From humble beginnings in a small Italian village, Lemi has grown a
hugely successful global business in the massage bed market. As it
celebrates its 30th anniversary year, we talk to GM Matteo Brusaferri
Left: Matteo Brusaferri and his biography on the Lemi Story
Looking back to his childhood growing up in a small village in northern Italy, it was probably inevitable that Matteo Brusaferri would follow into the family business.
He remembers his tiny bedroom being dominated by an industrial drawing board, where his father Emilio Brusaferri and father’s cousin Silvio Genelli, would spend hours plotting out new designs for their massage and medical beds.
Several decades later and that fledging business this year celebrates its 30th anniversary, having established itself as a leading designer and supplier of equipment to the spa, beauty, podiatry and medical industries.
“In many ways it also feels like my birthday, having grown up alongside the company,” says Brusaferri, who turned 31-years-old this year.
Now as general manager, Brusaferri made it his mission to learn about the company from the inside out, spending time in all the departments, from accounts and HR through to sales and marketing. The recent opening of the new Dubai office to spearhead the company’s expansion in the Middle East was ‘his baby’.
Last year, Brusaferri also published the story of the growth of Lemi in his book Some Like it Comfy, which details how his metal-worker father ‘accidentally’ went from fixing tractors around the village to creating high-tech massage beds and eventually building a global business.
Design powerhouse Brusaferri says: “Lemi was the first to make beds that enabled practitioners to stand up and not sit down. We also brought a strong element of design and durability to beds, and managed to successfully hide all the not-so-aesthetic component parts.
“The first bed my father ever made was discovered quite recently, still very much in use in a doctor’s surgery!”
With strong design ethics and capabilities, Lemi is known for being a powerhouse of innovation, with an ever-growing catalogue of products, and 60,000 beds produced each year for over 100 different countries.
At the recent CosmoProf trade event in Italy (where his father exhibited his very first bed three decades ago) the company showcased a range of six new forward-thinking table models.
These include the Verona Evo, a dual-use spa table which, thanks to its fully electric height adjustment, can be used as a massage table or a chair; and the Elba PediSpa, which follows the same elegant design as the Capri PediSpa, but with a thinner silhouette and more basic technology to create a better quality/price ratio for customers.
Brusaferri says: “We realised that we had a gap in our range for something that was high spec, but which allowed smaller businesses to offer their customers the unique experience of a Lemi bed.”
Highly personalised The company’s beds are still handcrafted with great care in their two village factories and carry the prestigious certification of ‘100 per cent Made in Italy’.
Brusaferri says: “Because of our very close, dedicated team and processes, we’re still able to guarantee a lead time of four to six weeks. It’s entirely bespoke. We don’t keep any premade beds in stock.
“In health and wellness, we’re entering a new era of increased personalisation. Clients who regularly go to spas know exactly what they want from a massage experience, and so our spa clients expect a high degree of customisation from us.
As well as the best quality Italian leather in a vast range of colours, Lemi offers additions that turn the massage experience into a multi-sensorial journey – from chromatherapy through to blue-tooth music.
So with 30 years clocked up, what’s next for the Lemi Group? Certainly there are many more designs and customisations in the pipeline, says Brusaferri, with some “exciting new departures” to be revealed later this year.
As one of the leaders of the company with an eye on greater expansion, Brusaferri’s business schedule is unsurprisingly full on, with two weeks in four spent travelling internationally.
“Unlike my father, who didn’t have the benefit of the internet when starting out, we can take advantage of great marketing opportunities like social media.
“But I see wellness as a very human-to-human business. It’s based on building relationships, and so there’s really no substitute to getting out there and meeting our customers and future customers face-to-face.
“We can talk about how fantastic our massage beds are, but until you actually lie on one you can’t truly appreciate how wonderful they feel.”
Wellness culture Lemi’s passion also extends to how the company treats its employees, fostering a culture of wellness for all who work there.
“We’ve introduced a relaxation lounge and ensure that nobody works for more than two hours without taking a break. We have a gym and offer pilates classes at three different levels, as well as English classes,” says Brusaferri.
“When our employees are happy and well cared for, we know that that contentment shines through in their work for us. In the same way, we also design our beds with the comfort and needs of therapist in mind.
“If a therapist doesn’t enjoy giving a treatment on a particular bed, then that discomfort can truly be picked up on by the massage client.
“So when the therapist has an exceptional massage bed to work on, the client experience will be exceptional too. That’s what the Lemi difference is all about.”
