The Peterborough Examiner

Collecting reward points for healthy behaviour

Ontario gives $1.5M to app that offers incentive to wellness goals

- JESSICA SMITH CROSS

TORONTO — Ontario has joined three other Canadian government­s in funding a smartphone app that gives users points for popular consumer reward programs in exchange for engaging with government-approved messages about wellness.

The province recently announced it is spending $1.5 million on the Carrot Rewards smartphone app, which tracks users’ steps and offers quizzes and tips on topics including healthy living, personal finances and the environmen­t.

When users reach their step goal or complete a quiz on home budgeting, for example, they’ll receive points in their account for the reward program of their choice: Aeroplan, Petro-Points, More Rewards, or Cineplex’s Scene.

Toronto-based company Carrot Insights developed the app in 2015 with funding from the federal government and British Columbia, and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador signed on last year.

Carrot Rewards became available to Ontarians in February and the company says it has about 200,000 active users in the province today.

Andreas Souvalioti­s, CEO of Carrot Insights, said the app launched with a focus on health but the company and its partner government­s quickly realized it was effective at modifying behaviour in other areas as well, and expanded to a more general focus on wellness that includes personal finance and the environmen­t.

He said a typical example of government messaging is a campaign by Natural Resources Canada that gave people informatio­n on saving energy at home and buying energy efficient appliances.

“Anything that requires positive public engagement, we can now run it through a much more modern platform like this, as opposed to the old-fashioned stuff, which was advertisin­g,” he said.

The informatio­n distribute­d through the app originates with the government­s, but charities that work with the company — the Heart and Stroke Foundation, YMCA and Diabetes Canada — help make the content more authentic, Souvalioti­s said.

“If for some reason the government is at risk of making a mistake, doing something that might frustrate you as a citizen or feel to you a little Big Brotherish, we have the charities that can help us push back and authentici­ze the content a little more,” he said.

Eleanor McMahon, Ontario’s minister of sport, said her government intends to use Carrot Rewards to help people make good choices that lead to healthier lives.

The goal is to give people an incentive to act and think differentl­y, McMahon said.

She likens Carrot Rewards to a modern-day ParticipAC­TION — the federally funded series of public service announceme­nts and Body Break commercial­s Canadians have seen off and on since the 1970s.

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GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O

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