Technophile NewsTechnophile News
  • Home
  • News
  • PC
  • Phones
  • Android
  • Gadgets
  • Games
  • Guides
  • Accessories
  • Reviews
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Web Stories
    • Press Release
What's On

CBP Wants New Tech to Search for Hidden Data on Seized Phones

3 July 2025

Apple’s colorful Watch Solo Loop bands are up to 70 percent off now

3 July 2025

Tecno Spark 40 – Price in India, Specifications (3rd July 2025)

3 July 2025

A Game Called Date Everything Literally Lets You Date Everything—Except People

3 July 2025

Paramount Plus slashes prices to $2 for two months

3 July 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Thursday, July 3
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
Technophile NewsTechnophile News
Demo
  • Home
  • News
  • PC
  • Phones
  • Android
  • Gadgets
  • Games
  • Guides
  • Accessories
  • Reviews
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Web Stories
    • Press Release
Technophile NewsTechnophile News
Home » Sonos CEO: ‘We All Feel Really Terrible’ About the Bungled App Update
News

Sonos CEO: ‘We All Feel Really Terrible’ About the Bungled App Update

By News Room9 May 20253 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

It is really tough, I think, to be in any environment where you’ve let your customers down when you’re customer-centric. And if anything, Sonos is customer-centric. It’s doubly hard when you work and you don’t understand the relative priority of your contribution. And we’ve really reset that ladder thing as much as the former thing, and people understand how their work fits into the success of Sonos today, and it’s really reset the cultural tone.

In the year since this app has rolled out, there’s been all these updates and changes. In the time that you’ve been there, has this whole experience taught you anything else about your users?

I think part of what gets me out of bed every morning to do this reasonably hard job is that Sonos has a really special place in our customer’s lives. I mean, sure we’re the soundtrack for barbecues and dinner parties. But it’s not an exaggeration to say that we’re literally there for birth, for death. I mean, let’s be honest, for conception.

Ha!

I mean, you can’t say that about Microsoft Excel.

Well, it depends on how freaky you are, I guess.

Yeah, I suppose so. It is really an honor to get to work on something that is so webbed into the emotional fabric of people’s lives, but the consequence of that is when we fail, it has an emotional impact.

I was talking to a customer on social media a few weeks ago. He was having problems with his system, and it was the day of his parents’ 50th wedding anniversary celebration. All he wanted was music for the party. Where you might be tolerant of a hiccup in your experience scrolling Instagram one day, it has a different emotional wall up when you can’t have music for a once-in-a-lifetime kind of celebration.

If anything, the experience of interacting with our customers over the course of the last 100 days is just this reminder of what we do goes beyond just software. It’s an emotional soundtrack for people’s lives. It just needs to work every time.

I’m curious about the software-hardware divide. Sonos is a fundamentally hardware product. How does your software mojo help a company that lives or dies on the hardware?

I mean, it’s such a delight to get to work with our acoustic team and the industrial design team and the hardware teams broadly. They’re just the best in the world at this stuff, and it is such a central part of the obvious identity of Sonos. But Sonos is also a platform. There’s critical table-stake software dimensions to each of our products—power management for portables, noise cancellation for headphones, 3D positioning for immersive audio.

If I were to critique those years, I think perhaps we didn’t make the right level of investment in the platform software of Sonos. And in a way, the attempt to re-architect the mobile experience was meant to be a remedy for that. But as we’ve described, we made some mistakes along the way. And so part of the reason that I can speak with some confidence about the progress we’ve made is that we have a really strong quantitative understanding of how the software platform is performing today relative to the previous generation software. Across dozens of metrics, the platform performs better than the software that it replaced.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related News

CBP Wants New Tech to Search for Hidden Data on Seized Phones

3 July 2025

Apple’s colorful Watch Solo Loop bands are up to 70 percent off now

3 July 2025

A Game Called Date Everything Literally Lets You Date Everything—Except People

3 July 2025

Paramount Plus slashes prices to $2 for two months

3 July 2025

How to Pick the Right Roku for Your TV

3 July 2025

Best phone 2025: the top smartphones to buy right now

3 July 2025
Top Articles

Huawei Nova 14 Ultra – Price in India, Specifications (21st May 2025)

20 May 202596 Views

iQOO Neo 10 Pro+ Confirmed to Debut This Month, Pre-Reservations Begin

8 May 202567 Views

Redmi K80 Ultra Design, Colours, and Key Features Revealed; to Get MediaTek Dimensity 9400+ SoC

18 June 202566 Views
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Don't Miss

Tecno Spark 40 Pro – Price in India, Specifications (3rd July 2025)

3 July 2025

Tecno Spark 40 Pro mobile was launched on 23rd June 2025. The phone comes with…

Tecno Spark 40 Pro plus – Price in India, Specifications (3rd July 2025)

3 July 2025

Google Pixel 6a to Get Mandatory Android 16 Update to Fix Battery Overheating Issues

3 July 2025

How to Pick the Right Roku for Your TV

3 July 2025
Technophile News
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
© 2025 Technophile News. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.