Malta Independent

Fitness tracker firm Jawbone faces liquidatio­n

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Fitness tracker firm Jawbone is facing liquidatio­n, and chief executive Hosain Rahman is launching a new health-based tech start-up. Jawbone said it had no comment. The firm has emailed customers, following months of silence, saying it has been “transition­ing to a simpler care experience”.

Some customers experienci­ng problems with their Jawbone device said that the company had not previously acknowledg­ed their emails.

Jawbone has not been active on Twitter or Facebook for several months.

Its products were among the first fitness trackers on the market and it was once valued at more than $3bn.

Jawbone user Lisa Cope said she received the email from the company’s customer support service late on Thursday.

“We sincerely apologise for the lack of communicat­ion - while you haven’t heard from us for a while, please know we haven’t forgotten about you,” the message said.

“Over the past few months we’ve been transition­ing to a simpler care experience. Those changes took longer than expected, but we’re excited to share they’re now complete and we are now ready to address your request.”

The company appears to be contacting customers who had been in touch with it between October 2016 and July 2017.

Ms Cope had been trying to resolve a problem with her Jawbone device for several months.

She said that she was sent a “troublesho­oting manual”.

“They took our money for an inferior product and then, when it failed within warranty, the company ignored us all,” she said.

“To be honest it has completely put me off fitness trackers. Maybe they’re not a sustainabl­e business.”

In March, the firm was forced to deny “abandoning customers” after several UK device owners complained that they were unable to reach the customer service team.

At that time a spokesman said its customer care was “days from being back online”.

Tech news site TechCrunch reported in February that Jawbone once a popular fitness tracker brand - intended to leave the consumer market and focus on healthcare providers.

Ian Fogg, analyst at IHS Markit, said it was not uncommon for early innovators to end up withdrawin­g from a market once it matured.

“The early fitness trackers were very simple devices, they had a sensor that tracked movement and step count, and then the companies inferred lots of other metrics mileage, calorie count and so on from that one very simple sensor,” he said.

“What’s been happening recently is that a lot of investment is needed to add more sophistica­ted functional­ity. Devices have gained screens and smartphone integratio­n.

“The newer products are marketed as fitness trackers but in many ways they are becoming much closer to a smartwatch.”

Mr Fogg added that giants such as Apple and Samsung had also changed the market by including health-tracking features in their smartwatch­es.

“To add things such as heart rate sensors and smartphone integratio­n requires investment and that can often be the trigger that causes a company to ask: do we want to stay in this market?

“Often it’s not possible to continue business as usual with the existing product range.”

What’s been happening recently is that a lot of investment is needed to add more sophistica­ted functional­ity. Devices have gained screens and smartphone integratio­n

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