Headspace gets a new CTO and head of data analytics

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Headspace might just be considered an app that plays back a soothing voice to help you meditate, but the company says it is increasingly
carries a more difficult technology problem as it continues to grow — and it’s hiring on a few people today to tackle it.Headspace said
it has brought on both a head of data science and a new chief technology officer today as it tries to figure out how to continue scaling
across new geographies without any hiccups, in addition to making sure it grows in its core markets
Paddy Hannon and Punnoose Isaac, previously at Edmunds.com as the chief technology officer and head of data and analytics respectively,
will be joining Headspace to reprise similar roles for the startup that’s trying to become a daily habit for users.“You can go through
the dot-com bubble of the 90s, over all those years, and look at how many companies built great technologies that were solutions looking for
problems,” Hannon said
“I think this is a different opportunity — we’re a product company
Technology and content are there to serve the aims and goals of the company
It’s all focused on that
The tech needs to be focused on that, and the product needs to be focused on that
We think about how to transform this company into one that has a global scale that [co-founders] Andy [Puddicombe] and Rich [Pierson]
envision
Their vision isn’t Andy’s voice throughout the world, their vision is building products that help people.”As startups start to take a
deeper look at their products and what kinds of interactions users have, they have to actually think about where they can start tracking
what their users are doing in sensitive ways in order to improve the experience
That might mean figuring out how often they are logging in, when they are checking their progress, how long they are listening, and other
examples in a non-invasive way
But another big challenge is ensuring all that is wrapped up in a way where statisticians and product people can actually easily query all
that data and start doing the math on it to figure out how to improve things, and building that out will be part of Isaac’s main jobs.The
rest of the technology problems are ones that startups will typically face as they start to scale, which includes getting on hardware around
the world and making sure that all that content is available when necessary
Headspace has increasingly tried to tailor its services for the time that its users have, and not the other way around, and that means
making sure it’s actually working right when a user is looking to check out of reality and into a Headspace meditation — especially if
it’s only just for a few minutes
Hannon said the plan, currently, is not to move onto its own proprietary infrastructure.Hannon stressed that the data that the company would
be collecting as it tries to improve its products would not be sold or used in any way other than trying to make Headspace a better
experience, as the company monetizes through different ways
“While data is an important aspect of what we do, we’re not incentivized to do things with that data that would violate the trust of our
consumers because they’re paying us,” Hannon said.All this is essentially continuing moves to try to make the service more palatable and
easier to use — and actually working — as it faces an increasingly crowded space market of apps looking to help users take a minute to
just chill and be a bit more mindful
Calm.com, for example, is reportedly hitting a $250 million valuation in an upcoming financing round, and the company that ends up with both
the best experience and content may eventually be the one that wins out
That means bringing on the right talent in order to ensure that everything runs smoothly and keeps getting better.