So all that technology he's talking about is already built or being built. It's there, it's being done. We're based in Pittsburgh - there's a Carnegie Mellons here, and there are big universities.
In fact, we were just at an event and someone even had the insoles of shoes they can track. There have been companies that have done it. I forget their names, but we've talked to a few of them. It's there, it exists.
But unless it connects people - no, people aren't going to pay for that unless it adds value. Me tracking and knowing that thing, unless it can connect to my health or my doctor or my system or my thing and improve my life, why would I want to know that data?
I wear an Apple Watch and that's it. And it's fun because I make sure I'm not late to a meeting and I try to close my rings and I try to get my steps in. That's all I care about. But it's fun. It's something that I do, but it doesn't add immense value to my life. So why would I do that if it didn't have that value? I get where he's coming from, and I think eventually it makes sense to do that.
But we already have more data than we know what to do with, and we can't use it right now, and it's not really getting us anywhere. So unless a company can come and connect that to something and show the value and then also, more importantly, maybe the rich, maybe the high performers.
However, currently, I have a disdain for a lot of products and companies out there that are building things that the average person can barely afford to live in the United States. I'm assuming everywhere, too. But the data I always look at is in the US - the average person. A lot of people talk about people not being healthy because they choose not to be healthy because they choose to be lazy. No, it's because there were two jobs.
It's because they don't make enough money. They make a certain hourly rate and they have to work, and they have kids and they have a family, and they don't have time to spend $100 a month on the gym and WHOOP subscription. And another thing, that's the problem.
So no, they're not going to wear wearable clothing because they're barely getting by, and healthcare isn't free, so it doesn't connect anywhere and they're not paying for that doctor - they're skipping the doctor's visit. So unless we as a society change, I don't see a vast majority of people wearing these things.
