As companies in the high-touch spa and wellness industry grapple with COVID-19, including closings, reduced service menus, new hygiene protocols and testing, there is an overarching new normal that businesses should prepare for. In the post-COVID world, adapting to the rippling impacts on global connectivity (climate, supply chains, disease, economies and politics) requires rapid adoption of evolving technology.
According to a McKinsey & Company report, during the initial three months of the COVID-19 outbreak, many industries implemented technology and “touchless” services at a scale that would normally have taken three years. And many companies are quickly establishing new remote-work policies that will alter real estate demands, workplace socialisation and customer service expectations. So, what does this mean to the wellness industry?
Human interaction is the hallmark of our industry, and will remain so for at least another generation or more until telepresence technological options are viable. Even then, the human element, combined with artificial intelligence (AI), will be important to provide an emotional experience that is integral to wellbeing. To grow, the spa and wellness industry must integrate better content, diagnostics and technology to elevate the quality of the services, particularly coming off a pandemic in which health and science were brought to the fore. For instance, the US$16.2bn health and fitness wearables market is forecast to grow to US$24.5bn in 2023, in large part due to the virus outbreak.
Wellness redefined
Kai-Fu Lee’s book, AI Super-Powers, provides a graph with four quadrants showing where AI will reside in the workplace. In the near term, two quadrants show the symbiotic benefit of AI and human interaction and the other two suggest AI will replace human labour. Based on his description, I would rather be a massage therapist than a medical radiologist in five years. AI may be able to read an X-ray and CAT Scan better than a human can soon, but it will take longer before telepresence and robotics can provide a substitute for human touch and emotional connection.
Two lessons from the COVID tragedy are 1) companies that are nimble and embrace technology will advance faster than their competitors who don’t, and 2) according to a study conducted by American LIVES, after living a “compromised-year” many people are reprioritising their lives and choosing to focus on their health and emotional wellbeing. The spa and wellness industry can play an important role in response to this growing consumer need.
To capture market-share, the spa and wellness sector can no longer define itself as either a hotel amenity or alternative health treatment – both are too limited. Wellbeing is the culmination of one’s lifestyle and involves many disciplines in a globally connected world. This means we need to be proficient in the healing arts as well as meditative, nutritional and fitness best-practices and content development and data and technology integration delivered in an emotionally safe environment to support behavioral change.
An open lane
To borrow an example from another industry, Tesla combines a multitude of technologies and disciplines involving transportation, energy, data collection and human behavioral sciences. It understands its role in an interconnected world. Just as Tesla is not simply a car company, a wellbeing organisation must be more than its treatments and tools. In an ever-connected sustainable world in which people will strive to achieve greater wellbeing, the spa and wellness industry has an open lane. Those who can adapt by incorporating technology and science within its human-touch practices will excel, and those who can’t will adhere to Schumpeter’s economic market theory of creative destruction, and go the way of the horse-drawn buggy whip.