Feel Like A Deal?

Feel Like A Deal?Research recently released showed that some 14 million wearable tech devices were shipped last year, with the market for these products set to climb to $6 Billion by 2016.

Right now, the bulk of wearable tech devices are in the health field – units to measure blood pressure, blood glucose levels, distance walked or calories expended in a day.  The Nike FuelBand bracelet, which helps wearers reach daily targets for fitness, is a leading example of this.

But, given the pace of innovation, glasses with monitors embedded and expanded function wearable computers are not too far behind.

The potential applications for this technology are staggering, but one area they most certainly could revolutionize would be retailing.

Feel Like A Deal?

Imagine a wearable tech device that detected you were hungry, searched using GPS what restaurants or food service stores were nearby, identified coupons and deals available, downloaded them to your device and then let you buy them with you embedded digitized wallet.  How about if it detected you were cold, found a good sweater retailer nearby, downloaded a coupon and …voila!  Talk about marketing relevance and delivering the right promotional deal at the right time.

Deals and innovative promotions are one of the most effective forms of marketing today because they are relevant to consumer needs, but wearable tech could take this to a whole new level.  With them, when you get an itch for a deal, you can get it scratched, right away, with no effort at all.

image credit: nike

Like Innovation Excellence on Facebook
Don’t miss an article (4,600) – Subscribe to our RSS feed and join our Innovation Excellence group!


Dean DeBiaseA serial CEO and innovation speaker, Dean DeBiase is the Chairman and CEO of entertainment.com, co-founder of boardroominnovation.com and Innovation Excellence, and a co-author of The Big Moo.

Dean DeBiase

NEVER MISS ANOTHER NEWSLETTER!

Categories

LATEST BLOGS

The Network Operators are Dead – Long Live the Mobile Operators

By Braden Kelley | July 15, 2007

There is little doubt now that the telecommunications industry is a tumultous and precarious place to be. On the wireline side, baby bells and cable companies are engaged in a necessary but costly arms race. Both are forced to invest in increasing broadband capacity and coverage while simultaneously facing increasing competition from wireless service providers.

Read More

Invention versus Innovation – Auto Industry Example

By Braden Kelley | July 11, 2007

Here is an invention that never became an innovation (for sale on eBay): Want to buy a car with disappearing doors? (check out the video) Up next week – “Invention versus Innovation” How do you think invention and innovation are different? I’ll give you my point of view next week.

Read More

Leave a Comment