Suffering from loneliness? These businesses may have a cure

Loneliness isn’t just a lingering by-product of COVID lockdowns—it’s a public health crisis. The impacts of social isolation are said to be as detrimental to human health as smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day, according to former U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy. Loneliness can increase the risk of heart disease and strokes by roughly 30%, and dementia by about 50%.

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In some ways, we’ve never been more connected thanks to online networks. Yet for many people, social media has fueled perceptions that others are living fuller, more vibrant lives in comparison to their own. Some have found that online interactions pale in comparison to in-person hang outs. Champagne sales are down, raising questions of whether party culture is dead. Overall, the downtrend of socialization in the U.S. paints a pretty bleak picture.

Companies have taken this public health diagnosis as a cue to step in, fill those cracks in our social fabric, and develop a cure for loneliness. At the Fast Company Grill at SXSW this month, business leaders shared how their companies are encouraging people to leverage online interfaces to—counterintuitively—get offline, or filling gaps in the market with products that account for new social trends and behaviors, like the sober curious movement.

Cultivating community at all life stages

When Andy Dunn moved to Chicago a few years ago to be closer to his family, he found it difficult to forge new friendships, joking that all he did was just “parent and work.”

This lack of infrastructure around simply finding things to do—and people to do them with—inspired him to create Pie, a social app aiming to combat social isolation.

Dunn, who is also the founder of clothing company Bonobos, said that between moving cities, switching jobs, marriage, starting a family, and other milestones, he estimates people go through anywhere from eight to 15 major life events that may upend their friend groups. This can leave people “at an inflection point where you have more social capacity than you have social opportunity.”

Pie creates those opportunities by using AI to bring together groups of six people—which the app takes its name from, as there are usually six slices in a pie—and help them discover events and activities they share a mutual interest in attending.