- IKEA is huge.
It consumes 1% of the world's wood supply,
and sells one billion
meatballs every year.
Now it's focusing its resources
on making the home smart.
We went to Sweden to talk to the company
about its smart home ambitions.
This is IKEA 2.0.
(upbeat techno music)
What are the products in Home Smart today?
- Well today, the offering
from IKEA Home Smart
started off with the wireless charging,
which is the Nordmarke,
the Riggad, the table lamp,
the Hektar table lamp with
integrated wireless charging.
We have the Tradfri smart lighting.
We have the Kadrilj and Fyrtyr,
which are the smart blinds,
and we also have the sound products,
Eneby and Symfonisk.
- [Thomas] The Home Smart
Initiative was started in 2012
when Bjorn Block joined
IKEA's lighting division,
just as the company was
launching the Uppleva TV.
You remember the Uppleva TV, right?
It was a major embarrassment for IKEA
and a lesson learned
that technology is hard.
- It's a television
that is fully integrated
into a piece of IKEA furniture.
Take a look.
- [Woman] Uppleva comes
with an illustrated
instructural manual and
all the essential pieces
for assembling your furniture
and state-of-the-art plasma
screen television set.
We also make meatballs.
(audience laughs and claps)
- We are used to do this type of products,
shelves, and couches, and beds,
and all the products that you think about
when you think about IKEA.
So we then started to
think about smart products
in the sense that they have chips in them,
of course, there has been
a lot just explanation
to the rest of our organization
and our colleagues.
- We didn't start IKEA Smart Home,
we started IKEA Home Smart,
because the home comes first.
- IKEA designs its products
at its headquarters
here in Almhult, Sweden, a
town of just 9,000 people.
It's 6,000 miles away from Silicon Valley,
but it still has to compete
with the likes of Apple and Google
for the same tech talent.
This town is responsible
for the 9,500 products IKEA sells,
including the 2,000 new
products swapped in each year.
IKEA has the ability to
pick winners and set trends.
In fact, they're probably a big reason
your LED light bulbs are so cheap,
regardless of where you bought them from.
- We set out the journey
not only to go all-in LED,
but also to say, "Lets
from 10 Euros to one Euro."
And a few years down the
line, now we're there.
We're selling a two-pack for one Euro now.
- How are you choosing which
product range to go into?
- When IKEA Home Smart started,
we were based in lighting.
And then we came from cords,
we knew that cords were like a hassle,
people hated cords, people hated charging,
but it was still a big need.
So then we started with that, as you say,
not as a proof of concept
but as a clear product range
that we thought, "Okay,
so let's try out, also,
"our ideas on how to develop
"home furnishing with
technology influences."
- It's all about simplicity.
Our customers, they are
quite new to gadgets.
They are not the techie nerds.
They need to be able to understand
what it can do for them.
And not having too many different features
and functionalities in a tricky set up.
- We would like to go beyond
the resident geek of the
home and invite more people,
and physical interfaces are a
fantastic way of doing that.
We would like to expand that offering
and make it so easy that it finally
doesn't feel like technology.
- In 2015, IKEA had to choose
between two competing
wireless charging technologies
when launching its first
Home Smart product.
- We had to take an early bet
and we picked the standard that we thought
was going to be the winning one.
And we picked Chi and I
think we actually impacted
a few other players just
by picking that standard.
- Because Apple then chose
it, and then it was done.
- Apple chose it and when they launched,
two years later, when they
launched the first phone,
the iPhone 8 and the iPhone X, with Chi,
they had an IKEA logo on stage,
saying that they are now
compatible with IKEA.
- Smart home leaders should be concerned
about the world's largest
furniture retailer's ability
to easily enter the home.
A walled garden starts with a seed
and more often the not,
IKEA is the first company
people invite through the door.
Here, let me explain.
Imagine you're leaving
home for the first time,
furnishing a dorm or a shared apartment.
You go to IKEA for a
bed, couch, and a light
when you realize that you can buy
a Symfonisk lamp that's also a speaker,
that works with your free Spotify account.
Then for a couple years,
you're satisfied that, no
matter what goes wrong,
at least you've got your
sound issue handled.
