Particle Data Platform

Oura CEO on the Future of Health Intelligence

6/26/202630 min

The boundaries between technology, wellness and luxury are blurring. Wearable technology is no longer just about tracking steps; it has become a sophisticated tool for lifestyle optimisation, personal health intelligence and a subtle statement of identity. Now, there are more devices than ever to help us in this pursuit, and at the cutting edge is Oura.

Under the leadership of CEO Tom Hale, who joined the company in 2022, Oura has grown from $220 million in annual revenue to $1 billion last year, achieving an $11 billion valuation. Last month, Oura filed for an IPO that could be one of the most significant public market tests for consumer health technology so far.

“We are a health intelligence platform that will redefine the future of healthcare,” says Hale. “Everyone's already got a supercomputer … on their body. There should be a machine intelligence that is personalised and customised to that individual, and a large physiological model that is making predictions about health outcomes in the short term and the long term based on your ground truth of biometrics.”

Hale joined BoF founder and CEO Imran Amed on stage in Napa Valley, California, during The Business of Beauty Global Forum 2026 to unpack how the company plans to build a “large physiological model” to redefine the future of the global healthcare and wellness landscapes.

Key Insights: 

  • The Drivers of the Inflexion Point: Oura has sold 5.5 million rings as of last year, with roughly half of those sales occurring in the last 12 months. Tom Hale attributes this growth acceleration to three strategic moves: shifting focus toward underserved use cases in women’s health (which flipped the customer base to mostly female), entering physical retail to bypass the slow shipping-based sizing process, and becoming the first wearable eligible for pre-tax employee funds via HSA/FSA accounts.
  • Hardware as an Onboarding Mechanism: Rather than viewing itself through the lens of jewelry or fashion, Oura defines its core commercial category as long-term behavior modification. Within this model, the physical ring functions primarily as the hardware mechanism that drives value and engagement for its subscription service.
  • Subscription Revenue Benchmarks: Operating on a value-to-price framework tied to a £6-a-month membership cost, Oura achieves an 80 percent retention rate at year one and an increased 85 percent retention rate at years two and three. Factual benchmarks reveal this trajectory outperforms major content subscription platforms like Netflix and Spotify at the same milestones.
  • Defending Market Share with IP and Clinical Credibility: To maintain its competitive advantage against new market entrants and lower-priced alternatives, Oura relies heavily on an intellectual property moat. Furthermore, the brand protects its premium position through scientific validation, noting that 11 percent of its current ring wearers are medical professionals.

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Clips

Transcript preview

First 90 seconds
  1. Speaker 10:00

    This episode of the BOF Podcast is brought to you by Macy's. Sometimes the accessory is the outfit. This summer at Macy's, we have the Kate Spade Tulip Tote, which is structured but easy to carry all day, and Jelly Sandals are the shoe of the summer. Translucent, lightweight, and just really cool. Oversized sunglasses in the same clear vibe tie the whole look together. For beauty, Clarins Lip Oil and the new La Vie est Belle body mist from Lancôme. Find it all at Macy's, in store or at macys.com.

  2. Imran Amed· Host0:34

    [upbeat music] Hi, this is Imran Amed, founder and CEO of The Business of Fashion. Welcome to the BOF Podcast. It's Friday, June 26th. The boundaries between technology, wellness, and luxury are blurring. Wearable technology is no longer just about tracking steps. It has become a sophisticated tool for lifestyle optimization, personal health intelligence, and a subtle statement of identity. Now, there are more devices than ever to help us in this pursuit, but at the cutting edge is Oura. Under the leadership of CEO Tom Haile, who joined the company in 2022, Oura has grown from $220 million in annual revenue to $1 billion in revenue last year, achieving an $11 billion valuation. Last month, Oura filed

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