‘Amazon Effect’ on Senior Living Grows With Care Hub Launch, Alexa for Hospitality Tools

“With this new update from Alexa for Hospitality, we can now offer simpler, more intuitive tooling for senior living community teams to manage the Alexa experience for their residents,” says Scott Moody, K4Connect CEO and Co-Founder.

 

By Tim Mullaney

November 16, 2020

Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN) is continuing its push into the older adult market with the launch of an Alexa app called Care Hub, as well new tools recently made available via Alexa for Hospitality.

These developments are notable for senior living providers because they offer some new capabilities for Echo devices deployed in communities, and show Amazon is further supporting older adults’ ability to age in place in their single-family homes.

Last week, Amazon rolled out Care Hub, which offers an array of features to enable remote connections and monitoring between older adults and their loved ones.

For example, the app offers an activity feed, showing how an older adult is interacting with an Amazon Echo device over the course of the day. The feed includes only basic information; for example, it shows that someone has used an Echo for entertainment purposes, but does not identify a particular song that was played.

Care Hub also includes customizable alerts, such as for when someone first uses Alexa during the day, or if there is no activity detected. And by saying “Alexa, call for help,” an older adult will activate a notification on a loved one’s phone.

Amazon has been steadily increasing its involvement in the health care sector broadly and the aging services sector specifically for several years. Among other moves, the company acquired pharmacy company PillPack and launched a health insurance venture with JPMorgan Chase and Berkshire Hathaway.

Earlier this year, Juniper Communities CEO Lynne Katzmann noted the increasing number of health applications available via Echo devices, and said that these potentially could enable more proactive interventions in senior living communities. She and other executives have noted the increasing “Amazon-ification” of health care with a mixture of optimism and concern, given the potential of the company to seriously disrupt nearly any industry.

But particularly during Covid-19, some senior living providers have found voice-enabled tech valuable, whether the devices are from Amazon or its competitors.

By the end of this quarter, K4Connect likely will have deployed more than 10,000 Alexa devices in senior living, Co-Founder and CEO Scott Moody told Senior Housing News.

Care Hub offers “great new capabilities” for Amazon’s consumer products, but on the enterprise level, K4Connect has been among the companies working with Amazon on its Alexa for Hospitality offering, Moody said. Through Alex for Hospitality, Echo devices integrated in senior living communities can provide even more robust features than Care Hub.

“For example, the ability to call the front desk via voice is a feature we have long offered,” he said. “The Amazon Alexa can also be part of our Resident Check-in (RCI) capabilities. With regards to RCI, residents can be passively “checked-in” with at any time of day, in a number of different ways, whether walking around the apartment (motion detection) and, soon, using their Alexa or their K4Community Plus resident mobile application.”

He does caution that the “call the front desk” feature should not be considered a resident safety fail-safe, given the potential for a spotty WiFi connection or other issues. Still, he touts the benefits of having voice technology in senior living — not only for residents but for staff.

“With this new update from Alexa for Hospitality, we can now offer simpler, more intuitive tooling for senior living community teams to manage the Alexa experience for their residents,” he stated in Amazon’s announcement of the Alexa for Hospitality upgrades. “Throughout this process, we have also significantly reduced time-to-setup allowing us to get more communities launched faster, and at a time when they need these resources most.”


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Alexa for Hospitality is Now Even More Delightful for Properties, Solution Providers, and Guests

With this launch, solution providers and property managers have a wider range of Echo devices to choose from as well as more Alexa features like dynamic language switching, proactive weather alerts and wellness tips.

 

By: Shantanu Kurhekar

October 28, 2020

We are excited to announce an update to Alexa for Hospitality, including new developer tools, support for more Alexa features, and support for more Echo devices, which enables solution providers and properties to integrate Alexa’s world-class AI into valuable end-to-end experiences at scale. Alexa for Hospitality enables hotels, vacation rentals and senior living facilities to offer voice-based integration with existing amenities, and simplifies tasks for their residents and guests like playing music, ordering room service, finding restaurants, and checking out.

What Our Early Adopters Say

Scott Moody, CEO and co-founder of senior living technology company K4Connect, says, “Our residents have found Alexa to be a welcome and valued companion. Alexa helps them stay better connected, informed and engaged with their community, and can even alert staff via our custom skill when they need assistance. With this new update from Alexa for Hospitality, we can now offer simpler, more intuitive tooling for senior living community teams to manage the Alexa experience for their residents. Throughout this process, we have also significantly reduced time-to-setup allowing us to get more communities launched faster, and at a time when they need these resources most.”


Read the full story from Amazon Alexa, here!

Tech Accessibility Startup K4Connect Raises $7.7M to Close $21M Funding Round

Our investor support allows us to continue offering tools to serve and empower senior living communities and their residents, making communication and services more accessible; especially during COVID-19.

 

By: Eric Hal Schwartz

July 8, 2020

Tech solutions for seniors and those with disabilities developer K4Connect has closed a $21 million Series B funding round after new investor Forte Ventures contributed $7.7 million. The startup plans to use the funds for designing and distributing its technology, a need heightened by the current COVID-19 health crisis.

TECH ACCESS

K4Connect offers tools for making technology more accessible to those who might have difficulties with standard systems, such as older people and those with impaired senses and movement. The company’s K4Community platform, built on the company’s FusionOS operating system, is usually integrated into care centers and assisted living communities, with more than 800 such facilities in the U.S. using some variation of the software. K4Community provides customized features depending on the needs of the client. For instance, K4Community might support voice, video, and text messaging networks for residents, share news and informational updates, run smart home devices, or interact directly with residents to play games or answer questions. Staff can analyze health and other data shared by residents and even automatically update family members about their loved ones. The new round of investment brings the Raleigh-based startup’s total venture funding to $31 million.

“We are incredibly fortunate in our investor relationships in that they not only believe in our vision but equally value our mission. Forte Ventures is a prime example of that relationship and we’re proud to welcome them to the bench of our valued investors,” K4Connect CEO Scott Moody said in a statement. “With their support, and all of our investors, we’re continuing to accelerate to serve as many older adults through technology as possible.”

COVID-19 NEEDS

The coronavirus pandemic has meant limited or no physical visits to many such facilities; this kind of tech is especially crucial. To help communities who may not have the budget for the hardware necessary to use K4Connect’s platform, the startup gave out more than 8,000 Amazon Echo Dot smart speakers to retirement communities in areas with high rates of COVID-19. The smart speakers are part of Amazon’s $5 million worth of devices donated in reaction to the pandemic and come with K4Community built-in. Amazon isn’t alone in its AI philanthropy. Google recently gave 1,000 Nest Hub Max smart displays to retirement communities in Washington State, albeit partly as a pilot program to test a simplified interface for seniors. The adjusted smart displays sent to Merrill Gardens come with immediate access to a contact list for video calls with Google Duo, along with digital notecards explaining how to use the Google Nest Max. The coronavirus has also spurred features in other senior-focused AI, such as voice app developer WellSaid.ai’s COVID-19 screening questionnaire in its My Day for Seniors Alexa skill. There’s plenty of reason to think the use of conversational AI can improve the wellbeing of seniors. Project Zilver and Voice for Loneliness have both published studies showing how, along with keeping people connected by phone and video calls, voice assistants can be comforting companions. K4Connect’s new funding will help it bring that service to even more senior living facilities.


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