While some products, such as smartwatches and fitness trackers, have been more successful than others, wearable technology seems destined to permeate our everyday lives. And, while may devices seem to have a specific niche – health and fitness, productivity, or entertainment – wearables, like so many new technologies before them, offer great potential for businesses. Small businesses are no exception. In fact, small businesses may be especially well positioned to benefit from this unique technology. Specifically, four features of wearable technology can help small businesses grow.

1. Attract Larger Audience

Businesses with existing mobile- and web-based products and services see wearable technology as a means of extending their reach. Wearables facilitate this process in two ways. First, wearable platforms – either devices or applications – enable users to access a company’s content, products, and services in many different ways. A consumer may research a product on the company’s website, use a mobile app to check prices or do more research on the go, and receive location-based notifications from a smartwatch. Greater access to a company’s services in turn habituates a customer to the brand. Second, expanding to a wearable platform grants a business another way to enhance the customer’s experience. For example, the health and wellness company, Lose It launched a mobile platform in 2008, with the goal of helping users lose weight. When wearables entered the scene, the company expanded its application-based offerings to smartwatches and various fitness platforms, such as Apple Watch, Fitbit, Runkeeper, and Strava, to name a few. Lose It’s decision to embrace wearable technology arose from a desire to expand the support and capabilities it offered.

2. Bolster Brand Loyalty

What better way to stay on your customer’s mind than by being tethered to her wrist? Wearables’ proximity to the body allows a business to close the physical gap between its product and the consumer. The closeness fosters an intimacy that increases the likelihood of the consumer embracing the brand wholeheartedly. First, smartwatches make it difficult for users to ignore notifications and reminders. Location-based notifications that trigger a tapping sensation on the wrist put a brand on the wearer’s mind. Second, wearable applications that augment the user’s experience promote brand loyalty. For example, while Canada-based restaurant chain, PizzaPizza allows customers to order pizzas in-house, online, over the phone, or from a tablet or mobile phone, its wearable application adds an element of fun to the pizza-ordering process. The delivery countdown makes waiting for your dinner a game, and the customized quick menu appeals to pizza lovers who order the same toppings every time.

Source: PizzaPizza

3. Increase Operational Efficiency

Technology has long been a boon to business efficiency, and wearable technology shows great promise for improving productivity on both the individual and enterprise levels. Both productivity and job satisfaction levels increase when employees use wearable technology, according to new research about the impact of wearables in the workplace. A variety of wearable applications aspire to aid productivity. For example, application design and development company, Tarasov Mobile, creator of the mobile and wearable application, Chaos Control, aims to help individuals prioritize tasks. Designed based on the Getting Things Done methodology by David Allen, Chaos Control’s mobile platform allows users to set personal goals, record tasks, and manage schedules, while the wearable application focuses on due dates and task lists only. Another example is the MyCalendar application Stanfy designed for the Pebble watch. The application syncs with Google Calendar and allows users to access their schedules with a simple glance down.

4. New Business Opportunities Arise From Access to Contextualized Data

Giving the data collected by wearables meaning and context is key to facilitating the overall acceptance and ongoing use of the new technology. For example, in the health sector, pairing two disparate data points can demonstrate an individual’s level of health and alert her to warning signs, according to Sean Mehra, head of product at HealthTap. An emerging technology, wearables have the potential to enhance our lives in meaningful ways. As the number of users increase and the technology becomes more popular and accepted in mainstream society, wearables surely will have a large-scale effect on businesses. What role can wearable technology play in your small business’ growth plan?

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