And since you need a bulb,
you might as well make it a Home Smart.
Soon you'll need your own
place, a few more bulbs,
and maybe a couple Sonos speakers,
then the kids arrive and
you buy even more gear
until you finally die.
That's IKEA's advantage with Home Smart.
Don't get me wrong.
Right now, Home Smart lags the competition
in terms of both functionality
and breadth of devices.
Hue still dominates smart bulbs,
and IKEA is dependent on
Google, Apple, and Amazon
for their voice assistance.
IKEA needs help to grow
its Home Smart ecosystem.
Your speakers aren't smart, for example.
I mean, they don't have microphones in it.
Why did you choose not to have mics?
- I think they're super smart
because they play a lot of good music
and connects all the music services,
but they don't have voice
control in isolation.
But you can enable them with voice control
if you connect them to a gateway.
You can connect them to a Echodot,
you can connect them to an Alexa,
or you can use Siri, and so on.
So we enabled voice control
but we haven't put in a
microphone into our products.
- [Thomas] The Sonos partnership created
an overwhelming response for
the Symfonisk lamp and shelf,
both of which feature
Sonos compatible speakers.
The range is also the
first co-branded product
ever sold in an IKEA store.
It's a true partnership.
- The collaboration started in 2016.
So we went knocking on Sonos' door
because we knew they
were the market leaders
and we knew that we needed a partner.
Because with the Uppleva case,
that was not very successful.
- That was the TV, I believe.
- [Johanna] That was the TV, exactly,
and it was not very successful.
We did not have a partner.
It was a new product area for us.
We didn't have any experience.
So we knew if we want to be
successful stepping into sound,
we need a strong partner in this.
- Internally, IKEA never viewed Home Smart
with the same importance as
its formal business areas
like Living Room, and
Bedroom, and Bathroom.
and frankly, the lack of priority shows.
Home smart products aren't terrible;
the Sonos compatible
speakers are pretty good.
But IKEA's Home Smart
documentation is confusing,
adding devices to the home drives me nuts
and the app is buggy.
- In IKEA we have the
formula of democratic design;
where we have form,
function, sustainability,
low price, and quality.
And obviously here, we're not living up to
quality and function in that sense.
Our funding has been year on year,
saying, "Let's continue this project,
"let's see if we're gonna do another year
"or two years on it now."
- In August, IKEA promoted Home Smart
into its own business area
and that can have a major
impact on what comes next.
If you're a business area,
it comes with a lot of...
What can I say, givens.
You get a dedicated space in the store,
you're on a certain budget,
ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba.
And Home Smart being a business
area, it's a big thing.
- We have a very strict article
number frame within IKEA.
If we did not get an article number
from that other business area,
we could not actually develop the product.
- The article numbers
is quite a hot currency
because we tend to have 9,500
articles in a typical store.
And even if we introduce
2,000 new products every year,
this number, 9,500, is not going up.
So that means that 2,000 are going out.
Seeing where IKEA has moved
from in 75 years until today,
I can't even think of where we're gonna be
in 75 years from now.
So it might be good to
force ourselves to think
in a 5-year or 10-year perspective,
but when you go to IKEA, you
experience the whole home.
You go through Living Room and Bedroom,
you go to kitchens, Children's IKEA.
So it's not only a luxury to
have access to the whole home,
it's actually our obligation to look at,
where should the home be smart?
In what rooms, for what activities?
So now being a business unit,
it's just being amplified
that that is our task,
that is our mission,
to now look at the Smart Home,
not the Smart product category.
- [Thomas] IKEA is reinventing itself
as a furniture company that understands
the role of technology in the home.
When IKEA was founded in 1943,
the world had more dreams than technology.
And now it seems the opposite is true.
We have so much cheap technology
that any dumbass idea can be mass produced
and marketed as smart.
If computing is supposed to
be everywhere in the future,
then why not from the company
that's already everywhere in the home?
Hey, thanks for watching!
Why don't you Like and Subscribe?
Is that how you do it? (laughs)
- Oh, my god, Thomas.
- You have the most energy
we've seen all night.
- Yes, I was like, what?
- [Woman] YouTuber mode!