Promotional feature: Lemi - Italian Touch
From humble beginnings in a small Italian village, Lemi has grown a hugely successful global business in the massage bed market. As it celebrates its 30th anniversary year, we talk to GM Matteo Brusaferri
Spa Programmes: On the menu
Olivia Newton-John skincare, Sounds of Africa and jet lag butlers feature in our programming series
Interview: Dale Hipsh
The senior VP of hotels at Hard Rock International tells Katie Barnes why its music-centric spa menu is striking the right chord with consumers and the media
Promotional feature: ISPA
After almost three decades serving members and contributing to the growth of the industry, we talk to ISPA’s Crystal Ducker about the work of the association and the future of spa
Spa Design: Jungle VIP
Kim Megson ventures deep into Mexico’s jungle to discover how two Chablé resorts with Mayan spas are aiming to redefine wellness
Interview: John & Karina Stewart
The inspirational couple behind Kamalaya in Thailand talk to Neena Dhillon about emotional therapies, why stress-busting is the new detox and how they’re evolving the concept
Promotional feature: Gharieni - Luxury Recognition
Gharieni has long been known as an industry innovator. Now, Forbes Travel Guide has named the company as its official Spa & Wellness Equipment Manufacturer. Sammy Gharieni tells us more
Promotional feature: Comfort Zone - Beauty Reloaded
Skincare brand Comfort Zone has partnered with Wellness for Cancer to create a new programme of spa treatments for people touched by cancer. Barbara Gavazzoli tells us more
Family spa: Multi-story
With the rise in multi-generational tourism, family spas are growing in popularity. Jane Kitchen reports
Software: Training & education
From bespoke training programmes to 24/7 support teams and company super-users, how are software suppliers helping spas get the most out of their systems?
From humble beginnings in a small Italian village, Lemi has grown a
hugely successful global business in the massage bed market. As it
celebrates its 30th anniversary year, we talk to GM Matteo Brusaferri
Left: Matteo Brusaferri and his biography on the Lemi Story
Looking back to his childhood growing up in a small village in northern Italy, it was probably inevitable that Matteo Brusaferri would follow into the family business.
He remembers his tiny bedroom being dominated by an industrial drawing board, where his father Emilio Brusaferri and father’s cousin Silvio Genelli, would spend hours plotting out new designs for their massage and medical beds.
Several decades later and that fledging business this year celebrates its 30th anniversary, having established itself as a leading designer and supplier of equipment to the spa, beauty, podiatry and medical industries.
“In many ways it also feels like my birthday, having grown up alongside the company,” says Brusaferri, who turned 31-years-old this year.
Now as general manager, Brusaferri made it his mission to learn about the company from the inside out, spending time in all the departments, from accounts and HR through to sales and marketing. The recent opening of the new Dubai office to spearhead the company’s expansion in the Middle East was ‘his baby’.
Last year, Brusaferri also published the story of the growth of Lemi in his book Some Like it Comfy, which details how his metal-worker father ‘accidentally’ went from fixing tractors around the village to creating high-tech massage beds and eventually building a global business.
Design powerhouse Brusaferri says: “Lemi was the first to make beds that enabled practitioners to stand up and not sit down. We also brought a strong element of design and durability to beds, and managed to successfully hide all the not-so-aesthetic component parts.
“The first bed my father ever made was discovered quite recently, still very much in use in a doctor’s surgery!”
With strong design ethics and capabilities, Lemi is known for being a powerhouse of innovation, with an ever-growing catalogue of products, and 60,000 beds produced each year for over 100 different countries.
At the recent CosmoProf trade event in Italy (where his father exhibited his very first bed three decades ago) the company showcased a range of six new forward-thinking table models.
These include the Verona Evo, a dual-use spa table which, thanks to its fully electric height adjustment, can be used as a massage table or a chair; and the Elba PediSpa, which follows the same elegant design as the Capri PediSpa, but with a thinner silhouette and more basic technology to create a better quality/price ratio for customers.
Brusaferri says: “We realised that we had a gap in our range for something that was high spec, but which allowed smaller businesses to offer their customers the unique experience of a Lemi bed.”
Highly personalised The company’s beds are still handcrafted with great care in their two village factories and carry the prestigious certification of ‘100 per cent Made in Italy’.
Brusaferri says: “Because of our very close, dedicated team and processes, we’re still able to guarantee a lead time of four to six weeks. It’s entirely bespoke. We don’t keep any premade beds in stock.
“In health and wellness, we’re entering a new era of increased personalisation. Clients who regularly go to spas know exactly what they want from a massage experience, and so our spa clients expect a high degree of customisation from us.
As well as the best quality Italian leather in a vast range of colours, Lemi offers additions that turn the massage experience into a multi-sensorial journey – from chromatherapy through to blue-tooth music.
So with 30 years clocked up, what’s next for the Lemi Group? Certainly there are many more designs and customisations in the pipeline, says Brusaferri, with some “exciting new departures” to be revealed later this year.
As one of the leaders of the company with an eye on greater expansion, Brusaferri’s business schedule is unsurprisingly full on, with two weeks in four spent travelling internationally.
