Sarah Robb O’Hagan’s Peloton Loyalty Focus
Sarah Robb O’Hagan has officially settled into her role at Peloton with a very clear direction. As Chief Content and Member Development Officer, her primary focus is member engagement and loyalty, two areas that sit at the center of Peloton’s current growth strategy.
O’Hagan reports directly to CEO Peter Stern and joined the company on April 1, 2026, succeeding Jen Cotter, who served as Chief Content Officer for seven years. Cotter is remaining as an advisor through mid-August to support the transition.

What Sarah Robb O’Hagan Brings to Peloton
O’Hagan brings three decades of experience across some of the most recognized names in sports, fitness, and consumer wellness. She served as Global President of Gatorade from 2008 to 2012, where she led a major repositioning of the $5 billion business. From 2012 to 2016, she served as Global President of Equinox, where she drove a technology and content transformation that deepened member connection inside and outside the gym.
She then served as CEO of Flywheel Sports from 2016 to 2018, and most recently as CEO of EXOS from 2020 to 2024, where she led the human performance company’s shift toward digital service delivery. She has also held roles at Nike and served on the board of Strava. She is the author of Extreme You, a book centered on performance mindset and personal development, which are themes that translate directly to Peloton’s member community culture.
Her expanded title is also notable. “Member Development” is an addition to the scope Cotter held under the Chief Content Officer title, signaling that O’Hagan’s role carries broader responsibility for retention and engagement outcomes beyond class production alone.
Where O’Hagan Is Placing Her Focus
Peloton’s central challenge right now is retention. The company has pulled back on promotional spending and raised prices, which has put downward pressure on subscriber counts. Keeping existing members engaged and re-engaging lapsed ones is the primary growth mechanism available while new products and distribution channels develop.
The tools O’Hagan is working with include Club Peloton, the company’s community-building program, and the Peloton IQ platform, which powers personalized training plans. Reactivation outreach to former subscribers is also part of the engagement strategy. Peloton credited this retention focus with keeping churn relatively low even through a period of price increases, a point highlighted on the company’s Q3 FY2026 earnings call on May 7, 2026.
O’Hagan’s background maps directly to that challenge. At Gatorade, she rebuilt a flagship consumer brand from the inside out. At Equinox, she connected content and technology to member outcomes. At EXOS, she scaled a human performance model digitally. Each of those experiences is directly applicable to what Peloton needs from this role.
Member engagement is not a soft metric for Peloton. It is directly tied to churn, hardware resale value, and the long-term value of every subscription. The deliberate expansion of O’Hagan’s title beyond content alone reflects how seriously Peloton is treating that equation.
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