Editor's letter
Two-way coaching

Content providers have been hugely active in the fit tech market since the start of the pandemic. We expect the industry to move on from delivering these services on a ‘broadcast-only’ basis as two-way coaching becomes the new USP

By Liz Terry | Published in Fit Tech 2021 issue 2


Does the acquisition of VAY by Nautilus confirm we’re at the dawn of a new era in fit tech? We think it does.

VAY is a specialist in AI and motion capture and its proprietary technology enables computers to understand human movement using cameras, such as those built into smartphones.

VAY then provides personalised, AI-driven feedback on reps and form, in real-time, to coach the user and improve their exercise outcomes.

Nautilus plans to integrate VAY into its JRNY platform to offer coaching and form tracking and expects the upgrade to enable it to scale JRNY to the point where it represents 20 per cent of revenues by 2026.

Before the acquisition, VAY was system agnostic, but it’s not yet clear whether Nautilus will share VAY or keep it solely for its own use.

Up to this point, the majority of digital fitness offerings from both B2B and direct-to-consumer providers have deployed a one-way model – either live or on-demand – where participants ‘consume’ content but have little or no engagement with the provider.

Even where some level of interaction has been possible, this has primarily been set up for general engagement and has not typically delivered technical coaching to the user.

We’re now expecting other content providers to graduate from a broadcast-only model to a two-way coaching model as rapidly as they can.

The fit tech sector is growing fast, with investments announced seemingly every week, making it a highly competitive market.

As a result, it’s ever more challenging for companies to gain a clear competitive advantage – and build a strong investor story – in this space.

The advent of increasingly sophisticated AI is bringing technical coaching within the reach of more fit tech content suppliers and as a result, we expect two-way services to emerge as a new and powerful USP for the early adopters, as the drive to stay ahead continues.

There will be a race to acquire businesses such as VAY that can deliver ready-made solutions, heralding a new period of disruption in the fast-emerging fit tech sector.

More: www.fittechglobal.com/VAY

Liz Terry, editor, Fit Tech
[email protected]
@elizterry
 


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SELECTED ISSUE
Fit Tech
2021 issue 2

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Leisure Management - Two-way coaching

Editor's letter

Two-way coaching


Content providers have been hugely active in the fit tech market since the start of the pandemic. We expect the industry to move on from delivering these services on a ‘broadcast-only’ basis as two-way coaching becomes the new USP

Liz Terry, Leisure Media
The acquisition of VAY enables Nautilus to deliver live feedback Nautilus

Does the acquisition of VAY by Nautilus confirm we’re at the dawn of a new era in fit tech? We think it does.

VAY is a specialist in AI and motion capture and its proprietary technology enables computers to understand human movement using cameras, such as those built into smartphones.

VAY then provides personalised, AI-driven feedback on reps and form, in real-time, to coach the user and improve their exercise outcomes.

Nautilus plans to integrate VAY into its JRNY platform to offer coaching and form tracking and expects the upgrade to enable it to scale JRNY to the point where it represents 20 per cent of revenues by 2026.

Before the acquisition, VAY was system agnostic, but it’s not yet clear whether Nautilus will share VAY or keep it solely for its own use.

Up to this point, the majority of digital fitness offerings from both B2B and direct-to-consumer providers have deployed a one-way model – either live or on-demand – where participants ‘consume’ content but have little or no engagement with the provider.

Even where some level of interaction has been possible, this has primarily been set up for general engagement and has not typically delivered technical coaching to the user.

We’re now expecting other content providers to graduate from a broadcast-only model to a two-way coaching model as rapidly as they can.

The fit tech sector is growing fast, with investments announced seemingly every week, making it a highly competitive market.

As a result, it’s ever more challenging for companies to gain a clear competitive advantage – and build a strong investor story – in this space.

The advent of increasingly sophisticated AI is bringing technical coaching within the reach of more fit tech content suppliers and as a result, we expect two-way services to emerge as a new and powerful USP for the early adopters, as the drive to stay ahead continues.

There will be a race to acquire businesses such as VAY that can deliver ready-made solutions, heralding a new period of disruption in the fast-emerging fit tech sector.

More: www.fittechglobal.com/VAY

Liz Terry, editor, Fit Tech
[email protected]
@elizterry

Originally published in Fit Tech 2021 issue 2

Published by Leisure Media Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385 | Contact us | About us | © Cybertrek Ltd