Fitbit debuts premium fitness and health tracking service as part of turnaround

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Fitbit (FIT) is jumping into the services business. Fitbit Premium, available this fall in the U.S. and launching in other markets next year, will provide users with an array of health data and daily tips to help them manage their weight, sleep, and exercise goals.

Starting at $9.99 per month, or $79.99 for a full year, Fitbit Premium is the culmination of the company’s effort to move away from a revenue stream based solely on devices.

“It’s taken a while for us to get here, because we’ve been talking about the transformation of the company to more services for quite a while now,” Fitbit CEO James Park said during a press preview of Fitbit’s new offerings. “It all started off...with a lot of market research and understanding exactly what our users wanted.”

Fitbit has launched its new Fitbit Premium subscription service aimed at helping uses improve their health and wellness. (Image: Fitbit)
Fitbit has launched its new Fitbit Premium subscription service aimed at helping uses improve their health and wellness. (Image: Fitbit)

It’s an impressive program for users that could turn around the company’s recent misfortunes, which included a downward revision of its quarterly guidance last quarter. The company’s stock is well off its year-to-date high of $6.87 set in February, and was trading at $2.85 Tuesday afternoon.

Premium makes Fitbit’s long-standing goal a reality

Fitbit has been losing ground in the wearables space to the Apple Watch for some time now, spurring it to move toward a subscription services model to help bolster revenue. Plans for such an offering have been in the works for a while, with Park mentioning the desire to transition to a software business like Fitbit Premium as far back as 2017.

As a software service, Fitbit Premium will continue to evolve over time, Park said, suggesting that what you see at launch won’t necessarily be what you see months or years down the line.

“I would say that it’s the end of the beginning, maybe. We’ve launched it, but it is a software service, so we’re going to be continuously evolving it and improving it over time. And so that’s what I’m excited about. To launch it, see it and hear the feedback from the users, and iterate and improve the service over time.”

The service will give consumers a number of benefits including sleep guidance, guided programs, dynamic workouts, advanced insights, challenges, health reports, and health coaching.

Fitbit Premium's Guided Workouts help users ease into their new workout routines. (Image: Fitbit)
Fitbit Premium's Guided Workouts help users ease into their new workout routines. (Image: Fitbit)

Sleep Guidance, for instance, will provide information about sleep cycles and duration, as well as let users know whether they tend to sleep better after they exercise. A new Smart Wake feature will also wake users up gently depending on their current sleep pattern. So rather than waking them from a deep sleep or REM sleep, the alarm might only go off during light sleep.

Sleep Guidance will provide tips and a checklist designed to help users fall asleep faster and stay asleep. Park said he used Sleep Guidance to help address his own sleep problems. The two-week program, the CEO said, provided him with a reasonable sleep goal and offered him tips for getting ready to go to sleep.