What Strava buying Runna means for users of both fitness apps – according to their CEOs

The Strava app open on an iPhone 15 Pro

This morning, news broke that two of the services on our best fitness apps list were joining forces: Strava is buying Runna.

Strava, which we rated an excellent service at both free and premium tiers with a terrific social media platform and run-tracking integrations, doesn’t really have much in the way of coaching, bar the availability of some static training plans. This seems to make Runna, another highly-rated app built around coaching plans, including an AI coaching service, a great fit.

As Strava CEO Mike Martin put it in an interview with TechRadar, alongside Runna CEO Dom Maskell, “The way that I think about it, it’s like the world’s largest team just got a new coach. I think that’s a really exciting way to position it.”

(Image credit: Runna)

After reading the reactions on the Runna subreddit (cautious optimism, unlike the furor around Garmin’s new Connect+ premium tier last month), I wanted to ask both CEOs, especially Martin, if there’s a temptation to force Runna users to eventually onboard to a new system, in the same way Google has done with the Fitbit community.

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