“Unlike my father, who didn’t have the benefit of the internet when starting out, we can take advantage of great marketing opportunities like social media.
“But I see wellness as a very human-to-human business. It’s based on building relationships, and so there’s really no substitute to getting out there and meeting our customers and future customers face-to-face.
“We can talk about how fantastic our massage beds are, but until you actually lie on one you can’t truly appreciate how wonderful they feel.”
Wellness culture Lemi’s passion also extends to how the company treats its employees, fostering a culture of wellness for all who work there.
“We’ve introduced a relaxation lounge and ensure that nobody works for more than two hours without taking a break. We have a gym and offer pilates classes at three different levels, as well as English classes,” says Brusaferri.
“When our employees are happy and well cared for, we know that that contentment shines through in their work for us. In the same way, we also design our beds with the comfort and needs of therapist in mind.
“If a therapist doesn’t enjoy giving a treatment on a particular bed, then that discomfort can truly be picked up on by the massage client.
“So when the therapist has an exceptional massage bed to work on, the client experience will be exceptional too. That’s what the Lemi difference is all about.”
Promotional feature: Lemi - Italian Touch
From humble beginnings in a small Italian village, Lemi has grown a hugely successful global business in the massage bed market. As it celebrates its 30th anniversary year, we talk to GM Matteo Brusaferri
Spa Programmes: On the menu
Olivia Newton-John skincare, Sounds of Africa and jet lag butlers feature in our programming series
Interview: Dale Hipsh
The senior VP of hotels at Hard Rock International tells Katie Barnes why its music-centric spa menu is striking the right chord with consumers and the media
Promotional feature: ISPA
After almost three decades serving members and contributing to the growth of the industry, we talk to ISPA’s Crystal Ducker about the work of the association and the future of spa
Spa Design: Jungle VIP
Kim Megson ventures deep into Mexico’s jungle to discover how two Chablé resorts with Mayan spas are aiming to redefine wellness
Interview: John & Karina Stewart
The inspirational couple behind Kamalaya in Thailand talk to Neena Dhillon about emotional therapies, why stress-busting is the new detox and how they’re evolving the concept
Promotional feature: Gharieni - Luxury Recognition
Gharieni has long been known as an industry innovator. Now, Forbes Travel Guide has named the company as its official Spa & Wellness Equipment Manufacturer. Sammy Gharieni tells us more
Promotional feature: Comfort Zone - Beauty Reloaded
Skincare brand Comfort Zone has partnered with Wellness for Cancer to create a new programme of spa treatments for people touched by cancer. Barbara Gavazzoli tells us more
Family spa: Multi-story
With the rise in multi-generational tourism, family spas are growing in popularity. Jane Kitchen reports
Software: Training & education
From bespoke training programmes to 24/7 support teams and company super-users, how are software suppliers helping spas get the most out of their systems?
Abu Dhabi-based investment firm Mubadala Capital has made a binding, fully financed
€1 billion
offer to acquire Pierre and Vacances SA, the European holiday resort operator behind the
continental European Center Parcs business.
Disney has reaffirmed its commitment to investing US$30 billion in its US parks and cruise
business by 2033, using new America250 celebrations to underline the role its attractions play
in supporting jobs, tourism and economic growth.
Expo 2030 Riyadh is being planned as a permanent visitor destination, with organisers
confirming the six-million-square-metre site will become a Global Village after the event closes.
The owner of one of Australia's best-known waterparks has acquired a major competitor,
creating a new attractions business spanning two of the country's largest visitor destinations.
The Toverland theme park in the Netherlands has announced a €98m expansion programme
that will add a resort, new attractions and staff facilities as it pursues plans to become a multi-
day destination.
Hotel de France, located on the British Isle of Jersey, has created a wellness retreat package
that includes a hot yoga session that will take place in Jersey Zoo’s butterfly sanctuary.
A new immersive attraction designed to transport visitors into the final hours of ancient Pompeii
is preparing to open near the world-famous archaeological site in southern Italy.
Experience design company, BRC Imagination Arts, has completed a transition that sees founder
Bob Rogers pass ownership of the business to four long-serving senior executives, while
remaining actively involved with the company.
Movie Park Germany has opened a new Paramount Pictures-themed attraction as part of its 30th
anniversary celebrations, using immersive storytelling and adaptive reuse to reinforce the park’s
longstanding “Hollywood in Germany” positioning.
Therme Manchester’s 28-acre development, which will include interconnected glass pavilions
that measure 65,000sq m, will be the largest bathing and wellbeing attraction in the world once
complete, according to prof David Russell, CEO of Therme UK.
+ More news
COMPANY PROFILES
RMA Ltd RMA Ltd is a one-stop global company
that can design, build and produce from a
greenfield site upw [more...]
Sally Corporation Our services include: Dark ride design & build; Redevelopment of existing attractions; High-quality [more...]