What Strava Purchase Runna means for users of the two fitness applications – according to their CEOs

This morning, the news announced that two of the services on our list of best fitness applications joined what Strava buys Runna.

Strava, that we have evaluated an excellent service at free and premium levels with a formidable social media platform and racing follow-up integrations, does not have much coaching, to negotiate the availability of certain static training plans. This seems to make Runna, another highly rated application built around coaching plans, including an AI coaching service, an excellent adjustment.

Like Strava CEO, Mike Martin, said it in an interview with Techradar, alongside the CEO of Runna, Dom Maskell, “the way I think about it, it’s as if the biggest team in the world has a new coach. I think it’s a really exciting way to position it.”

(Image credit: Runna)

After reading the reactions on the sub-Subddit Runna (cautious optimism, unlike the fury around the new Connect + Premium level of Garmin last month), I wanted to ask the two CEOs, in particular Martin, if there is a temptation to force Runna users to possibly aboard a new system, in the same way as Google did with the Fitbit community.

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