It looks like we won’t see any new fitness trackers or revolutionary products from Nokia any time soon.
“Honestly, I feel like we’ve rounded out our portfolio”, said Head of Nokia Digital Health Rob Le Bras-Brown. “Now it’s about adding incremental utility.
“Our focus is on preventing chronic illness, particularly heart related diseases and working with our medical experts so you’ve got data about your weight, heart and activity so you can start to really affect the trajectory of those conditions.”
Nokia is a relatively new company to the world of fitness tracking. You likely remember the company for producing mobile phones such as the Nokia 3310 or N95, but now the phone brand is reborn with new handsets like the Nokia 8 from a third party manufacturer, HMD Global
The original Nokia now focuses on health and well-being products, a lot of which are retooled and rebranded elements of Withings – a company Nokia bought in 2016. Products such as the Nokia Steel HR and Nokia Go were originally released with the Withings name on, but are now handled under the digital health division of Nokia.
“One of the reasons Nokia acquired Withings is because we believe in its philosophy. We want to make products that work seamlessly in people’s lives”, said Le Bras-Brown.
“It’s really about inspiring the individual to take control of their own health and their wellbeing, but there’s a wider goal to help human wellness as a population. If anything, we’re doubling down on what Withings was already doing.”
The company is aiming to tackle the problems of chronic illness, but it also understands persuading everyone that their health is important can be a very difficult thing to do.
Changing people’s habits can be difficult, so the company has had to think about how it can make products that are as frictionless with customer’s day-to-day routine as possible.
“With our activity trackers, we focus on things such as battery life and making them beautiful so people don’t have to take them off.
“Our activity trackers (specifically the Nokia Steel or Steel HR) don’t look like a USB disk on your wrist. Instead it looks like a beautiful piece of jewelry.”
That’s not necessarily true of the Nokia Go – the cheapest product from the brand that uses an e-ink screen and has a plastic design- but it does offer great battery life of six months, so you don’t need to recharge it.
It’s not just fitness trackers that Nokia offers though. “We want to have a broad ecosystem of products. What we offer – that many of our competitors do not – is four key areas. We have activity tracking, weight measurement (including body composition), heart monitoring and sleep.”
If you own all of these products, all of your stats will then appear within the Nokia Health Mate app.
One of the problems with having a connected fitness ecosystem is different brands use different apps. For example, if you own a Fitbit Aria 2 set of weighing scales as well as a Samsung Gear Fit 2 Pro fitness tracker, it’ll be a struggle to combine all of this data onto the one platform.
Le Bras-Brown is proud of how the company offers everything within one phone app. He said, “I think it’s important we continue partnering with people such as MyFitnessPal and Apple.”
The company clearly sees it needs to offer integration with other platforms in the future.
Asleep on the job
CES 2018 also saw the company enter a new market with its sleep tracker. This is a pad you insert under your mattress to give you stats on how often you’ve woken up, how deep your sleep is and more.
We don’t currently know how much the pad will cost, but it’ll connect to both Bluetooth and Wi-Fi to give you what the company believes will be a more accurate and insightful look at your night’s sleep than a normal activity tracker on your wrist.
“Every day you then get a sleep score that is based on our algorithm and I’m blown away by how we can identify heart rate, respiration rate and then presence – how much you move – and turn it into a single sleep score,” said Le Bras-Brown.
“We give you a number out of a 100 to work out how good your sleep was and then we give you ways to improve that.”
It’s another example of Nokia making a frictionless fitness experience. He said, “You set it up once, slide it under the mattress and connect it to Bluetooth and Wi-Fi. You can then forget about it.”
Although Nokia thinks it has a full portfolio of products, it doesn’t mean the company doesn’t want to improve its existing eco-system.
Le Bras-Brown said, “There are certain things I want to do with the Steel HR product going forward that I’m not at liberty to share now but, for example, I want to add incremental data that will give you further insight.
“I think we get better every month in reading data, interpreting it and then delivering it as a form of insight. I think the goal is to deliver that info in a more bespoke way to an individual.”
Nokia also wants to make your fitness stats and improvement a much more personalized experience.
He said, “I would love one day for Nokia to have a product that the first day you use Health Mate it asks you what are your goals and how can I help you? Our app is called Mate… it should be your Mate.
“You could say, ‘I want to lose 5 pounds, get a six pack and add 10 years to my life’. Each time you go back to it, I want it to get more sticky and more bespoke to you.
“My aspiration is to get to a place where it doesn’t feel like you’re interacting with a machine. I want it to be like you’re talking with a mate who has your back. It knows my needs, my weaknesses and it helps me navigate those.
That’s not something Nokia is going to be able to offer in the immediate future, but it may one day become a possibility.
“I think with machine learning and some of the AI capabilities Nokia has, that’s not an unreasonable place for us to get to.”
It’s clear Nokia is proud of the hardware it’s inherited and developed so far.
Rather than pushing out new products with advanced features, it wants to focus on making the devices you already own even better with smarter data analysis and more intuitive feedback helping you stay fit and healthy.
Source: techradar.com