the fly, a Community icon, and a Profile icon. Tap the Community icon (it looks like three silhouetted people standing together) and the next screen will give you three options: Teams, Feed, and Challenges. Under Teams, you’ll see any Teams you’re on, plus the option to Create one.

When you tap Create a Team, you’ll be asked to name it, give it a description, select a color to represent the group, and pick activities for everyone to focus on. You can choose from strength, yoga, meditation, cardio, and more—or you can pick „all.“ Then, indicate where the Team is based from a list of major cities, or select „anywhere.“ Finally, decide if the Team is public or private. Public Teams have activity data available for view by anyone, and anyone can join them. Private Teams are more, well, private, with progress only visible to members. Team admins determine who is allowed to join a private Team.

Setting up Peloton Team

Credit: Lindsey Ellefson

Once you’re done with the basic setup, you’ll be taken to a page that shows you the details of the team across five tabs: Overview, Feed, Challenges, Weekly stats, and Teammates. There are a few ways to add teammates—tap the icon at the top with a silhouette and a plus sign, or the button that says Invite friends on the Overview and Teammates tabs. Tapping any of those brings you to a list of the people who follow you on Peloton, and you’ll see an Invite button next to their name. You can also share the invite link to people with whom you aren’t connected on the app, so you can text it to a friend or post it in a forum.

Who can be on your Peloton Team

Anyone with a Peloton membership can be on your Peloton Team. Memberships range from $12.99 per month if you’re just using the app to do things like yoga and stretching, to $44 per month if you have Peloton equipment (like a Bike, Bike+, Tread, or Row) and want to access classes, games, and other features.

I have the All Access membership, which enables me to do everything from follow along with guided walks on my phone to playing a beat-based game on my Bike called Lanebreak. I recently began testing out a Bike+, the upgraded at-home stationary cycle, and I set up my boyfriend with an All Access membership to use on my old Bike so we could test out features like taking classes together. We formed a Team on the first day, though we could have done so even without owning two Pelotons, as app-only members can also participate.

What you do once you’ve made a Team

After you’ve invited your teammates, it’s time to set up some challenges and competitions. Your team will is a permanent fixture, but the challenges and competitions are timed. Say you set a week-long challenge where everyone works to complete a combined 25 workouts: After a week, that challenge will disappear, but the team itself will remain. You can do more than one challenge at a time, and add new ones whenever one expires.

Creating challenges

Credit: Lindsey Ellefson

There are two options when creating an activity:

  • Challenges create a „shared target goal“ that everyone works toward, like the completion of a set number of workouts, a set distance traveled, or a set amount of time spent exercising.

  • Competitions allow you to set those same workout- or time-based goals, but you’re all competing against one another to see who can do the most in a fixed amount of time.

You can check progress on your challenges and competitions from the Overview tab, and get a more detailed view by checking the Challenges and Weekly Stats tabs. The Feed tab shows you everyone’s workouts. You can send virtual high-fives to your teammates through the app, too, to keep everyone motivated.

Find a Team to join

If you don’t have a group of Peloton-owning friends, you can join Teams with strangers. From the Community tab in the app, tap the Discover button. There, you’ll find trending teams and featured public teams across a wide variety of classifications—Pregnant Pelo Mamas, TeamEverySingleDay, MenoPosse, Peloton Digital App Users, etc.—any of which you can join. There’s also a search bar, and you can search for Teams to join by activity type, location, or interest.

Accessing and finding Peloton teams

Credit: Lindsey Ellefson

You may not actually know these people, but they can motivate you to exercise the same way strangers at the gym do: Just by existing in your space, even your virtual space.

How Peloton Teams keeps me moving

I usually keep my Peloton profile set to private since I shared my username on my Instagram Stories when I first got my Bike and, as a result, I have a lot of strangers on my in-app friends list and I don’t think they need to see a feed of how often I’m using my machine. For this reason, it felt a little unusual for me to share the details of my workout schedule with someone, even though my first Team just consisted of myself and my boyfriend. But after just a day or two of us working on a shared-goal challenge of completing a mere 10 workouts, I started feeling the motivating itch: If I didn’t hop on my Bike, my beau would know—and I’d be letting our team down!

Just the knowledge that my timely use of the Bike could help us reach our shared goal kept me active and excited to work out. I am also a deeply competitive person, and though we were doing a shared-goal challenge, not a head-to-head competition, it still delivered me a little dopamine shot to check my stats and discover that I did, in fact, beat him by contributing more to our goal over the course of the week-long challenge.

The bottom line

Anything that motivates a person to work out is a good thing in my book, but Peloton Teams is especially useful because it’s so easy to set up, and so well integrated with the app you’re probably already using. You don’t have to coordinate schedules with anyone, since you don’t have to be working out at the same time. All you need to do is tap a few buttons, invite teammates, and get going.

I wasn’t sure it would be for me, given I’m generally self-motivating when it comes to my workouts, but I quickly discovered it lit a fire under me like no solo routine schedule could. I’ve already launched a new challenge for my boyfriend and myself. I expect to win.

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