
Kunal Walia
March 9, 2026
Estimated reading time: 7 minutes
He had zero clue that years later, these same basic devices would talk to each other, respond to his voice, and somehow know what he needed before he did. Same brand. Completely different world.
By the early 2010s, Philips was in trouble. Not broke. Not failing. Just stuck.
They had a solid reputation for making reliable stuff—lightbulbs, shavers, kitchen appliances. Things your parents bought and trusted. But the market was moving fast. Tech giants were building entire smart home ecosystems. Scrappy startups were launching connected devices that made Philips’ products look like relics.
Here’s a company that built its name on consumer electronics, suddenly at risk of becoming that brand your grandparents remember fondly but nobody young actually buys.
Most people had already written them off. A company known for lightbulbs leading a digital revolution? Yeah, right.
Philips didn’t accept that.
First move Philips made? They didn’t try building the flashiest gadget. Didn’t slash prices to compete with startups. Instead, they asked themselves one question:
“How does our history of meaningful innovation apply to the smart home?”
They built their entire strategy around three beliefs:
Focus intensely on building a connected home experience. One brand. One clear purpose.
Lesson for founders: Don’t chase every trend. Go back to your core purpose and figure out how new technology helps you fulfill it better.
Philips leaders didn’t brainstorm in conference rooms. They went into people’s homes. Watched how they cooked. Listened to complaints about household chores. Experienced every forgotten timer, every annoying moment—just like regular people.
That changed everything.
The Philips Airfryer with Smart Controls came out of those visits. Not just solid hardware—seamless app integration that made it personal. A guided cooking partner, not just another appliance.
Lesson for founders: Real innovation solves actual human problems. The best tech disappears into the background and just makes life better.
While competitors talked about horsepower and wattage, Philips focused on how things felt. Their ads didn’t show charts—they showed healthy family meals and the peace of mind that comes from breathing clean air.
The appliances weren’t just doing a job. They became symbols of a simpler, healthier, more connected life.
Lesson for founders: Your product is just a tool. The ease, the wellness, the lifestyle you build around it? That’s what people actually buy.
Philips understood something powerful: people don’t just want an appliance—they want to be part of something.
So they created the HomeID app. Users connected, shared recipes, became a community of home cooks helping each other. The app turned into a hub—tutorials, tips, stories of people hitting their wellness goals with Philips products.
Today, millions of users worldwide are part of this community. They promote the brand better than any ad agency ever could.
Lesson for founders: People don’t just want to buy from you. They want to belong to something you’ve built. A loyal community beats a marketing budget every time.
One day, Philips leaders noticed something. People weren’t just asking about appliances—they were asking how the devices would fit into their existing smart homes.
That’s when it clicked.
Why not make Philips appliances talk to everything else?
That’s how the focus on interoperability with Google Home and Alexa happened. These weren’t isolated devices anymore—they were parts of a holistic smart home where everything worked together.
Lesson for founders: Pay attention to how your product fits into customers’ existing lives. The best tech integrates effortlessly and adds value without friction.
Philips didn’t chase flashy, complicated devices. They stuck to what felt right—intuitive, simple, felt like part of your routine.
Some standouts:
Smart Air Purifiers – Automatically detect air quality and adjust. You don’t lift a finger.
Connected Coffee Machines – Personalized coffee with a tap on your phone.
Smart Garment Steamers – Reminders and fabric care tips right on your device.
Classic reliability. But smoother, easier, more personal.
Lesson for founders: Don’t just sell features. Sell a feeling. Your tech should enable a specific experience customers can’t get anywhere else.
After nailing the smart home ecosystem, Philips went international. Adapted their app and services for Europe, Asia, Latin America. Consumers who wanted convenience and wellness benefits from smart tech—but also wanted a brand they could trust—chose Philips.
Success in smart appliances proved their “heritage roots, future wings” vision actually worked.
Lesson for founders: What you master locally, you can export globally. Lessons from your core audience become your competitive advantage everywhere else.
You’d think a heritage brand would avoid tech. Philips did the opposite.
Their HomeID app gives recipe ideas and maintenance reminders. Need service or a part? Handle it online. Digital content—tutorials, webinars—keeps the community connected 24/7.
They figured out how to use digital tools to strengthen human connections, not replace them.
Lesson for founders: Use technology as a bridge to customers, not a barrier. Digital tools should enhance human connection, not kill it.
Philips hit bumps:
But every problem taught them something. Listening to customers and staying flexible kept them ahead.
Lesson for founders: Don’t run from challenges. Embrace them. They’re often the best teachers and proof of your commitment to customers.
No matter what you’re building—appliances, a brand, a blog—these lessons hold:
Passion spreads. Philips loved innovation. That love infected the company and the customers.
Focus wins. By focusing on seamless integration and user experience, Philips carved out space nobody else owned.
Build community. Loyal fans beat big marketing budgets.
Your history is strength. Don’t run from your past—own it.
Feelings over features. People forget specs. They remember how you made them feel.
Philips is already working on more personalized health tech, planning new integrations, expanding the smart home ecosystem. But the promise stays the same:
Innovation. Wellness. Simplicity.
“Innovation is meaningful only when it inspires and improves daily life.” – Frans van Houten, CEO, Philips, 2025
A company that almost became a relic is now leading smart living globally. Because they focused on what actually matters—people, health, the soul of a home.
Philips isn’t an appliance company anymore. It’s about people and the vibe.
That unmistakable ease you feel using a smart device that quietly says: this isn’t just a gadget. This is my life, made better.