
If nothing else, people who wear smartwatches are
using them to track their steps.
While the wearable devices can be used to track location, set times, deal with messages, set alarms, monitor heart rates and numerous other things, the most
used fitness feature is tracking steps taken.
This is among the findings in a study of wearable devices in U.S. broadband households conducted by Parks Associates.
While about one in
10 (11%) households now have a smartwatch, most (60%) of the consumers wearing them use the devices to track their daily step count.
Smartwatches and fitness trackers, categories dominated by
Apple and Fitbit, are the most commonly used connected health devices. Two-thirds of adopters use their devices daily and the majority use them for health-related reasons.
For context, 18% of
households own a wearable device and 10% of wearable owners have both a fitness tracker and a smartwatch, according to Parks Associates.
People who wear smartwatches don’t only track
steps, of course. For example, here is what Apple Watch owners do with their device, according to the study:
- 56% -- Reply to notifications with their device each week
- 50% --
Check the weather on a weekly basis
- 45% -- Make or receive phone calls with their device
- 31% -- Search for information with voice commands on a weekly basis
Three
emerging smartwatch app trends identified were IoT, mobile wallet expansion and monitoring for insurance.
Smartwatches and fitness trackers have been evolving to incorporate features of each
other. Both tell time and track steps. Now the race is on to see which common feature emerges next.