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

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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.”

Runna app being used on track

(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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