OTC Hearing Aids - Sony’s Solution For People With Hearing Issues
Who would have thought companies like Sony and Bose would enter the hearing aid market? Well, since they’re in the audio business, why not also create something for those who have difficulty in hearing? While Bose already made an exit from the hearing aid market, Sony introduces its OTC hearing aids. Unlike Bose, will Sony succeed?
Good news for individuals with hearing problems: Sony, one of the world’s pioneers in technology, now offers over-the-counter or OTC hearing aids.
According to the Japanese company’s press releasepublished by Cision PR Newswire on September 13, Sony inked a deal with WS Audiology Denmark A/S (WSA) to enter together the hearing aid market.
They initially want to penetrate the U.S. market.
The Danish hearing aid company, with headquarters in Denmark and Singapore, agreed with the partnership.
From the press release:
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Both companies will pursue enhanced products and services, striving to create OTC hearing aids that can be used more naturally and comfortably.
Sony, with its audio technology, and WSA, with its hearing aid technology, will create OTC hearing aids.
FDA clears hearing aids for over-the-counter sales
Barely a couple of months ago, popular American equipment brand Bose surprised the public with its announcement of abandoning the hearing aid market.
It entered the market in 2016.
The Boston Globe reported on July 27 that the Massachusetts-based company, known for its quality audio products such as headphones, decided to stop selling hearing aids.
Then here comes Sony, one of its major competitors, stepping in and testing the waters, so to speak.
Sony even brought along with it WS Audiology Denmark A/S (WSA) to ensure that they will only sell “top-of-the-line” OTC hearing aids, with “easy-to-use features.”
That’s according to Sony’s press release this month. Sony and WSA aim to make them “be obtained more easily.”
On September 13, Sony-Global uploaded a video showing a conversation with Sony’s Osamu “George” Hajimoto and WSA’s Dr. Maarten Barmentlo.
Maarten Barmentlo of WS Audiology and Osamu Hajimoto of Sony shake hands in a makeshift living room
Hajimoto, the deputy president of Sony’s New Business & Technology Development Group, said that they thought of creating something for people who are hard of hearing.
According to him, Sony picked WSA as a partner because the company regards it as “the expert” in the field of hearing aids.
WSA emerged in 2019 after two hearing aid companies merged: Denmark’s Widex (est. 1956) and Singapore’s Sivantos (est. 2019).
According to the WSA website, its history of “over 140 years of experience” in creating hearing aids can be traced back in 1878.
Dr. Barmentlo, who holds a Ph.D. in physics and WSA’s chief marketing officer, said that they were “thrilled” to collaborate with Sony.
Based on the press release, the Dutch physicist described the said business partnership as a “strategic alliance.”
In the video, Dr. Barmentlo underscored the edge of the two companies to offer OTC hearing aids, saying:
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We can combine our technological knowhow in hearing aid technology . . . with Sony’s design capabilities and technology.
The partnership between Sony and WSA involves the following factors:
“audiology expertise”
“IT/audio technology”
“medical technology”
“business asset”
The press release didn’t indicate what the specific name of the product.
Still, as Dr. Barmentlo mentioned in the video, they will be marketed under the Sony brand.
In addition, Sony and WSA will work on the OTC hearing aids with this tagline in mind: “Wonderful Sound for All.”
A young male child wearing an OTC hearing aid and Scrabble tiles that form the words ‘hear the joy in life’
According to the video presented by Sony, 12 percent of people in the U.S. - that will be an estimated 1 in ten people - told doctors that they’re experiencing hearing problems.
While 4.1 percent of them have hearing aids, 7.8 percent don’t.
This data prompted Sony to embark on producing OTC hearing aids, which, unlike prescription hearing aids, can be bought directly.
Part of Sony’s company vision leans toward the creation of products that reflect Kando (Japanese for “emotion”) and Anshin(Japanese for several positive words, including trust and peace of mind).
According to the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, OTC hearing aids are recommended for people with “mild to moderate hearing loss.”
One hand holds a woman’s ear while the other hand attaches a receiver-in-canal (RIC) hearing aid on her
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