Safety- and security-related devices are at the top of consumers’ wishlists when it comes to wearables.
In the new Ericsson ConsumerLab report, “Wearable technology and the internet of things”, six out of 10 smartphone users state that wearables have uses beyond health and wellness. Devices related to personal safety and security, such as panic buttons and personal locators, attract most interest.
The top five most-wanted wearables across five markets are:
* Panic/SOS button – 32%
* Smartwatch – 28%
* Wearable location tracker – 27%
* Identity authenticator – 25%
* Wearable water purifier – 24%
The report captures the opinions of 5 000 smartphone users (of which 2 500 are wearable users) in Brazil, China, South Korea, the UK and the US, representing the views of 280-million smartphone users globally.
It also shows that consumers predict a booming wearables market beyond 2020, as well as that wearables might replace smartphones and will help consumers interact with physical things and objects in the internet of things (IoT) era.
Ownership of wearables among smartphone users in the surveyed markets has doubled in the past year. However, consumers predict it will take at least another year for the current generation of wearables to go mainstream.
A more diverse set of wearables, such as personal safety devices and smart garments, will go mainstream beyond 2020 – but when they do, a market boom can be expected. One in three smartphone users believe they will use at least five connected wearables beyond 2020.
The integration of smartphones into every aspect of daily life makes it hard to envisage a future without them. But with two in five (43%) smartphone users expecting wearables to replace smartphones, this could indeed happen – although it may take some time.
As wearables get smarter and more independent in terms of factors such as connectivity, the smartphone screen may become less significant. Thirty-eight percent of smartphone users say wearables will be used to perform most smartphone functions within just five years.
Jasmeet Singh Sethi, consumer insight expert at Ericsson ConsumerLab, says: “Early signs of detachment from smartphones are visible today with 40% of today’s smartwatch users already interacting less with their smartphones.”
Wearable technology will also accelerate the convergence of the digital and human worlds, by bringing people into the (IoT).
While consumers are confident that wearable technology will help them interact with objects in their surroundings, they also say that this technology may not necessarily be devices.
Meanwhile, 60% believe that ingestible pills and chips under the skin will be commonly used in the next five years – not only to track vital health data, but also to unlock doors, authenticate transactions and identity, and to control objects.
Already today, 25% of smartwatch owners use their smartwatch to remotely control other digital devices at home, and 30% use voice search on their smartwatches.
Sing Sethi says: “Although consumers show greatest interest in devices related to safety, we also see an openness to wearable technology further away from today’s generation. In five years’ time, walking around with an ingestible sensor, which tracks your body temperature and adjusts the thermostat setting automatically once you arrive home, may be a reality.”