Wearable Data Analytics Bring Humans into the IoT
December 19, 2017 | ABI ResearchEstimated reading time: 2 minutes
Data analytics provides companies, healthcare professionals, and consumers alike with further insight into the long stream of data that they receive from various sensors and devices, which increasingly includes wearable devices. Traditional wearables, such as fitness tracking devices, provide the user with raw information such as their heart rate or step count. By applying analytics to this data, wearers can now receive actionable information and preemptive alerts. ABI Research, a market foresight advisory firm providing strategic guidance on the most compelling transformative technologies, forecasts wearable data and analytics services revenue will reach over $838 million in 2022, increasing from over $247 million in 2017, a CAGR of over 27%.
“Wearable devices have long been finding their way into the lives of consumers and enterprises, offering various features such as activity tracking, communication, access to information, and vital healthcare monitoring,” says Stephanie Lawrence, Research Analyst at ABI Research. “Data analytics adds a further benefit to the technology, giving users and companies actionable information based on the data that the devices collect, with deep integration through an increasingly connected market.”
There are many ways in which data analytics can provide this added layer of insight. These include providing healthcare professionals with analysis into health data collected from a large number of patients, providing them with anticipatory information on which patients may require immediate assistance; providing consumers, athletes, and workers with insight into their fitness and activity, allowing them to improve their levels or style; providing companies with the ability to understand workflow and determine how to improve productivity; and even providing law firms with analysis of claimant activity levels after an injury to determine if their levels are reduced. Companies such as Catapult Sports, Emu Analytics, Sentrian, and Vivametrica provide these analytical capabilities.
Some wearable companies provide data analysis for their devices. For example, communications equipment company Plantronics offers a number of analytical features along with its hearables. The analysis is used to determine the distribution of devices, usage patterns, quality of conversations, and acoustic events. With acoustic events, such as an extremely loud noise, the analysis is used to determine if a damaging acoustic event has occurred or not after an employee has raised a complaint. Without this analysis, the employee would automatically be permitted to have time off, but the analysis helps to prove whether the acoustic event occurred, which helps to reduce the number of false claims.
“Raw data from wearable devices can often be overwhelming, providing the user, healthcare professional, or company with far too much information that doesn’t have any real meaning,” concludes Lawrence. “With access to data analytics, this information becomes much more meaningful, allowing the user, healthcare professional, or company to take action. In the wider IoT market view, wearables provide a human-centric data source—a valuable asset for efficiency and safety improvements in the workforce.”
These findings are from ABI Research’s Wearable Data Analytics and Business Models report. These reports are part of the company’s Wearables, Usables, and Expendables research service, which includes research, data, and analyst insights.
About ABI Research
ABI Research provides strategic guidance for visionaries needing market foresight on the most compelling transformative technologies, which reshape workforces, identify holes in a market, create new business models and drive new revenue streams. ABI’s own research visionaries take stances early on those technologies, publishing groundbreaking studies often years ahead of other technology advisory firms. ABI analysts deliver their conclusions and recommendations in easily and quickly absorbed formats to ensure proper context. Our analysts strategically guide visionaries to take action now and inspire their business to realize a bigger picture.
Testimonial
"Our marketing partnership with I-Connect007 is already delivering. Just a day after our press release went live, we received a direct inquiry about our updated products!"
Rachael Temple - AlltematedSuggested Items
Soaring Inference AI Demand Triggers Severe Nearline HDD Shortages; QLC SSD Shipments Poised for Breakout in 2026
09/16/2025 | TrendForceTrendForce’s latest investigations reveal that the massive data volumes generated by AI are straining the global infrastructure of data center storage.
Advanced Packaging-to-Board-Level Integration: Needs and Challenges
09/15/2025 | Devan Iyer and Matt Kelly, Global Electronics AssociationHPC data center markets now demand components with the highest processing and communication rates (low latencies and high bandwidth, often both simultaneously) and highest capacities with extreme requirements for advanced packaging solutions at both the component level and system level. Insatiable demands have been projected for heterogeneous compute, memory, storage, and data communications. Interconnect has become one of the most important pillars of compute for these systems.
Procense Raises $1.5M in Seed Funding to Accelerate AI-Powered Manufacturing
09/11/2025 | BUSINESS WIREProcense, a San Francisco-based industrial automation startup developing cutting-edge AI and remote sensing technologies for process manufacturers has raised $1.5 million in a seed funding round led by Kevin Mahaffey, Business Insider’s #1 seed investor of 2025 and HighSage Ventures, a Boston-based family office that primarily invests in public and private companies in the global software, internet, consumer, and financial technology sectors.
Zuken Announces E3.series 2026 Release for Accelerated Electrical Design and Enhanced Engineering Productivity
09/10/2025 | ZukenZuken reveals details of the upcoming 2026 release of E3.series, which will introduce powerful new features aimed at streamlining electrical and fluid design, enhancing multi-disciplinary collaboration, and boosting engineering productivity.
AI Infrastructure Boosts Global Semiconductor Revenue Growth to 17.6% in 2025
09/09/2025 | IDCAccording to the Worldwide Semiconduct o r Technology and Supply Chain Intelligence service from International Data Corporation (IDC), worldwide semiconductor revenue is expected to reach $800 billion in 2025, growing 17.6% year-over-year from $680 billion in 2024. This follows a strong rebound in 2024, when revenue grew by 22.4% year-over-year.