Don’t get me wrong, I’m a fan of apps. I really am. What would we do with our phones if we didn’t have apps? Call people? Fooey! What’s the fun in that? I just don’t believe every home appliance we have in our lives deserves a companion app. If it can’t add something, then it’s just digital clutter.
What I’m not a fan of is pointless crap, and so many apps are afterthoughts.
Someone somewhere said, “Well, we should have an app.”
Someone else started scrambling and said, “Yes, of course, we should.”
All of this activity happens with no thought to how the app will add to the appliance. That’s what gets me going. If you’re going to do something, put some thought into it. If having an app doesn’t make sense, then don’t do it. After all, a poor app experience equals a poor brand experience. In our social media-centric world, that’s not a good thing.
What is the point? Really?
I review a lot of home appliances and many of them have an accompanying app. These apps are typically either more trouble than they’re worth or they don’t add any real value. Case in point: Kitchen appliances. What does having an app really add? Most of the time they can do the following:
In all of these scenarios, the only “smart” thing I want is a robot like Rosie fromThe Jetsons, who can do the laundry and dishes and put them away. No be-bop-boop or app-touching from me. Don’t even get me started on super apps. Why?!
But apps are cool
Sometimes it makes sense to have an app. Considerrobot vacuums— if they didn’t come with apps, you couldn’t create schedules for them or identify no-go zones just by touching the device because they don’t have a touchscreen.
The same idea goes forsmart lights— lights don’t have an interface. They were designed to screw into a socket and work with a switch. Way back in 1879, that was pretty “smart” technology … truly ground-breaking and life-changing. Now lights can do so much more: change colors, sync with music, go on and off as the outside environment changes, turn on remotely, etc.
It makes sense that you need an app to do any of those things with the robovacs or lights, but does it need a separate app? If you’ve got Google Nest Hub, an Alexa-enabled device, and even Siri products — you probably don’t need another app. There are protocols that engineers can tie into to make their products work with these smart home hubs. That overall experience still has a way to go, but it’s a start. For it to be magical, it should be aseamless plug-and-play interaction. That’s a discussion for another day.
The point is that apps shouldn’t make us any lazier than we are already becoming. They should add to the experience or put the whole interaction on steroids — otherwise, it’s just another thing cluttering up our phones.